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Informa Work Based Learning Forum
22nd – 23rd November 2011 | Vibe Savoy Melbourne


Interpreting practice
Merilyn Childs and Regine Wagner1



               Honorary Doctorate awarded to retired High Court judge Michael Kirby
                 (UNSW 2008, Murdoch University 2009, Victoria University 2009)



Abstract

A number of speakers before us have defined practice, and talked about workbased learning
from a number of perspectives. Rather than duplicating this focus, we will instead share some
of our thinking about practice and workbased learning, drawing from our own practices.
During 1994-2007 we established four postgraduate degrees at the University of Western
Sydney, supported by a Recognition of Prior Learning entry process. These were the
Graduate Diploma of Educational Leadership, offered to students in Iraq and in Alice
Springs; the Graduate Diploma of Social Sciences (Community Services) offered in
partnership with the centre for Community Welfare Training and the Australian Children‟s
Welfare Agency, the Graduate Diploma of Social Sciences (Adult Education), offered
through open enrolment; and the Graduate Certificate of Social Sciences (Emergency
Services), developed in partnership with the NSW Fire Brigades as the promotional program
for Station Officers developing job readiness for the role as Inspector. The first two were
workbased degrees, the latter two were work-integrated degrees.

In addition, in 2002-3 we were funded by the NSW Office of the Director of Equal
Opportunity in Public Employment (ODEOPE) to develop a recognition process to enable
migrants attempting to enter employment in the public sector to articulate their prior
knowledge and experiences in the contexts of work and Higher Education learning. For these
various projects, work was defined as curriculum and was expansively understood as a

1
 Affiliations: Associate Professor of Higher Education, Dr Merilyn Childs, Deputy Director of the Flexible
Learning Institute, Charles Sturt University mchilds@csu.edu.au and Associate Professor and Visiting Fellow, Dr
Regine Wagner, Flexible Learning Institute, Charles Sturt University rwagner@csu.edu.au
2



metaphor for productive labour. For example, “work” encompassed relevant paid or unpaid
labour, and included individual as well as socially mediated evidence. Central to our response
to “work” was our commitment to interpreting practice. We began with a simple proposition
– life and work is more complex and potentially more thoughtful than a single undergraduate
or postgraduate semester long subject. Our task then was to establish strategies whereby that
complexity could be understood, expanded, theorised and evidenced. In this presentation we
outline our approach, and a number of the strategies we used to develop university degrees at
the nexus of work and learning.

In our presentation, we‟ll draw on some anecdotes from our practice, and some of these
you‟ll see throughout this paper.

Demystifying academic practice

We‟d like to give a brief indication about the meaning we give to words like “practice” and
“work” by saying that, by these words we are referring to “productive labour”; and by
“productive” we are meaning economically, socially, democratically productive labour. We
are influenced by the German concept of Sozialpaädagogik2; which means we think about
“practice” in relationship to “working on and in the social” (a social-societal orientation,
Pretoriaus 2008, p.5) and this includes working on and in the social in the context of paid
labour, voluntary labour, or socially productive activity. In particular it is concerned with the
inherent connectivity between learning, social actions and socially just futures. Humans are
not machines, and all human labour exists within, and shapes, multiple, complex and socially
connected worlds even when fire fighting!

So often within the academe in Australia, “practice” is portrayed as the (lesser?) labour done
by paid professionals and para-professionals, outside the academe.

Anecdote

         A week ago I heard an academic refer to the work of paramedics as “doing what they are told
         to do”. It‟s not the first time I‟ve heard this kind of claim, and some academics seem to
         genuinely believe that work with the hands – operational work – can be done without the
         mind. Clearly they have limited understanding about the complex nature of paramedic
         practice, even when it involves novice paramedics. They simply see Standard Operating
2
 In 2000, we wrote: “Although spoken of as educational innovation, WBL has a long history of experimentation and the
educational concepts and practices described as workplace learning and WBL have a rich epistemological tradition in
debates about * the relationship between education and the economy * the relationship of theory and practice in
education processes * the dualism of education and training and associated social and institutional divisions (Wagner and
Childs, 2000, p.1).
3



       Procedures, and imagine all paramedics do is follow orders. Or fire fighters just have to “put
       the wet stuff on the red stuff”. It just isn‟t that simple.

We offer the word “lesser” because practice is often associated with “un” words like:
uncritical, un-theorised, and under-developed (un-thinking-ly meaning “with the hands”). The
work academics do is often associated with positive words such as: seminal, critical,
evidence-based, and peer-reviewed (done insightfully, guided by the mind). It is as if
academics are not in the labour force or even the same landscape as students; and “practice”
is the thing other people do. It is the activity undergraduates learn to do after a three year
degree, although even then it may be “uncritical” practice. In our experience, this assumed
superiority creates blindness within the university to understanding and working with
practice.

Anecdote:

       I attended a Professor‟s Forum at which education for practice was being discussed. The
       question of great interest was how the university might ensure that disciplinary rigour might
       be applied to practice. I asked if the model they were discussing allowed them to understand
       rigour from the perspective of practice. For example, how was “rigour” characterised within
       the practice domain by those practicing within it? How did a particular domain of practice
       foster criticality? How did it foster its evidence-base? How was new knowledge – for
       example, as derived from university research – taken up and used within the practice-
       domain? There was a long silence. The conversation returned to a discussion about
       disciplinary knowledge.

In order to engage in meaningful ways with “practice”, we needed to see our own practice as
existing within the same rubrics, hierarchies and continuums as practice more generally. This
allowed us to understand that statements we made about practice were automatically
statements we were making about academic practice. If we asked students to interrogate and
expand their understanding of their practice; – then so too should we, in the academe.

The academic practices we worked to demystify (Wagner & Childs, 2000) included: the
relationship between work and learning; the subject; student contact hours with the subject;
critical thinking; assessment; and the role of the academic in a critically engaged learning
process. If we argued that reflective practice was important, then it had to be important as
applied to academic practice. If we argued that through their workbased projects, students
might mitigate or militate against structural disadvantage for their clients; then so too should
the academe in their practice. If we heard our colleagues say “we need to improve
professional practice in the xxx industry”; then we automatically took this to mean “and to do
this, we need to improve academic practice”.
4



Students enrolled in the workbased degrees completed a workbased project that was either a
session long (Graduate Certificate) or yearlong (Graduate Diploma). As work was defined as
the curriculum, and a project was defined as the learning process, the project needed to be
highly relevant – and so too did the assessment practices. Learning evolved through three
thematic stages (as distinct from the completion of single, potentially unrelated subjects).
These stages were:

       describing practice during which student articulated their professional “known”
       through narrative and other forms
       problematising practice during which students posed questions about their practice
       through a variety of lenses, including appropriately chosen readings
       re-shaping praxis during which students made recommendations and articulated
       frameworks for future practice at the nexus of “the word” (critical thinking,
       speculation, theory formation) and “the world” (practice domains)

In order for these stages to make sense in relationship to academic practice, we needed to
make a number of structural changes to our work, and this meant we had to understand our
own practice; see the systemic and pedagogical problems and learn more about how to solve
them; and re-shape our praxis.

