[Xmca-l] FW: Apprentice in a Changing Trade
Peter Smagorinsky
smago@uga.edu
Fri Jul 10 16:08:40 PDT 2015
This one looks interesting.
From: Information Age Publishing [mailto:marketing@infoagepub.com]
Sent: Friday, July 10, 2015 4:25 PM
To: Peter Smagorinsky
Subject: Apprentice in a Changing Trade
[News update from Information Age Publishing]
[http://www.infoagepub.com/assets/images/covers/p4d86bcee9196e.gif]<http://www.infoagepub.com/products/Apprentice-in-a-Changing-Trade>
Published 2011
ORDER ONLINE AT WWW.INFOAGEPUB.COM<http://www.infoagepub.com/products/Apprentice-in-a-Changing-Trade>
Paperback
978-1-61735-411-3
$45.99
Hardcover
978-1-61735-412-0
$85.99
eBook
9781617354137
Apprentice in a Changing Trade<http://www.infoagepub.com/products/Apprentice-in-a-Changing-Trade>
Edited by:
Jean-François Perret
Anne-Nelly Perret-Clermont
Danièle Golay Schilter
Claude Kaiser
Luc-Olivier Pochon
A volume in Advances in Cultural Psychology: Constructing Human Development
This book is a result of a major research project in Switzerland that brings together the fields of Education and Socio-Cultural Psychology. It is focused on how culture is involved in very concrete educational practices. The reader is invited to follow the research group in a Swiss technical college that trains young people in precision mechanics during a period of major technological change: the arrival of automated manufacturing systems. This transition in the trade is an opportunity to explore the educational and psychological challenges of vocational training from a perspective inspired by activity theory and the consideration of social interactions and semiotic or other technical mediations as crucial to the formation of professional identities and competencies.
What are the most appropriate settings for learning? There is no simple answer to this question. What can lead a pupil to become engaged, even if this is within a school, with all the seriousness of a future professional? Under which conditions is an internship in a company genuinely formative?
Is it necessary to possess the most recent technologies in order to offer high quality training? What do we know about the relation between doing and knowing in the construction of new competences? How can it be planned and informed to become an object of reflection and make sense in the eyes of the learner? Dealing with such qustions, this study explores new working hypotheses on the manner in which the young experience their training and on the significant role for them of professional specialization.
CONTENTS:
Series Editor's Preface: Learning from the Trade School- Learning for Living. Author's Introduction to the International Edition General Introduction 1. Restructuring of Vocational Competence 2. Where Can Professional Knowledge and Skills Be Acquired? 3. Introduction of Manufacturing Systems into a College: The Views of the Teachers Involved 4. What Happens in the Course of Practical Work? 5. Interacting and Succeeding 6. Alternative Interpretations of Learning Activities 7. Occupational Motivations and Their Relation to Learning Situations 8. Facing Up to the Introduction of New Technologies: Identifying the Dimensions Involved 9. General Conclusions: Learning Spaces for Creative Initiative and the Taking of Responsibility References.
See Also: http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/bern-washington_swiss-us-agree-on-vocational-training-and-bio-products/41540368
Information Age Publishing | P.O. Box 79049 | Charlotte, NC 28271-7047
T: 704.752.9125 | F: 704.752.9113 | E: info@infoagepub.com<mailto:info@infoagepub.com>
-------------------------------------------------------------------
This e-mail was sent to smago@uga.edu<mailto:smago@uga.edu> because you are subscribed to at least one of our mailing lists. If at any time you would like to remove yourself from our mailing list, please feel free to do so by visiting:
http://infoagepub.net/lm/public/unsubscribe.php?g=139&addr=smago@uga.edu
More information about the xmca-l
mailing list