Book Chapter

Vocational Education Pedagogy and the situated practices of teaching core skills

Details

Citation

Canning R (2011) Vocational Education Pedagogy and the situated practices of teaching core skills. In: Catts R, Falk I & Wallace R (eds.) Vocational Learning: innovative theory and practice. Technical and Vocational Education and Training: Issues, Concerns and Prospects, 14. London: Springer, pp. 179-190. http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-94-007-1539-4_11

Abstract
This chapter explores cutting-edge educational research in the field of generic core skills and the pedagogic practices of teaching work-based vocational education to young people. It argues for a complete transformation on how we conceptualize and teach generic skills. The reader is invited to rethink the fundamental assumptions that underpin the notion of transferable skills, the division created between theory and practice and the role played by outcome-based competency standards in education. The argument is made for conceptualizing vocational education as a material, discursive and normative set of practices that rely heavily upon context-dependent learning environments. Best-practice examples of teaching core skills are identified from a range of organizations in the UK. Finally, the debate on generic skills is set within a broader international context. The audience to benefit most from this discussion includes researchers in work-based learning; national and institutional policy makers in post-compulsory education; teachers of vocational education; human resources development managers and further and higher education teachers.

StatusPublished
Title of seriesTechnical and Vocational Education and Training: Issues, Concerns and Prospects
Number in series14
Publication date31/12/2011
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/11706
PublisherSpringer
Publisher URLhttp://link.springer.com/…94-007-1539-4_11
Place of publicationLondon
ISSN of series1871-3041
ISBN978-94-007-1538-7