Reeves Professional Learning as Relational Practice
2010
ISBN: 978-90-481-8739-3
Verlag: Springer Netherland
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
E-Book, Englisch, 205 Seiten, eBook
ISBN: 978-90-481-8739-3
Verlag: Springer Netherland
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Mapping the Relational Spaces of Educating.- Adopting a New Approach to Professional Learning.- Describing Educating Systems.- The Field of Educating: Tracking Relations and Relays.- Making Learning Spaces Visible.- Professional Learning as Relational Practice.- Changing Self: Interactions of Space and Identity.- Pedagogy: Creating a Hub in a Field of Relays.- Constructing Knowledge and Agency.- Tracking Knowledge Creation and Exchange.- Knowledge Creation: The Reflexivity of Hybrid Systems.- Conclusion.
"Chapter 3 The Field of Educating: Tracking Relations and Relays (p. 33-34)
Introduction
This chapter is about the first stage of mapping networked activity systems, relational mapping, which is a means of representing the relations, transmission points and relays that run between and across educating systems. I want to begin to develop the tool set for mapping by setting the operation of local educating systems within the wider context of educating as a field of activity.
There are therefore two main objectives of the chapter: first, to provide some delineation of the types of systems involved in educating activity and second, to begin the process of building representations of the operation of networked systems within this particular field. The chapter begins by exploring some of the general features of educating and the relationship this activity has to various discourses that are characteristic of educational contexts.
In so doing, it identifies four broad categories of educating systems that use socialising, schooling and developmental and contagious pedagogic strategies to shape the behaviour of learners. The first two strategies are characterised as assimilative, since learners are taken into the space of their educators, whilst the two latter strategies are characterised as invasive, in that the educators move into the learners’ territory. The case study that forms the background for extending this discussion is about the introduction of an organisational learning strategy into a local authority’s education service.
The account begins the analytical task by looking at how two particular local educating systems sought to establish frameworks for sense making that would alter the practice of teachers in schools and how these systems were materially connected to one another in contestation over practice. The case illustrates the conceptual and political work that was involved in attempting to shape practice through the use of an invasive, developmental strategy on the part of the local authority’s senior management team.
Last, the discursive analysis of the case study data is used to derive a horizontal section through this local network or a relational map–a map that shows some of the key discursive relays and relations between the activity systems that were germane to the progress of educating at this particular location. The relational map is based on the use of a number of conventions that will be built upon and refined in the next chapter as a way of mapping educating activity over time."