Illustrating in-this-site embedding of google videos
08-March-2006
Alan and Jamie Brown have been doing a great job of posting video snippets on workplace learning. They have been posting them to the google video service, and linking to them from the lifelong learning / workplace learning area of this site. Using google video to host the video is in the "data outside": spirit of web2.0 - it lets goggle-video concentrate on providing excellent uplaod and display facilities while leaving our own NGRF software to concentrate on what it does best. However, this does not mean that the video content cannot be thumbnailed - or indeed played - within the NGRF site itself.
Google video offers a 'new' feature whereby you can grab the html code needed to embed a player for your content in your own site. I've included that embed code below so as to illustrate the feature.
This clip provides some background to the Sealants company, which is a family-owned business, about thirty years old. They are the number one UK supplier of putty (it is primarily used to hold single glaze glass to the frame) and were originally almost completely focused on this market. However, the sons of the founder recognised that this was a mature and declining market and so developed new products to satisfy the putty substitution market. For example they now also supply Butyl Strip (most commonly used in wooden-framed double glazing) especially to the 'industrial leaf market' and Silicon products (most often used as trims for the edge of bathrooms and sinks). As a result, they are now a reasonably-sized and growing SME, employing around a hundred people and turning over circa ten million pounds. Click here.NGRF - A case study of a supply chain network based around a SME making sealants
Research on work-related learning
22-November-2005
The current developments on the site demonstrated the potential to cluster issues related to work-related learning. From a TLRP perspective the group felt that it would be important to produce some narratives that through hyper-linking allowed users to go in different directions and also allowed for different perspectives. It was felt that the initial clustering was important as this needed to support investigation of theoretical and methodological issues as well learning processes and to allow switching between different levels of analysis.
In order to allow for different lenses with which it would be possible to view research on work-related learning the group felt that 12 - 20 branches might be about the right number for ease of organisation. After discussions in small groups at two meetings the group as a whole came up with the following ten categories:
- Research Methodologies / Strategies
- Theoretical bases
- Learning contexts and settings
- Organisational learning and work design
- Strategies for enhancing learning
- Factors affecting learning
- Policy (national / regional / organisational)
- Learning processes
- Knowledge at work
- Learning trajectories and transfer
Guidance | crossref.org : : the reference linking backbone
21-November-2005
The following is really here just to illustrate the power of cross-linking discussion via trackbacks.
Guidance | crossref.org : : the reference linking backboneCrossRef is also the official DOI registration agency for scholarly and professional publications. It operates a cross-publisher citation linking system that allows a researcher to click on a reference citation on one publisher’s platform and link directly to the cited content on another publisher’s platform, subject to the target publisher’s access control practices. Our citation-linking network today covers millions of articles and other content items from several hundred scholarly and professional publishers
...Of course, the content cited above is also important for things like getting a universal digital object identifier registered for all the academic or research content on the NGRF site.
1 comments.
- Latest comment:
- 21-Nov-2005 22:02 by abrown; Work-related learning
Welcome to the Work Related Learning weblog
21-November-2005
This is a test post to inaugurate the new Work Related Learning weblog. these blogs will be getting a nice fresh coat of styling and features over the next week or two!
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1 comments.
- Latest comment:
- 22-Nov-2005 19:21 by abrown; PS1
Theoretical bases: Post-structuralism
06-September-2005
Post-structuralism
When looking at post-structuralism it probably makes sense to say something about first about how structuralism, used mainly in a literary context, drew attention to how much of our imaginative world is structured in a binary way. A focus upon current binary views can be challenged in two ways. First, the binary oppositions can be overturned and replaced by new structures that are themselves binary. Second, the limitations of binary views can be exposed by saying there are a much wider range of ways to look at things. Foucault (1972a) outlined the idea of how one system of thought, with dominant ways of thinking, replaced another in periods of revolutionary cultural change. He also analysed the range of ways knowledge and power operated in modern society. Sarup (1998) points to the similarities between Foucault's ideas, applied to culture as a whole, and Thomas Kuhn's concept of paradigm shifts where stable established scientific ways of thinking are interrupted by periods of scientific revolution. Within social science, structuralist views emphasised how certain ways of thinking were dominant and constrained how people viewed the world, with culture offering a degree of agency and choice but also circumscribing the range of possibilities.
In contrast, post-structuralism sees a much wider range of possibilities, and questions the extent to which people can be represented as sharing one of a relatively small number of ways of thinking about society and culture. The much wider range of options is coupled with a view that cultural 'scripts' are much more open to individual influence. Post-structuralism is concerned with breaking down over-arching narratives, concerned with the 'big picture', into a series of smaller narratives that deconstruct the 'structure' as a whole and thereby release more ways of making sense of particular parts of the bigger picture.
