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Vocational Curriculum and Pedagogy: An Activity Theory Perspective
Author(s) -
Stephen Billett
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
european educational research journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.715
H-Index - 34
ISSN - 1474-9041
DOI - 10.2304/eerj.2003.2.1.11
Subject(s) - vocational education , curriculum , curriculum theory , sociocultural evolution , sociology , pedagogy , social practice , curriculum mapping , curriculum development , national curriculum , engineering ethics , perspective (graphical) , mathematics education , psychology , engineering , computer science , art , artificial intelligence , performance art , anthropology , art history
This article advances a scheme that proposes how curriculum goals and content might be conceptualised for vocational education. The scheme is founded in socio-historical activity theory. An account of the social sources of vocational knowledge (sociogeneses) comprising history, culture and situation is discussed to illuminate how both the canonical requirements of vocational practice and its manifestations in actual practice need to be accounted for in curriculum goals and content. Currently, curriculum frameworks for vocational programmes focus on the sociocultural level of practice (e.g. national competencies, national skills standards). Yet, these fail to account for the actual manifestations and requirements of the vocational practice and how judgements are made about performance. An emphasis on practice as a basis for considering curriculum goals and developing adaptable outcomes is proposed. Vocational Knowledge and Learning This article discusses existing and alternative conceptions of curriculum goals and frameworks for vocational education. Central to the discussion is the need to account for the social genesis of vocational knowledge and the social bases of learning. A conceptual scheme that accounts for the sociogenesis of vocational knowledge is proposed. It comprises historical and sociocultural sources of vocational knowledge and its ultimate manifestation in particular workplaces. Having described the sources of knowledge and their construction, the implications for vocational curriculum and learning vocational practice are discussed. The generic kinds of competencies favoured in a number of countries are proposed as reflecting the phylogenetic (evolving history of the species) level of practice, whereas national core curricula existing in many Western countries are representative of practice at the sociocultural level. However, these focuses are not helpful in understanding the requirements for practice and providing bases for robust or transferable goals

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