Archive for April, 2010

Informal learning in apprenticeships

April 2nd, 2010 by Graham Attwell

railway

Photo: James F. Clay

Here is the second in my series on informal learning. This is an extract from a a paper called ‘Rediscovering Apprenticeship?: A Historical Approach’ which I wrote in 1997. The paper, based on an interview with my father, provides a narrative account of an apprenticeship as a coach fitter in the Great Western Railway works in Swindon, England in the 1940s. The full paper can be downloaded at the bottom of this post.

“Apprentices were moved around between the gangs, usually spending about three months with a particular gang before the foreman would move them on. “Although it was not hard and fast we were moved in a fairly organised way. Apprentices always started on No 1 gang, which was a light job based in a siding outside the shop where we had to refurbish drop light windows. This meant removing the drop lights and the mouldings, which would be repaired inside, and then re-glazing the windows prior to fitting them back in the coach. After three months we were moved to a gang that undertook more complex work. The work got a little more complex with each move.

The chargeman for each gang was responsible for telling us what to do. Inside No. 7 shop we were mainly working on a bench. The men working on the next bench would show us how to do each job. When we were working outside the shop we were put with an individual tradesman who would teach us the job. Obviously some were better than others were”.

There was no written curriculum or even a list of skills or tasks that had to be learnt. “What we learnt depended totally on what a particular shop did. In fact our work was similar to a cabinetmaker. We were expected to achieve a tip-top finish. When we were working on the drop lights we would spend a whole day just sand papering – and then often the chargehand would make us do them all again. Time was not a problem – the question was quality”.

There were no written plans or procedures – learning was from practice. “Later I was sent ‘up the line’ to work outside the shop with the door gang. That was where I got my first interest in crossword puzzles. The tradesman was called Ted Quinn”. The door gang was responsible for hanging the interior doors in the carriages. “There is an art to hanging doors and making them slide – a knack to it. We had to screw a quarter inch rod with brackets above the door. The doors hang and rolled along the rod on wheels. If they were too high they would lift off the bottom guide rail, if they were too low they would stick or come off the rollers. Ted Quinn would get it right every time. He was fast enough that he would do a little work, then settle back to his crossword puzzles. If an apprentice mastered the skill he would be kept on the gang but some could never get the knack of it”.

New work, rather than repair and renovation, was highly regarded, mainly because it paid more. One of the best jobs was fitting the interior of compartments. This involved erecting the seats, interior panelling, mirrors, and putting up the net and blinds. Tradesmen would aim to complete one compartment each day. “Apprentices could be seen as a hindrance in this work – if you were not good you could slow the job down.” There were a number of specific skills to be mastered: “The best tradesman was a Hector Neaves. Everyone knew him as ‘one cut Neaves’. He would look at something and then cut a piece of wood which would fit first time nine times out of ten”.

There were no formal tests or assessment, neither was there any requirement to attend school. Those that did go to night-school could study for a National Diploma. This offered the opportunity on completion of apprenticeship to transfer to the Drawing Office, a position that was highly paid and the highest status. Many of the workers in the Drawing Office had passed their 11 plus and stayed on at school until the age of 16 prior to entering an apprenticeship. Few working class students went on to university. Other ‘grammar school boys’ joined the railway as clerks, a position which paid better and where they could “wear clean clothes”. Clerks also worked only 44 hours a week compared with 50 hours for tradesmen and labourers.”

Download the full paper here: apprenticeship_paper

European Summer School on Technology Enhanced Learning

April 2nd, 2010 by Graham Attwell

The 6th Joint European Summer School on Technology Enhanced Learning will take place from Monday, 7th June 2010 to Friday 11th June 2010in Ohrid, Macedonia..
The summer school aims to encourage participants to adopt a critical stance in thinking about the role of technologies in providing opportunities for learners and the potential of these opportunities in terms of learning. Work will centre on three research “Grand Challenges”:

  • Connecting learners
  • Orchestrating learning
  • Contextualising learning environments.

According to the Summer School web site “The summer school provides a learning environment where participants get opportunities to: develop their research skills; increase their knowledge base; collaborate with others in their own and complementary research areas; engage in debate; have access to experts in the field; and discuss their own work.

The call for participation can be found on the web site and the application deadline has been extended to April 9. Grants are available for post graduate students wishing to take part.