Anecdote

       When we designed the first postgraduate workbased program we were faced with some real
       problems. We had a series of individual subjects which required at least two assessment items
       per subject. There were four subjects in a session, and this meant eight separate assessment
       tasks. Broken up in this way suited academic practice, but bore no relationship to the world
       of work of community services professionals in Alice Springs – a world a great deal more
       complex and dynamic than single subjects in a university degree; yet needing new ideas and
       possibilities to solve real problems on the ground. We problematised our practice, integrated
       the learning outcomes across all four subjects, and created a learning process and
       assessment practices that allowed us to meet university workload, student load, and
       assessment requirements; whilst similarly responding respectfully to the practices of students
       who were adult workers in their own social contexts.


Hierarchies of knowledge and knowing

We made a claim at the beginning – that life and work is more complex and potentially more
thoughtful than a single undergraduate or postgraduate semester long subject. This doesn‟t
sound like a very big claim, but in our experience it turns out that it is. From inside a
discipline, even if words like “multi” and “cross” are added to it; the discipline seems very
complex. (Those involved in professional practice will have the same experience about their
5



own practice-domain). So, we specialise; and as part of this specialisation, we create
individual subjects that bite off a small part of the complex disciplinary picture in order to
provide students with that one small coloured dot that we specialise in, that contributes to the
whole picture. These coloured dots make up subjects, typically about 24 in an undergraduate
degree over a 3 year full-time period. These subjects, through the student experience of them,
build disciplinary or professional capacity.

In the process of creating the “bits”, we rely on hierarchies. Some bits are seen as more
important than others, so we have first, second and third years. Some bits are more complex
than others, so we have 5,000 word essays rather than 2,000 word essays. We have theory,
and generally speaking this comes before and certainly above practice in our curriculum
hierarchy. In our experience at least – all of the bits, even the first year, first semester bits
taken by experience professionals who are experts in their own right – are seen as more
important and more complex than practice. We know this, because whilst some Australian
Universities may give credit for prior formal studies; credit for prior professional practice,
lifewide and informal lifelong learning remains in a poor state of development3.

Over the years we have participated in academic conversations based on a number of
underlying and historic assumptions about the theory/practice relationship, and these can be
summed up as:

          Students need to learn theory before they can practice
          Theory should be applied to practice
          Theory is more rigorous than practice
          Practice is un-theorised unless it has been interrogated through university studies

Theory is typically privileged, and celebrated, for example, through mandatory text books
that form the basis of a learning process; learning in many subjects remains structured in line
with the chapters of a textbook. Theory is seen as systematic, ordered, abstracted and tested;
universal therefore applicable to practice, and of its very nature critical. Practice on the other
hand is seen as un-systematic, not tested by peer review or experiment, context bound, and of




3
  Although Pitman argued in 2010 that “29 out of 38 public universities in Australia accepted RPL for the purposes of
admission and/or credit”, he does not differentiate policy for RPL, and the actual practice of RPL, described by others as
inadequate and patchy (eg Fox, 2007).
6



its very nature uncritical4. This latter assumption seems to be held without any understanding
of practice-rigour either through research or anecdote.

Anecdote:

         When I was working as an educational innovator in a Mathematical faculty at a German
         university, I asked the academics working in “Applied Mathematics” what type of work and
         workplaces their students would go to. Not only did they not know, they did not see it as their
         responsibility to prepare their students for work, they were „training‟ Mathematicians. In the
         end, we did develop a course “Mathematics and the Environment”, aimed at taking a first
         step into “applied” studies.

As academics working in workbased degrees, we were repeatedly confronted with the
obvious need to draw on multiple disciplines to develop, with students, an analysis of their
work problems and strategies to move forward. We experienced firsthand the limitations of
any one disciplinary approach. We realised how work as a generative theme created the focal
point for knowledge production, as it proceeded from a need to know and integrated various
approaches, concepts and frameworks to reflect complexity in situ. As much as un-theorised
practice is unable to respond to complex problems, un-practiced theory is bound by academic
traditions rather than by the search for complex understandings and therefore remains limited.
Both needed each other. We observed first hand student impulses to engage creatively and
thoughtfully through practice to understanding – we were merely part of this larger
professional and life journey.

The theory (critical)/practice (uncritical) dualism is unhelpful in a workbased learning
environment. To frame5 our academic education practice we developed four continua as
practice guiding principles for ourselves, and for students enrolled in workbased degrees:

    1.   process versus product orientation
    2.   investigation versus prescription
    3.   generative themes versus segmented knowledge
    4.   critical thinking versus mystification

These four continua go to the heart of workbased learning for all workers, including
academics.



4
  There is no doubt that post-modernism has challenged notions of grand narratives but it has not been able to undo the
theory/practice divide in the academe.
5
  If we inform our academic practice drawing on Vygotskii’s (1978) and Leont’ev’s (1982) thinking, there is no such thing
as pure mind or pure hand work. According to these influential thinkers, all activity is based in the material world and
mediated through cognitive processes.
7



Anecdote

       When I was a student myself, I had to sign up to a „theory/practice seminar‟ for two years,
       which involved team based practice as educators in professional development programs for
       child care and youth workers. Our practice led us to choose discipline based offers at our
       Uni, across a broad social science spectrum, ranging from educational to sociological to
       psychological courses. We explored research methodologies, philosophical and ethical
       issues, political and economic aspects, communication and design. The point was, those
       course were organised around our field of practice, to respond to our need to understand and
       develop strategies for our next encounter with our „clientele‟ and as such were utterly
       relevant. At the same time, as student/practitioners we were able to ask pertinent questions of
       academics, who were also practitioners engaging in the same fields. …. And we had to
       produce a minor thesis to be able to graduate form an undergraduate degree.



Practice, including WBL, as a site of interpretation

In order to talk about practice, we needed to introduce the idea that hierarchies of knowledge
based on a (critical) theory/practice/ (uncritical) dualism existed as an invisible curriculum,
and we had to develop strategies that turned the dualism into continua. Work-integrated
learning, field placements, “authentic learning” and personal learning environments are all
really useful approaches to improving the student experience. However, they are typically
used to enliven a theory-lead curriculum; or to tentatively allow students to engage in practice
in a controlled and limited way.

Anecdote:

       I recall when one of the large Sydney universities announced they were going to introduce a
       mandated subject for all undergraduate students who would be required to do volunteer work
       as a subject in their degree. No mention was made of valuing the voluntary labour many
       students may have already undertaken on their own cognisance, or of a mechanism that might
       allow any student to register the learning outcomes that the university aspired to achieve
       through their voluntary labour. All that counted was voluntary labour manufactured within
       the codification offered (and advertised) by the university.


