{"title":"将企业配置为学习空间:可能性、风险和限制","authors":"Bernd Käpplinger, Anika Denninger","doi":"10.1080/0158037X.2021.1927307","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The Researching Work & Learning (RWL) International Conference Series is the world’s longest, continuously running international research conference series serving the field of workplace learning. It was initiated in 1999. By 2022 it will have visited ten countries in five continents. The conference series as a whole is organised through the work of the RWL International Advisory Committee. This committee is composed of leading international scholars in the diverse field of workplace learning; www.rwlconferences.org is the standing organisational website of this committee. The 11th RWL conference took place at Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen in Germany in July 2019. The head of the local organising committee was Bernd Käpplinger and Anika Denninger was a key person within the local organising committee. The major theme of the conference was on Configuring Enterprises as Spaces for Learning: Possibilities, Risks and Limits. Enterprises are crucial places and spaces for learning at work. They offer chances and possibilities to learn. Progressive enterprises make resources (money, time, mentors, learning circles, staff, etc.) available for their employees and configure themselves as learning organisations. Other firms can be less interested in the learning of their employees and do little to support learning. Digitalisation offers chances for blended and hybrid forms of learning in virtual spaces. A less optimistic prognosis envisages a loss of jobs or dramatic changes with risks of de-skilling. The whole development requires attention, thus the need for research. This special issue contains papers presented in an earlier form at the conference and developed further for this issue. Soila Lemmetty considers employees’ opportunities for selfdirected learning at technology organisations. Her study uses an ethnographic approach to examine situations in which self-directed learning is realised as an individual or collective phenomenon. Bill Esmond’s paper reports a qualitative study with two case studies, located in Germany and England, of the way vocational teachers’ understandings of facilitating learning across domains are constructed. Felix Lukowski, Myriam Baum and Sabine Mohr focus on evidence of the provision of employer-provided training in times of technological change. The paper investigates German firms’ employer-provided continuing training provision for employees with different skill requirements. It uses firm-level data from the BIBB Establishment Panel on Training and Competence Development and a fractional logit model. Zan Chen, Arthur Chia and Xiaofang Bi write about ways in which innovative learning has been promoted for training and adult education in Singapore. They present findings from three projects. These show that a good proportion of training providers and adult educators are adopting blended learning to respond to changes and new demands. Asmita Bhutani Vij ‘s paper is located in the education-based Non-Government Organisation (NGO) sector in India, a large sector that depends on activities of learning, training and","PeriodicalId":46790,"journal":{"name":"Studies in Continuing Education","volume":"43 1","pages":"137 - 138"},"PeriodicalIF":1.9000,"publicationDate":"2021-05-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1080/0158037X.2021.1927307","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Configuring enterprises as spaces for learning: possibilities, risks and limits\",\"authors\":\"Bernd Käpplinger, Anika Denninger\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/0158037X.2021.1927307\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The Researching Work & Learning (RWL) International Conference Series is the world’s longest, continuously running international research conference series serving the field of workplace learning. It was initiated in 1999. By 2022 it will have visited ten countries in five continents. The conference series as a whole is organised through the work of the RWL International Advisory Committee. This committee is composed of leading international scholars in the diverse field of workplace learning; www.rwlconferences.org is the standing organisational website of this committee. The 11th RWL conference took place at Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen in Germany in July 2019. The head of the local organising committee was Bernd Käpplinger and Anika Denninger was a key person within the local organising committee. The major theme of the conference was on Configuring Enterprises as Spaces for Learning: Possibilities, Risks and Limits. Enterprises are crucial places and spaces for learning at work. They offer chances and possibilities to learn. Progressive enterprises make resources (money, time, mentors, learning circles, staff, etc.) available for their employees and configure themselves as learning organisations. Other firms can be less interested in the learning of their employees and do little to support learning. Digitalisation offers chances for blended and hybrid forms of learning in virtual spaces. A less optimistic prognosis envisages a loss of jobs or dramatic changes with risks of de-skilling. The whole development requires attention, thus the need for research. This special issue contains papers presented in an earlier form at the conference and developed further for this issue. Soila Lemmetty considers employees’ opportunities for selfdirected learning at technology organisations. Her study uses an ethnographic approach to examine situations in which self-directed learning is realised as an individual or collective phenomenon. Bill Esmond’s paper reports a qualitative study with two case studies, located in Germany and England, of the way vocational teachers’ understandings of facilitating learning across domains are constructed. Felix Lukowski, Myriam Baum and Sabine Mohr focus on evidence of the provision of employer-provided training in times of technological change. The paper investigates German firms’ employer-provided continuing training provision for employees with different skill requirements. It uses firm-level data from the BIBB Establishment Panel on Training and Competence Development and a fractional logit model. Zan Chen, Arthur Chia and Xiaofang Bi write about ways in which innovative learning has been promoted for training and adult education in Singapore. They present findings from three projects. These show that a good proportion of training providers and adult educators are adopting blended learning to respond to changes and new demands. 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Configuring enterprises as spaces for learning: possibilities, risks and limits
The Researching Work & Learning (RWL) International Conference Series is the world’s longest, continuously running international research conference series serving the field of workplace learning. It was initiated in 1999. By 2022 it will have visited ten countries in five continents. The conference series as a whole is organised through the work of the RWL International Advisory Committee. This committee is composed of leading international scholars in the diverse field of workplace learning; www.rwlconferences.org is the standing organisational website of this committee. The 11th RWL conference took place at Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen in Germany in July 2019. The head of the local organising committee was Bernd Käpplinger and Anika Denninger was a key person within the local organising committee. The major theme of the conference was on Configuring Enterprises as Spaces for Learning: Possibilities, Risks and Limits. Enterprises are crucial places and spaces for learning at work. They offer chances and possibilities to learn. Progressive enterprises make resources (money, time, mentors, learning circles, staff, etc.) available for their employees and configure themselves as learning organisations. Other firms can be less interested in the learning of their employees and do little to support learning. Digitalisation offers chances for blended and hybrid forms of learning in virtual spaces. A less optimistic prognosis envisages a loss of jobs or dramatic changes with risks of de-skilling. The whole development requires attention, thus the need for research. This special issue contains papers presented in an earlier form at the conference and developed further for this issue. Soila Lemmetty considers employees’ opportunities for selfdirected learning at technology organisations. Her study uses an ethnographic approach to examine situations in which self-directed learning is realised as an individual or collective phenomenon. Bill Esmond’s paper reports a qualitative study with two case studies, located in Germany and England, of the way vocational teachers’ understandings of facilitating learning across domains are constructed. Felix Lukowski, Myriam Baum and Sabine Mohr focus on evidence of the provision of employer-provided training in times of technological change. The paper investigates German firms’ employer-provided continuing training provision for employees with different skill requirements. It uses firm-level data from the BIBB Establishment Panel on Training and Competence Development and a fractional logit model. Zan Chen, Arthur Chia and Xiaofang Bi write about ways in which innovative learning has been promoted for training and adult education in Singapore. They present findings from three projects. These show that a good proportion of training providers and adult educators are adopting blended learning to respond to changes and new demands. Asmita Bhutani Vij ‘s paper is located in the education-based Non-Government Organisation (NGO) sector in India, a large sector that depends on activities of learning, training and
期刊介绍:
Studies in Continuing Education is a scholarly journal concerned with all aspects of continuing, professional and lifelong learning. It aims to be of special interest to those involved in: •continuing professional education •adults learning •staff development •training and development •human resource development