Moving from courses to supporting informal learning

April 1st, 2010 by Graham Attwell

This is the first of a series of posts on informal learning. the idea was largely inspired by my trip to Bucharest earlier this week for the launch of a new European funded project on Lifelong Learning. The main aim of the project is to raise awareness of the importance and potential of learning especially in the workplace. Three groups have been identified as being of risk in the labour market – young people with low qualifications, older people with low qualifications and recent  graduates. The project has undertaken a major baseline survey with these groups interviewing some 15000 individuals from the target groups and talking to 120 employers. The results of the survey have only just been compiled so it is too early to draw any proper contusions. A quick glance at the figures reveals a very low percentage of people presently involved in learning with more of the graduates prepared to undertake training if available than the other groups, although showing a marked decline in enthusiasm for training if they have to pay themselves. The early figures also show considerable differences in internet usage between the groups, suggesting that there is a generation gap in ICT skills in Romania. However further analysis is needed particularly to examine sector differences and rural . urban differences. Internet access can still be problematic in some areas of rural Romania.

The project launch consisted of presentations and a workshop. Alongside the Minister of Education were representatives of the Labour ministry, employers and trade union representatives and leading researchers. My colleague Eileen Luebke and myself were the international guests.

You can see my presentation below (although it has few words, I guess you can get the drift of what I was talking about).

The presentation caused a lot of controversy. Previous speakers (and there were a lot!) had assumed that the idea of lifelong learning was to increase access and take up of training courses. Many initiatives had been referred to – to produce a database of courses, quality indicators for courses, second school opportunities for those without qualifications, more flexible courses, credit based qualifications etc. etc. But all were based on the premise that learning is synonymous with formal attendance on a course.

I quoted Jay Cross as saying that some 80 per cent of learning at work is informal and this caused huge interest  so much that I was asked to repeat this for a television news interview. There was also interest in the idea of using the internet to support informal learning and as to how workplaces could be changed to facilitate learning.

So… I think it is time to start putting some of these ideas together. This morning I launched a shout out on Twitter for any research about the extent and context of informal learning. I will add any replies to a new area on the Pontydysgu wiki. Over Easter I will start writing up some notes on some of the issues as I see them around this topic. Watch this space……

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    News Bites

    Open online seminar

    Jisc are hosting an open, online seminar on ‘Making Assessment Count (MAC)’ on Friday 3rd Feb – 1-2pm. The presenters are Professor Peter Chatterton (Daedalus e-World Ltd) and Professor Gunter Saunders (University of Westminster).

    The mailing for the seminar says” “The objective of Making Assessment Count is primarily to help students engage more closely with the assessment process, either at the stage where they are addressing an assignment or at the stage when they receive feedback on a completed assignment. In addition an underlying theme of MAC is to use technology to help connect student reflections on their assessment with their tutors. To facilitate the reflection aspect of MAC a web based tool called e-Reflect is often used. This tool enables the authoring of self-review questionnaires by tutors for students. On completion of an e-Reflect questionnaire a report is generated for the student containing responses that are linked to the options the student selected on the questionnaire.”

    You can find out more ans sign up for the seminar at  http://jiscmac.eventbrite.co.uk/


    EC-TEL 2012

    The EC-TEL 2012: Seventh European Conference on Technology Enhanced Learning 21st Century Learning for 21st Century Skills takes place on 18-21 September 2012 at Saarbrücken in Germany.

    The focus for the conference includes:

    - How can schools prepare young people for the technology-rich workplace of the future?
    - How can we use technology to promote informal and independent learning outside traditional educational settings?
    - How can we use next generation social and mobile technologies to promote informal and responsive learning?

    The deadline for proposals is April 2.


    Visitors and Residents

    David White (University of Oxford) and Dr. Lynn Silipigni Connaway (OCLC) have been attracting quite a stir with their JISC-funded work on Visitors and Residents: What Motivates Engagement with the Digital Information Environment?, being undertaken as part of the Developing Digital Literacies programme webinar series.

    Slides, audio and a recording of the Blackboard Collaborate session where they presented some of the findings of their work can be found at http://bit.ly/jiscdiglitvr.


    Learning and New Technologies

    Graham Attwell is delivering a keynote presentation on Learning and New Technologies to the ‘Encouraging participation in continuing training in Romania, with focus on disadvantaged employees’ project in Bucharest on Wednesday 7 December.


    ECER 2010

    The keynotes, videos, radio shows and interviews from the ECER 2010 Conference in Helsinki:

    On the ECER 2010 website.

    Taccle handbook for teachers order form

    Here you find the Taccle handbook for teachers order form.

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