We began this presentation by making reference to three honorary doctorates awarded to
Justice Michael Kirby, a worthy recipient, in 2008 and 2009. We did this to point out in the
simplest way possible that Australian universities do value practice achieved through
recognition. Justice Kirby‟s workbased learning over many years was judged by three
universities to be equivalent to (more likely exceeding) a doctorate. The statement produced
by the University of Melbourne supported the awarding of the doctorate by interpreting
8



Justice Kirby‟s practice by making reference to his career highlights, his increasingly
prestigious appointments, awards, and service. At the upper end of the hierarchy of
knowledge, we know how to interpret practice – Justice Kirby is tertiary qualified, and his
contribution to the law and society has been exemplary. That is why it is equated to a
doctorate.

The underlying principle remains useful – universities are able to value and interpret practice
for the purposes of a qualification. Whether acknowledged or not, students more generally
are adults for whom formal university studies take place within diverse and complex lives –
of course not to the extent of Justice Kirby‟s and the awarding of a doctorate, but
nevertheless developing practice through work and life. Let‟s look at some statistics. In 2009,
the Australian Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEET)
released the enrolment statistics of all students by age group and broad level of course. One
million adults aspired to enrol in an Australian University in 2009. According to DEET‟s
figures, the total number of students enrolled in all Undergraduate (UG) courses in public
universities in Australia in 2009 (excluding enabling and non-award courses) was 790,810
(DEET, 2009). Of this total, 13% were aged over 30 years old (100,633); 9.5% were aged 25-
29 (75,032); 45% were aged 20-25 (358,398). A total of 67.5% of all UG students enrolled in
Australian Universities were aged over 20 years old and were legally “adults”, and of these
22.5% were aged over 25 years. Only 140,466 or 18% were under 18 years old. University
students are not all seventeen or eighteen year olds straight from school, but adults who will
have aspirations, life experiences, learning journeys and spaces, outside the institution.

Students come to their University studies from somewhere, going somewhere. Jackson (2010)
argued that a university can change its “conception of curriculum” (p.496), and discusses
how this has unfolded at Surrey University (UK) through the development of a “life-wide
learning award” that values workplace learning curriculum, new learning through part-time
work and volunteering, and experiential learning gained through “life wide enterprise” gained
outside the academic curriculum. The award recognizes the learning spaces in which students
engage in learning, and the “building blocks of an epistemology of practice (Raeline 2007,
cited in Jackson, p.495) achieved in those spaces. This approach to curriculum reform is
qualitatively different to reforms that attempt to “improve the student experience” without
changing the university‟s conceptions of curriculum.
9



Whether we design a work-integrated, workbased or a recognition curriculum, we ask
students to interpret their practice – for example, as a narrative of understanding, through the
lens of theory, through a rubric, as assessments. This approach to learning changes what is
required of us, as academics, in relationship to a student‟s practice and their productive
labour more generally. We can no longer privilege a textbook chapter or a pet theory derived
from a favoured discipline in order to work with students to translate their practice into a
genre that can then be used for assessment.

Anecdote:

       In 2005 I did some part-time teaching for a large city university. The subject I was teaching
       was “Program Development” in a Bachelor of Adult and Vocational Education. The policy of
       the course, and one of the theoretical stances of the subject, was that program development
       should be responsive to a student‟s prior learning. As mature aged students with substantial
       post-compulsory program development experience, at least a third of the class could have
       taught the subject just as well as I could. When I referred these students to the Course
       Coordinator with a request for Recognition of Prior Learning to exempt them from the
       subject, their requests were denied. They were told they had not studied the textbook assigned
       to the subject, and could not therefore show they knew the theory of program development.
       The rationale was that they knew the practice, but we (the university) knew the theory, and
       the theory could only be found in this single textbook.


Justice Kirby did not have to articulate his life‟s work in relationship to a discipline or set of
disciplines. He did not have to refer to seminal works nor compartmentalise his lifewide and
lifelong learning into assessments that responded to textbooks that had been privileged. The
University of Melbourne interpreted his achievements through a portfolio of evidence against
a policy framework related to excellence as a quality.

The act of translation does not lie in the hands of students alone. As we pointed out through
our example of Justice Kirby, the act of translation lies also in the hands of the academe. In
the case of our workbased degrees, we had to translate what we were doing in relationship to
policy, and to our peers, and to try to find models within the university that could create
precedence for our innovations. Academics working with students in the context of practice
must engage in acts of interpretation in ways that are totally different to teaching content,
then marking an essay. They need to be able to

       value practice as holding the potential for praxis
       recognise theorised practice, and value theory formation
       recognise rigour in the practice-domain
       recognise “graduateness” and graduate attributes in the practice-domain
       recognise equivalence
10



       recognise criticality through its many iterations as action and activism
       foster learning in the context of practice-domains, including academic practice-domains


Conclusion

In this presentation we have outlined aspects of our approach and some of our experience
with workbased learning in higher education, told from within the small window of
opportunity that presented itself in the tumultuous years of accelerated change and continuous
restructuring of universities in the 1990s and the first decade of the twenty first century. We
briefly outlined what we mean when we talk about “practice” and outlined the problems
posed by the (critical) theory/ (uncritical) practice dualism that characterises a great deal of
academic talk about practice.

Valuing and interpreting practice, including work as a practice-domain, lies at the heart of
workbased learning. Our approach to integrating and interpreting practice/praxis benefitted
traditional and “non-traditional” students (now often referred to as lower SES students),
academics and industry partners we worked with at the time. These achievements were
possible because of the way we perceived, valued, recognised and problematised practice,
including our own. Work as learning creates a deeply authentic and connected curriculum not
only to Higher Education, but also to productive labour more generally. It demands a
different way of thinking about practice from the point of view of the academic, and the
academe.

Since our work in workbased learning, the sector has moved on and is experimenting with
different work related models, often at the individual subject level. As far as we know,
workbased learning – that is, learning where work is the curriculum – is yet to be accepted
beyond a few local examples by the Australian HE sector. Perhaps the widely adopted “work
integrated learning” model made popular during the Australian Learning and Teaching
Council era is one small step towards a more radical understanding of what it means to
theorise practice and to practice theory to achieve praxis? Our story about Justice Kirby
provided proof of the sector‟s capacity to value practice in its complexity and rigour, in his
case, through recognition. It seems possible that those designing “authentic learning
environments” and “learning spaces” might add to their tool box the capacity to value,
translate and problematise existing authentic learning environments and spaces, designed
11



through and in the life world (Childs and Wagner 2011) and populated by adults, who one
day may be students?

