Adult literacy teaching in Australia Rethinking occupational knowledge
This chapter explores the effects of rapid changes in adult literacy provision when a new culture of competency-based workplace training was introduced into Australian workplaces during a period of major industrial reform in the 1990s. Adult literacy provision can be identified by funding source (Co...
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Published in | Learning and Work and the Politics of Working Life pp. 173 - 186 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Book Chapter |
Language | English |
Published |
London
Routledge
2010
|
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | This chapter explores the effects of rapid changes in adult literacy provision when
a new culture of competency-based workplace training was introduced into
Australian workplaces during a period of major industrial reform in the 1990s.
Adult literacy provision can be identified by funding source (Commonwealth/state
government and industry/community), location (schools, universities, vocational
education and training institutes, workplaces and community centres), the curriculum framework in use and at times the industrial/university qualifications of the
teacher. These parameters help to define an occupation – adult literacy work – and
the knowledge base associated with that work. However, as I show below, these
boundaries are anything but definitive. |
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Bibliography: | Learning and Work and the Politics of Working Life: Global Transformations and Collective Identities in Teaching, Nursing and Social Work. Seddon, Terri; Henriksson, Lea and Niemeyer, Beatrix (eds). London: Routledge, 2010: (157)-169 |
ISBN: | 9780415557535 0415557534 9780415557528 0415557526 |
DOI: | 10.4324/9780203863121-18 |