In some senses therefore post-structuralism is a tool to sensitise the researcher to the possibility of multiple meanings and narratives associated with discourse and action in the particular contexts under investigation: it also has the potential to throw light upon aspects of society that could be overlooked. In this sense, depending on the nature of the topic and the intention of the researcher this perspective may be useful as a frame for investigation. Ironically, the more often this approach is used the less useful it may become: whether the focus upon discourse and meaning is illuminative partly depends upon how many previous studies there have been adopting this approach and the extent to which does indeed generate new insight.
The interesting thing for me is that you can, of course, use other frameworks to achieve similar effects. So personally, while occasionally drawing on insights from theorists associated with post-structuralism I have never used the framework to underpin my research. I also often find the work rather dense and so tend to prefer other ways of achieving the same ends. Indeed I wonder whether you can use Foucault's (1972b) own one idea of discourse existing within a complex web of meanings affected by shared, but changing, understandings of the 'rules of exclusion' to apply to much of this work: many of us are excluded from discussions on this because the ideas are not clearly expressed. However, it may be good to hear from those with more familiarity with some of these ideas, especially if they can communicate in a less exclusive way.
For other introductory ideas about post-structuralism see the following social bookmarking contribution: http://del.icio.us/NGRF/post-structuralism%2C
References - see also the post-structuralism tag in our NGRF connotea shared bookmarks (RSS is available)
- Foucault, M. (1972a) The Archaeology of Knowledge (New York, Pantheon).
- Foucault, M. (1972b) The discourse on language. Appendix to Foucault, M. The Archaeology of Knowledge , pp. 215-238 (New York, Pantheon).
- Kuhn, T. (1962) The structure of scientific revolutions, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Sarup, M. (1988) An Introductory Guide to Post-Structuralism and Postmodernism. Harvester Wheatsheaf, Hemel Hempstead .
Final meeting
14-February-2005
The meeting on February 11th went very well - thanks for all your efforts. We will need one more meeting to flesh out the final two categories (transitions and trajectories) and policy and then review all ten sub-categories and see how well they fit together. We thought we would have a little time before fixing the next meeting, so that we can catch up with some of the proposed technical refinements.Â
After the final meeting in April / May (that can also consider how to represent all the TLRP wrl projects at the Sydney conference)Â Sally and IÂ will work on linking to exisiting documents etc. so that we can give a demonstration of the full potential of the system at the TLRP annual conference,
I will circulate possible dates for the next meeting and thanks again for your ideas - things are starting to take shape,
Alan
     Â
Factors affecting learning
11-February-2005
Distinguishing between working and learning through work is difficult. It is similarly difficult to separate factors that affect learning at work because in many cases they interact strongly. The distinctions made below particuarly in the main headings should be understood as analytical aids rather than distinctly different categories.
Factors affecting learning emphasises the relational aspects of learning at all levels. It is a dynamic rhetoric.
Individual
- life history
- current position
- hopes
- dispositions
- attitudes to career
Group/community
- availability of support
- informal communication
- occupational positioning
- presence or absence of learning culture
- the nature of teamworking
Wider organisations
- the nature and challege of work
- the kind of mentoring available
- patterns and management of work
- HR systems
- quality of feedback
- purpose of product and service strategy
- corporate structure
Macro (labour market): structures
- Globalising tendencies (how to translate policy through intermediaries)
- MNCs
- Third and First world
- American hegemony
- ICT
- Workforce mobiltiy/migration (illegal workers)
- Performance discources
Labour market
Gender
Ethnicity
Class
Knowledge at work
11-February-2005
Formal knowledge
Informal knowledge
Technical knowledge and skills
People skills
Tacit knowledge
Procedural knowledge
Process knowledge
Knowledge of the organisational culture
Collective and organisational knowlegde
Knowledge transfer
Emotional labour?
Emotional intelligence?
Research Methodologies
11-February-2005
This section allows entry into the range of methods, methodologies and strategies that have been and are currently in use or being considered to study learning at work. It identifies a range of methods in use. It also gives links to the epistemological and theoretical positions that can underpin their use.
Some methods (which are often used in combination)  include:
- Observation (participant/repeat/non-participant)
- Interviewing
- Use of technology (eg email, computer assisted interviewing, video)
- Instruments and tools (eg questionnaires, diaries and learning logs)
A case study approach is often used, which frequently draws upon a mixture of methods.
Consideration also has to be given to:
- Decisions about which methods to use (eg epistemological positions)
- Methods in action (adapting and using methods in context)
- Data handling, reduction, analysis and synthesis (eg validation, tracking, coding, etc)
- Ethical concerns
- Scope of the study (eg longitudinal, snap-shot)
Of course methods are not used in a vacuum. They are used in accordance with theorectical/epistemological perspectives, which can be found under Theoretical bases.
Theoretical bases
11-February-2005
Theorectical bases involves how they predispose people to look at research on learning in and through work.
Activity theory
Actor network theory
Socio-cultural practice theory
Multi-lens perspective
Labour process theory
Sociol-cultural linguistics
Organisational learning
Knowledge development/management
Socio-psychological constructivist
Post-structuralist
Grouping of concepts
Perspectives and concepts:
Gender