Finally we return to a claim we made at the beginning, and expand it a little – life and work is
more complex and potentially more thoughtful than a single undergraduate or postgraduate
semester long subject – and perhaps even an entire undergraduate or postgraduate degree.
Some final questions: What do you think about our proposition? Have you thought about
rigour from the point of view of practice? What might it mean in the context of the practice-
domains with which you work? What are its characteristics, and how might it sit comfortably
along a continuum with academic rigour? Do you value practice? If you do; how? Does the
value you place on practice benefit the student/novices and student/experts with whom you
work? How do you interpret practice within the rubrics available to you? Do you think, by
and large, practice is uncritical and needs theory to make it critical? What blindness does this
create for you, as you work with students and design learning environments?



Anecdote – what else is possible?

        In 2000 and 2001, we facilitated a workbased graduate diploma in education change
        management with staff of the Ministry of Education who became interested in the concept‟s
        applicability to schools. In a lecture, I used the „Tvind‟ example. Tvind, an experimental High
        school in Denmark did not teach classroom based curricula but used all activities required to
        keep a residential school running as learning sites. Students were engaged in grounds,
        vehicle and building maintenance (curriculum areas: biology, technology, design, physics,
        mathematics, mechanics); financial management (curriculum areas: budgeting, accounting,
        statistics), catering (curriculum areas: health, nutrition, communication, planning,
        measuring, stock maintenance), organisational management and development (curriculum
        areas; social studies, conflict resolution, internal and external partnership management,
        marketing), entertainment (curriculum areas: performing arts, sports, travel and tourism).
        Over several years, the majority of students passed the national matriculation exam with
        flying colours and then went on a twelve months bus trip around Europe, as part of the
        school‟s curriculum, to experience cultural diversity and assist in community projects.
        Interestingly enough, the Iranian Ministry of Education was interested in the concept; alas we
        were interrupted by 9/11.



References

Childs, M. (ed.) (1997) A slight breathing space. A guide to working with micro and small to medium
business enterprises for adult educators and the VET sector. University of Western Sydney Nepean.
12



Childs, M and Wagner, R. (2011). „Beyond The Look – Viral Learning Spaces as Contemporary
      Learning Environments‟. In Mike Keppell, Kay Souter, Matthew Riddle [Eds], Physical and
      Virtual Learning Spaces in Higher Education: Concepts for the Modern Learning Environment,
      Information Science Publishing, Hershey, pp.33-50.

Childs, M. and Wagner, R. (2010) Rethinking margin and centre in student equity in higher
      education: The sound of viral learning spaces: voices from praxis2nd Annual Student Equity in
      Higher Education national Conference, Melbourne October 2010.

Constable,J., Wagner,R., Childs,M. Natoli, A. (2004) Doctors become Taxi Drivers. Recognising
      Skills – not as easy as it sounds.
      http://www.dpc.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0008/25577/Recognising_Skills_-
      _not_as_easy_as_it_sounds.pdf

DEEWR (2009). Students: Selected Higher Education Statistics, Accessed February 22nd 2011,
http://www.deewr.gov.au/HigherEducation/Publications/HEStatistics/Publications/Pages/2009FullYe
ar.aspx


Fox, Tricia A. (2005) Adult learning and recognition of prior learning: The 'white elephant' in
      Australian universities. Australian Journal of Adult Learning, 54(3), pp. 352-370.

Jackson, N. (2010) From a curriculum that integrates work to a curriculum that integrates life:
      changing a university's conceptions of curriculum. Higher Education Research &
      Development; Oct2010, Vol. 29 Issue 5, pp491-505

Leont‟ev, A.N. (1982) Action, cognition and personality, Weinheim, Beltz. (in German)

Pitman, T. (2010). The use of recognition of prior learning in the Australian higher education sector.
        In Proceedings Western Australian Institute for Educational Research Forum 2010.
        http://www.waier.org.au/forums/2010/pitman.html

Press releases (Justice Kirby) http://www.watoday.com.au/wa-news/retired-judge-spotlights-mallard-
20090317-90wl.html 2009 http://www.vu.edu.au/media/media-releases/michael-kirby-to-receive-
honorary-degree-tomorrow 2008 http://www.unsw.edu.au/news/pad/articles/2008/sep/Kirby.html;
Statement of claim: http://www.unimelb.edu.au/unisec/calendar/honcausa/citation/kirby.pdf

Pretorius, J. W. M. Translation (2008) of Chapter 1, Sociopedagogics as a science, from Opvoeding,
        Samelewing, Jeug, J. L. van Schaik,Pretoria, 1979.Accessed 1st November 2011,
        http://georgeyonge.net/sites/georgeyonge.net/files/Pretorius_socio_Ch1.pdf

Vygotskii, L.S. (1978) Mind in society: the development of higher psychological processes,
       Cambridge, Harvard University Press.

Wagner, R. (Ed) (2003) Recognition of Prior Learning in Higher Education and the Australian
    Labour Market. The case of skilled migrants and refugees. ISBN 186341 824 5, 90

Wagner, R. and Childs, M. (2006) Exclusionary narratives as barriers to the recognition of
    qualifications, skills and experience – a case of skilled migrants in Australia, Studies in
    Continuing Education, 28 (1) 49-62.
13



Wagner, R. and Childs, M. (2005) Critical social pedagogy: Colliding with neo-liberal education
      management, International Congress for Social Education, Barcelona, March .
      http://www.eduso.net/archivos/iiicongreso/31.pdf

Wagner, R. and Childs, M. (2000) Workbased learning and the academic workplace. Working
      Knowledge: Productive Learning at Work, International Conference, UTS, Sydney. pp551-
      559.

Wagner, R .and Childs, M (2000a) Workbased learning as critical social pedagogy, 3rd National
    Conference of the Australian Vocational Education and Training Research Assoc. (AVETRA),
            Canberra, February 2000.
            http://www.avetra.org.au/abstracts_and_papers_2000/mc_rw_full.pdf


Addendum

An excerpt summarising the approach of the speakers; taken from Solomon, N. & Boud, D.
2011, 'Researching workplace learning in Australia', in M. Malloch, L. Cairns, K. Evans & B.
O'Connor (eds), The SAGE Handbpook of workplace learning, SAGE Publications, London,
pp. 210-223:
As RPL has been a strong feature of work-based learning degrees, some academics involved in the
development and delivery of these degrees have focused their research on knowledge and learning
that crosses institutional boundaries. Working within a social justice and social participation
framework, the research of Regine Wagner (RMIT, formerly of University of Western Sydney) and
Merilyn Childs (Charles Sturt University, formerly of University of Western Sydney) has contributed
to pedagogical practices in educational institutions in recognition to recognition of prior learning
(Wagner, 2007; Wagner and Childs, 2006; Childs et al 2002) and post-graduate work-based degrees
(Wagner et al., 2001). They have also researched the nexus of work, learning and social change in
industrial settings such as fire fighting (Childs, 2006, 2005), community service and private
organisations. Central to their work is a questioning of the way higher education institutions act as
gatekeepers and mediators of social, educational and labour market change. More recently they have
focused on critical social pedagogy at the nexus of work and learning within the professional practice
of university learning and teaching (Childs and Wagner 2010). They define critical social pedagogy
approach as „the application of an inter-disciplinary action focus with the aim to balance power
inequities and economic, social and political disadvantage”. This particular take on social pedagogy
adds a cohesive critical theoretical f framework to the activist and pragmatic traditions of social
pedagogy in the nineteenth and early twentieth century (p.219, bold in original).
14

