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Digital doings: Curating work-learning practices

Digital doings: Curating work-learning practices

Published by Terrie Lynn Thompson on October 8, 2014

In a recent research project exploring how everyday work-learning practices are changing through the infusion of web and mobile technologies, multiple knowing practices emerged (i.e., Thompson, 2013). I wonder if these micro-practices enact a form of curating. Not in the traditional sense of what museum professionals have always done, but as Cairns and Birchall (2013) suggest, mobilizing “new tactics, both… Read more →

Posted in Digital technologies | Tagged digital curation, learning ecologies, professional learning, sociomateriality, technology, work-learning
Celebrating amateurism: a modest proposal?

Celebrating amateurism: a modest proposal?

Published by Richard Edwards on June 23, 2014

In recent years, an emphasis in public service delivery has been placed on reforming professionalism through, for instance, reaccreditation processes, more effective inter-professional practice, greater user engagement and co-production of services, and more effective integration of para-professional and technical support. Concurrently there has been increased emphasis on professional standards, accountability, and external measures. Increasing and enhancing professionalism, continuing professional development… Read more →

Posted in Professionalism & professional responsibility | Tagged amateurism, professionalism
Professional knowledge making: A mediated activity or not?

Professional knowledge making: A mediated activity or not?

Published by Sarah Doyle on June 20, 2014

In her book Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning Karen Barad asserts that knowledge making is not a mediated activity. Although I am persuaded, a recent conversation about my (ongoing) doctoral research prompted my companion to counter, “But your data suggest otherwise.” In my study about the emergence of professional knowing in paediatric… Read more →

Posted in Digital technologies | Tagged Barad, diabetes, insulin pump, professional knowing, sociomaterial
(Not quite) total institutions

(Not quite) total institutions

Published by cate watson on June 18, 2014

I have been re-reading Erving Goffman lately, and thoroughly enjoying the experience. But it seems to me that while what he calls ‘Total institutions’ may be different in degree from other institutions they are not in kind. I was reminded of this most forcibly while travelling through an airport recently  (clutching my copy of Asylums, 1961). I empathised with the… Read more →

Posted in Theory | Tagged autoethnography, Goffman, total institutions
fantastic voyage

Sociomaterial approaches in ethnographic research

Published by tarafenwick on June 4, 2014

In a recent chapter myself and three of my doctoral students decided to discuss our different sociomaterial approaches to doing our ethnographies of professional practice and learning. We found ourselves really grappling with thorny issues of how to trace the material and social entanglements of the settings that we were enacting without (1) killing the tangles or (2) getting bogged… Read more →

Posted in Research approaches | Tagged ethnography, practice-based theory, sociomaterial
The problems with ‘professionalism’

The problems with ‘professionalism’

Published by tarafenwick on June 2, 2014

One project we are enjoying now in ProPEL is looking at professionals’ use of social media. And one of the first things we ran into in this fascinating cyberscape were the new codes of online professionalism: regulations governing what professionals can and cannot do in social media. Professionalism is one of those hot topics that never seems to lose its… Read more →

Posted in Professionalism & professional responsibility | Tagged e-professionalism, online professionalism, professional responsibility, social media
What’s with materiality in professional research?

What’s with materiality in professional research?

Published by tarafenwick on May 29, 2014

Materials – things that matter – are often missing from accounts of educational processes such as learning. Materials tend to be ignored as part of the backdrop for human action, dismissed in a preoccupation with consciousness and cognition, or assumed to be subordinate to human intention and design. This sort of treatment still tends to privilege human beings, as though… Read more →

Posted in Theory | Tagged assemblage, Barad, intra-action, materiality, sociomaterial
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