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Interpreting Practice in Work-Based Learning

  • 1. 1 Informa Work Based Learning Forum 22nd – 23rd November 2011 | Vibe Savoy Melbourne Interpreting practice Merilyn Childs and Regine Wagner1 Honorary Doctorate awarded to retired High Court judge Michael Kirby (UNSW 2008, Murdoch University 2009, Victoria University 2009) Abstract A number of speakers before us have defined practice, and talked about workbased learning from a number of perspectives. Rather than duplicating this focus, we will instead share some of our thinking about practice and workbased learning, drawing from our own practices. During 1994-2007 we established four postgraduate degrees at the University of Western Sydney, supported by a Recognition of Prior Learning entry process. These were the Graduate Diploma of Educational Leadership, offered to students in Iraq and in Alice Springs; the Graduate Diploma of Social Sciences (Community Services) offered in partnership with the centre for Community Welfare Training and the Australian Children‟s Welfare Agency, the Graduate Diploma of Social Sciences (Adult Education), offered through open enrolment; and the Graduate Certificate of Social Sciences (Emergency Services), developed in partnership with the NSW Fire Brigades as the promotional program for Station Officers developing job readiness for the role as Inspector. The first two were workbased degrees, the latter two were work-integrated degrees. In addition, in 2002-3 we were funded by the NSW Office of the Director of Equal Opportunity in Public Employment (ODEOPE) to develop a recognition process to enable migrants attempting to enter employment in the public sector to articulate their prior knowledge and experiences in the contexts of work and Higher Education learning. For these various projects, work was defined as curriculum and was expansively understood as a 1 Affiliations: Associate Professor of Higher Education, Dr Merilyn Childs, Deputy Director of the Flexible Learning Institute, Charles Sturt University mchilds@csu.edu.au and Associate Professor and Visiting Fellow, Dr Regine Wagner, Flexible Learning Institute, Charles Sturt University rwagner@csu.edu.au
  • 2. 2 metaphor for productive labour. For example, “work” encompassed relevant paid or unpaid labour, and included individual as well as socially mediated evidence. Central to our response to “work” was our commitment to interpreting practice. We began with a simple proposition – life and work is more complex and potentially more thoughtful than a single undergraduate or postgraduate semester long subject. Our task then was to establish strategies whereby that complexity could be understood, expanded, theorised and evidenced. In this presentation we outline our approach, and a number of the strategies we used to develop university degrees at the nexus of work and learning. In our presentation, we‟ll draw on some anecdotes from our practice, and some of these you‟ll see throughout this paper. Demystifying academic practice We‟d like to give a brief indication about the meaning we give to words like “practice” and “work” by saying that, by these words we are referring to “productive labour”; and by “productive” we are meaning economically, socially, democratically productive labour. We are influenced by the German concept of Sozialpaädagogik2; which means we think about “practice” in relationship to “working on and in the social” (a social-societal orientation, Pretoriaus 2008, p.5) and this includes working on and in the social in the context of paid labour, voluntary labour, or socially productive activity. In particular it is concerned with the inherent connectivity between learning, social actions and socially just futures. Humans are not machines, and all human labour exists within, and shapes, multiple, complex and socially connected worlds even when fire fighting! So often within the academe in Australia, “practice” is portrayed as the (lesser?) labour done by paid professionals and para-professionals, outside the academe. Anecdote A week ago I heard an academic refer to the work of paramedics as “doing what they are told to do”. It‟s not the first time I‟ve heard this kind of claim, and some academics seem to genuinely believe that work with the hands – operational work – can be done without the mind. Clearly they have limited understanding about the complex nature of paramedic practice, even when it involves novice paramedics. They simply see Standard Operating 2 In 2000, we wrote: “Although spoken of as educational innovation, WBL has a long history of experimentation and the educational concepts and practices described as workplace learning and WBL have a rich epistemological tradition in debates about * the relationship between education and the economy * the relationship of theory and practice in education processes * the dualism of education and training and associated social and institutional divisions (Wagner and Childs, 2000, p.1).
  • 3. 3 Procedures, and imagine all paramedics do is follow orders. Or fire fighters just have to “put the wet stuff on the red stuff”. It just isn‟t that simple. We offer the word “lesser” because practice is often associated with “un” words like: uncritical, un-theorised, and under-developed (un-thinking-ly meaning “with the hands”). The work academics do is often associated with positive words such as: seminal, critical, evidence-based, and peer-reviewed (done insightfully, guided by the mind). It is as if academics are not in the labour force or even the same landscape as students; and “practice” is the thing other people do. It is the activity undergraduates learn to do after a three year degree, although even then it may be “uncritical” practice. In our experience, this assumed superiority creates blindness within the university to understanding and working with practice. Anecdote: I attended a Professor‟s Forum at which education for practice was being discussed. The question of great interest was how the university might ensure that disciplinary rigour might be applied to practice. I asked if the model they were discussing allowed them to understand rigour from the perspective of practice. For example, how was “rigour” characterised within the practice domain by those practicing within it? How did a particular domain of practice foster criticality? How did it foster its evidence-base? How was new knowledge – for example, as derived from university research – taken up and used within the practice- domain? There was a long silence. The conversation returned to a discussion about disciplinary knowledge. In order to engage in meaningful ways with “practice”, we needed to see our own practice as existing within the same rubrics, hierarchies and continuums as practice more generally. This allowed us to understand that statements we made about practice were automatically statements we were making about academic practice. If we asked students to interrogate and expand their understanding of their practice; – then so too should we, in the academe. The academic practices we worked to demystify (Wagner & Childs, 2000) included: the relationship between work and learning; the subject; student contact hours with the subject; critical thinking; assessment; and the role of the academic in a critically engaged learning process. If we argued that reflective practice was important, then it had to be important as applied to academic practice. If we argued that through their workbased projects, students might mitigate or militate against structural disadvantage for their clients; then so too should the academe in their practice. If we heard our colleagues say “we need to improve professional practice in the xxx industry”; then we automatically took this to mean “and to do this, we need to improve academic practice”.
  • 4. 4 Students enrolled in the workbased degrees completed a workbased project that was either a session long (Graduate Certificate) or yearlong (Graduate Diploma). As work was defined as the curriculum, and a project was defined as the learning process, the project needed to be highly relevant – and so too did the assessment practices. Learning evolved through three thematic stages (as distinct from the completion of single, potentially unrelated subjects). These stages were: describing practice during which student articulated their professional “known” through narrative and other forms problematising practice during which students posed questions about their practice through a variety of lenses, including appropriately chosen readings re-shaping praxis during which students made recommendations and articulated frameworks for future practice at the nexus of “the word” (critical thinking, speculation, theory formation) and “the world” (practice domains) In order for these stages to make sense in relationship to academic practice, we needed to make a number of structural changes to our work, and this meant we had to understand our own practice; see the systemic and pedagogical problems and learn more about how to solve them; and re-shape our praxis. Anecdote When we designed the first postgraduate workbased program we were faced with some real problems. We had a series of individual subjects which required at least two assessment items per subject. There were four subjects in a session, and this meant eight separate assessment tasks. Broken up in this way suited academic practice, but bore no relationship to the world of work of community services professionals in Alice Springs – a world a great deal more complex and dynamic than single subjects in a university degree; yet needing new ideas and possibilities to solve real problems on the ground. We problematised our practice, integrated the learning outcomes across all four subjects, and created a learning process and assessment practices that allowed us to meet university workload, student load, and assessment requirements; whilst similarly responding respectfully to the practices of students who were adult workers in their own social contexts. Hierarchies of knowledge and knowing We made a claim at the beginning – that life and work is more complex and potentially more thoughtful than a single undergraduate or postgraduate semester long subject. This doesn‟t sound like a very big claim, but in our experience it turns out that it is. From inside a discipline, even if words like “multi” and “cross” are added to it; the discipline seems very complex. (Those involved in professional practice will have the same experience about their
  • 5. 5 own practice-domain). So, we specialise; and as part of this specialisation, we create individual subjects that bite off a small part of the complex disciplinary picture in order to provide students with that one small coloured dot that we specialise in, that contributes to the whole picture. These coloured dots make up subjects, typically about 24 in an undergraduate degree over a 3 year full-time period. These subjects, through the student experience of them, build disciplinary or professional capacity. In the process of creating the “bits”, we rely on hierarchies. Some bits are seen as more important than others, so we have first, second and third years. Some bits are more complex than others, so we have 5,000 word essays rather than 2,000 word essays. We have theory, and generally speaking this comes before and certainly above practice in our curriculum hierarchy. In our experience at least – all of the bits, even the first year, first semester bits taken by experience professionals who are experts in their own right – are seen as more important and more complex than practice. We know this, because whilst some Australian Universities may give credit for prior formal studies; credit for prior professional practice, lifewide and informal lifelong learning remains in a poor state of development3. Over the years we have participated in academic conversations based on a number of underlying and historic assumptions about the theory/practice relationship, and these can be summed up as: Students need to learn theory before they can practice Theory should be applied to practice Theory is more rigorous than practice Practice is un-theorised unless it has been interrogated through university studies Theory is typically privileged, and celebrated, for example, through mandatory text books that form the basis of a learning process; learning in many subjects remains structured in line with the chapters of a textbook. Theory is seen as systematic, ordered, abstracted and tested; universal therefore applicable to practice, and of its very nature critical. Practice on the other hand is seen as un-systematic, not tested by peer review or experiment, context bound, and of 3 Although Pitman argued in 2010 that “29 out of 38 public universities in Australia accepted RPL for the purposes of admission and/or credit”, he does not differentiate policy for RPL, and the actual practice of RPL, described by others as inadequate and patchy (eg Fox, 2007).
  • 6. 6 its very nature uncritical4. This latter assumption seems to be held without any understanding of practice-rigour either through research or anecdote. Anecdote: When I was working as an educational innovator in a Mathematical faculty at a German university, I asked the academics working in “Applied Mathematics” what type of work and workplaces their students would go to. Not only did they not know, they did not see it as their responsibility to prepare their students for work, they were „training‟ Mathematicians. In the end, we did develop a course “Mathematics and the Environment”, aimed at taking a first step into “applied” studies. As academics working in workbased degrees, we were repeatedly confronted with the obvious need to draw on multiple disciplines to develop, with students, an analysis of their work problems and strategies to move forward. We experienced firsthand the limitations of any one disciplinary approach. We realised how work as a generative theme created the focal point for knowledge production, as it proceeded from a need to know and integrated various approaches, concepts and frameworks to reflect complexity in situ. As much as un-theorised practice is unable to respond to complex problems, un-practiced theory is bound by academic traditions rather than by the search for complex understandings and therefore remains limited. Both needed each other. We observed first hand student impulses to engage creatively and thoughtfully through practice to understanding – we were merely part of this larger professional and life journey. The theory (critical)/practice (uncritical) dualism is unhelpful in a workbased learning environment. To frame5 our academic education practice we developed four continua as practice guiding principles for ourselves, and for students enrolled in workbased degrees: 1. process versus product orientation 2. investigation versus prescription 3. generative themes versus segmented knowledge 4. critical thinking versus mystification These four continua go to the heart of workbased learning for all workers, including academics. 4 There is no doubt that post-modernism has challenged notions of grand narratives but it has not been able to undo the theory/practice divide in the academe. 5 If we inform our academic practice drawing on Vygotskii’s (1978) and Leont’ev’s (1982) thinking, there is no such thing as pure mind or pure hand work. According to these influential thinkers, all activity is based in the material world and mediated through cognitive processes.
  • 7. 7 Anecdote When I was a student myself, I had to sign up to a „theory/practice seminar‟ for two years, which involved team based practice as educators in professional development programs for child care and youth workers. Our practice led us to choose discipline based offers at our Uni, across a broad social science spectrum, ranging from educational to sociological to psychological courses. We explored research methodologies, philosophical and ethical issues, political and economic aspects, communication and design. The point was, those course were organised around our field of practice, to respond to our need to understand and develop strategies for our next encounter with our „clientele‟ and as such were utterly relevant. At the same time, as student/practitioners we were able to ask pertinent questions of academics, who were also practitioners engaging in the same fields. …. And we had to produce a minor thesis to be able to graduate form an undergraduate degree. Practice, including WBL, as a site of interpretation In order to talk about practice, we needed to introduce the idea that hierarchies of knowledge based on a (critical) theory/practice/ (uncritical) dualism existed as an invisible curriculum, and we had to develop strategies that turned the dualism into continua. Work-integrated learning, field placements, “authentic learning” and personal learning environments are all really useful approaches to improving the student experience. However, they are typically used to enliven a theory-lead curriculum; or to tentatively allow students to engage in practice in a controlled and limited way. Anecdote: I recall when one of the large Sydney universities announced they were going to introduce a mandated subject for all undergraduate students who would be required to do volunteer work as a subject in their degree. No mention was made of valuing the voluntary labour many students may have already undertaken on their own cognisance, or of a mechanism that might allow any student to register the learning outcomes that the university aspired to achieve through their voluntary labour. All that counted was voluntary labour manufactured within the codification offered (and advertised) by the university. We began this presentation by making reference to three honorary doctorates awarded to Justice Michael Kirby, a worthy recipient, in 2008 and 2009. We did this to point out in the simplest way possible that Australian universities do value practice achieved through recognition. Justice Kirby‟s workbased learning over many years was judged by three universities to be equivalent to (more likely exceeding) a doctorate. The statement produced by the University of Melbourne supported the awarding of the doctorate by interpreting
  • 8. 8 Justice Kirby‟s practice by making reference to his career highlights, his increasingly prestigious appointments, awards, and service. At the upper end of the hierarchy of knowledge, we know how to interpret practice – Justice Kirby is tertiary qualified, and his contribution to the law and society has been exemplary. That is why it is equated to a doctorate. The underlying principle remains useful – universities are able to value and interpret practice for the purposes of a qualification. Whether acknowledged or not, students more generally are adults for whom formal university studies take place within diverse and complex lives – of course not to the extent of Justice Kirby‟s and the awarding of a doctorate, but nevertheless developing practice through work and life. Let‟s look at some statistics. In 2009, the Australian Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEET) released the enrolment statistics of all students by age group and broad level of course. One million adults aspired to enrol in an Australian University in 2009. According to DEET‟s figures, the total number of students enrolled in all Undergraduate (UG) courses in public universities in Australia in 2009 (excluding enabling and non-award courses) was 790,810 (DEET, 2009). Of this total, 13% were aged over 30 years old (100,633); 9.5% were aged 25- 29 (75,032); 45% were aged 20-25 (358,398). A total of 67.5% of all UG students enrolled in Australian Universities were aged over 20 years old and were legally “adults”, and of these 22.5% were aged over 25 years. Only 140,466 or 18% were under 18 years old. University students are not all seventeen or eighteen year olds straight from school, but adults who will have aspirations, life experiences, learning journeys and spaces, outside the institution. Students come to their University studies from somewhere, going somewhere. Jackson (2010) argued that a university can change its “conception of curriculum” (p.496), and discusses how this has unfolded at Surrey University (UK) through the development of a “life-wide learning award” that values workplace learning curriculum, new learning through part-time work and volunteering, and experiential learning gained through “life wide enterprise” gained outside the academic curriculum. The award recognizes the learning spaces in which students engage in learning, and the “building blocks of an epistemology of practice (Raeline 2007, cited in Jackson, p.495) achieved in those spaces. This approach to curriculum reform is qualitatively different to reforms that attempt to “improve the student experience” without changing the university‟s conceptions of curriculum.
  • 9. 9 Whether we design a work-integrated, workbased or a recognition curriculum, we ask students to interpret their practice – for example, as a narrative of understanding, through the lens of theory, through a rubric, as assessments. This approach to learning changes what is required of us, as academics, in relationship to a student‟s practice and their productive labour more generally. We can no longer privilege a textbook chapter or a pet theory derived from a favoured discipline in order to work with students to translate their practice into a genre that can then be used for assessment. Anecdote: In 2005 I did some part-time teaching for a large city university. The subject I was teaching was “Program Development” in a Bachelor of Adult and Vocational Education. The policy of the course, and one of the theoretical stances of the subject, was that program development should be responsive to a student‟s prior learning. As mature aged students with substantial post-compulsory program development experience, at least a third of the class could have taught the subject just as well as I could. When I referred these students to the Course Coordinator with a request for Recognition of Prior Learning to exempt them from the subject, their requests were denied. They were told they had not studied the textbook assigned to the subject, and could not therefore show they knew the theory of program development. The rationale was that they knew the practice, but we (the university) knew the theory, and the theory could only be found in this single textbook. Justice Kirby did not have to articulate his life‟s work in relationship to a discipline or set of disciplines. He did not have to refer to seminal works nor compartmentalise his lifewide and lifelong learning into assessments that responded to textbooks that had been privileged. The University of Melbourne interpreted his achievements through a portfolio of evidence against a policy framework related to excellence as a quality. The act of translation does not lie in the hands of students alone. As we pointed out through our example of Justice Kirby, the act of translation lies also in the hands of the academe. In the case of our workbased degrees, we had to translate what we were doing in relationship to policy, and to our peers, and to try to find models within the university that could create precedence for our innovations. Academics working with students in the context of practice must engage in acts of interpretation in ways that are totally different to teaching content, then marking an essay. They need to be able to value practice as holding the potential for praxis recognise theorised practice, and value theory formation recognise rigour in the practice-domain recognise “graduateness” and graduate attributes in the practice-domain recognise equivalence
  • 10. 10 recognise criticality through its many iterations as action and activism foster learning in the context of practice-domains, including academic practice-domains Conclusion In this presentation we have outlined aspects of our approach and some of our experience with workbased learning in higher education, told from within the small window of opportunity that presented itself in the tumultuous years of accelerated change and continuous restructuring of universities in the 1990s and the first decade of the twenty first century. We briefly outlined what we mean when we talk about “practice” and outlined the problems posed by the (critical) theory/ (uncritical) practice dualism that characterises a great deal of academic talk about practice. Valuing and interpreting practice, including work as a practice-domain, lies at the heart of workbased learning. Our approach to integrating and interpreting practice/praxis benefitted traditional and “non-traditional” students (now often referred to as lower SES students), academics and industry partners we worked with at the time. These achievements were possible because of the way we perceived, valued, recognised and problematised practice, including our own. Work as learning creates a deeply authentic and connected curriculum not only to Higher Education, but also to productive labour more generally. It demands a different way of thinking about practice from the point of view of the academic, and the academe. Since our work in workbased learning, the sector has moved on and is experimenting with different work related models, often at the individual subject level. As far as we know, workbased learning – that is, learning where work is the curriculum – is yet to be accepted beyond a few local examples by the Australian HE sector. Perhaps the widely adopted “work integrated learning” model made popular during the Australian Learning and Teaching Council era is one small step towards a more radical understanding of what it means to theorise practice and to practice theory to achieve praxis? Our story about Justice Kirby provided proof of the sector‟s capacity to value practice in its complexity and rigour, in his case, through recognition. It seems possible that those designing “authentic learning environments” and “learning spaces” might add to their tool box the capacity to value, translate and problematise existing authentic learning environments and spaces, designed
  • 11. 11 through and in the life world (Childs and Wagner 2011) and populated by adults, who one day may be students? Finally we return to a claim we made at the beginning, and expand it a little – life and work is more complex and potentially more thoughtful than a single undergraduate or postgraduate semester long subject – and perhaps even an entire undergraduate or postgraduate degree. Some final questions: What do you think about our proposition? Have you thought about rigour from the point of view of practice? What might it mean in the context of the practice- domains with which you work? What are its characteristics, and how might it sit comfortably along a continuum with academic rigour? Do you value practice? If you do; how? Does the value you place on practice benefit the student/novices and student/experts with whom you work? How do you interpret practice within the rubrics available to you? Do you think, by and large, practice is uncritical and needs theory to make it critical? What blindness does this create for you, as you work with students and design learning environments? Anecdote – what else is possible? In 2000 and 2001, we facilitated a workbased graduate diploma in education change management with staff of the Ministry of Education who became interested in the concept‟s applicability to schools. In a lecture, I used the „Tvind‟ example. Tvind, an experimental High school in Denmark did not teach classroom based curricula but used all activities required to keep a residential school running as learning sites. Students were engaged in grounds, vehicle and building maintenance (curriculum areas: biology, technology, design, physics, mathematics, mechanics); financial management (curriculum areas: budgeting, accounting, statistics), catering (curriculum areas: health, nutrition, communication, planning, measuring, stock maintenance), organisational management and development (curriculum areas; social studies, conflict resolution, internal and external partnership management, marketing), entertainment (curriculum areas: performing arts, sports, travel and tourism). Over several years, the majority of students passed the national matriculation exam with flying colours and then went on a twelve months bus trip around Europe, as part of the school‟s curriculum, to experience cultural diversity and assist in community projects. Interestingly enough, the Iranian Ministry of Education was interested in the concept; alas we were interrupted by 9/11. References Childs, M. (ed.) (1997) A slight breathing space. A guide to working with micro and small to medium business enterprises for adult educators and the VET sector. University of Western Sydney Nepean.
  • 12. 12 Childs, M and Wagner, R. (2011). „Beyond The Look – Viral Learning Spaces as Contemporary Learning Environments‟. In Mike Keppell, Kay Souter, Matthew Riddle [Eds], Physical and Virtual Learning Spaces in Higher Education: Concepts for the Modern Learning Environment, Information Science Publishing, Hershey, pp.33-50. Childs, M. and Wagner, R. (2010) Rethinking margin and centre in student equity in higher education: The sound of viral learning spaces: voices from praxis2nd Annual Student Equity in Higher Education national Conference, Melbourne October 2010. Constable,J., Wagner,R., Childs,M. Natoli, A. (2004) Doctors become Taxi Drivers. Recognising Skills – not as easy as it sounds. http://www.dpc.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0008/25577/Recognising_Skills_- _not_as_easy_as_it_sounds.pdf DEEWR (2009). Students: Selected Higher Education Statistics, Accessed February 22nd 2011, http://www.deewr.gov.au/HigherEducation/Publications/HEStatistics/Publications/Pages/2009FullYe ar.aspx Fox, Tricia A. (2005) Adult learning and recognition of prior learning: The 'white elephant' in Australian universities. Australian Journal of Adult Learning, 54(3), pp. 352-370. Jackson, N. (2010) From a curriculum that integrates work to a curriculum that integrates life: changing a university's conceptions of curriculum. Higher Education Research & Development; Oct2010, Vol. 29 Issue 5, pp491-505 Leont‟ev, A.N. (1982) Action, cognition and personality, Weinheim, Beltz. (in German) Pitman, T. (2010). The use of recognition of prior learning in the Australian higher education sector. In Proceedings Western Australian Institute for Educational Research Forum 2010. http://www.waier.org.au/forums/2010/pitman.html Press releases (Justice Kirby) http://www.watoday.com.au/wa-news/retired-judge-spotlights-mallard- 20090317-90wl.html 2009 http://www.vu.edu.au/media/media-releases/michael-kirby-to-receive- honorary-degree-tomorrow 2008 http://www.unsw.edu.au/news/pad/articles/2008/sep/Kirby.html; Statement of claim: http://www.unimelb.edu.au/unisec/calendar/honcausa/citation/kirby.pdf Pretorius, J. W. M. Translation (2008) of Chapter 1, Sociopedagogics as a science, from Opvoeding, Samelewing, Jeug, J. L. van Schaik,Pretoria, 1979.Accessed 1st November 2011, http://georgeyonge.net/sites/georgeyonge.net/files/Pretorius_socio_Ch1.pdf Vygotskii, L.S. (1978) Mind in society: the development of higher psychological processes, Cambridge, Harvard University Press. Wagner, R. (Ed) (2003) Recognition of Prior Learning in Higher Education and the Australian Labour Market. The case of skilled migrants and refugees. ISBN 186341 824 5, 90 Wagner, R. and Childs, M. (2006) Exclusionary narratives as barriers to the recognition of qualifications, skills and experience – a case of skilled migrants in Australia, Studies in Continuing Education, 28 (1) 49-62.
  • 13. 13 Wagner, R. and Childs, M. (2005) Critical social pedagogy: Colliding with neo-liberal education management, International Congress for Social Education, Barcelona, March . http://www.eduso.net/archivos/iiicongreso/31.pdf Wagner, R. and Childs, M. (2000) Workbased learning and the academic workplace. Working Knowledge: Productive Learning at Work, International Conference, UTS, Sydney. pp551- 559. Wagner, R .and Childs, M (2000a) Workbased learning as critical social pedagogy, 3rd National Conference of the Australian Vocational Education and Training Research Assoc. (AVETRA), Canberra, February 2000. http://www.avetra.org.au/abstracts_and_papers_2000/mc_rw_full.pdf Addendum An excerpt summarising the approach of the speakers; taken from Solomon, N. & Boud, D. 2011, 'Researching workplace learning in Australia', in M. Malloch, L. Cairns, K. Evans & B. O'Connor (eds), The SAGE Handbpook of workplace learning, SAGE Publications, London, pp. 210-223: As RPL has been a strong feature of work-based learning degrees, some academics involved in the development and delivery of these degrees have focused their research on knowledge and learning that crosses institutional boundaries. Working within a social justice and social participation framework, the research of Regine Wagner (RMIT, formerly of University of Western Sydney) and Merilyn Childs (Charles Sturt University, formerly of University of Western Sydney) has contributed to pedagogical practices in educational institutions in recognition to recognition of prior learning (Wagner, 2007; Wagner and Childs, 2006; Childs et al 2002) and post-graduate work-based degrees (Wagner et al., 2001). They have also researched the nexus of work, learning and social change in industrial settings such as fire fighting (Childs, 2006, 2005), community service and private organisations. Central to their work is a questioning of the way higher education institutions act as gatekeepers and mediators of social, educational and labour market change. More recently they have focused on critical social pedagogy at the nexus of work and learning within the professional practice of university learning and teaching (Childs and Wagner 2010). They define critical social pedagogy approach as „the application of an inter-disciplinary action focus with the aim to balance power inequities and economic, social and political disadvantage”. This particular take on social pedagogy adds a cohesive critical theoretical f framework to the activist and pragmatic traditions of social pedagogy in the nineteenth and early twentieth century (p.219, bold in original).
  • 14. 14