Making Sense of the Learning Turn: Why and In What Sense Toys, Organizations, Economies, and Cities are "Learning"
From "learning toy" and "learning society" to "learning city" and "learning organization", what is meant by "learning"?

The main focus of this volume is to increase our understanding of the "learning turn" referring, in this book, to the frequent occurrence and usage of terms in the last few decades where the word "learning" is the premodifier. The authors also offer insights into the use of the word "learning" as a premodifier in the future and discuss what, if anything, may replace it, such as "knowledge" (as in "knowledge management") and "smart" (as in "smart city").

An extensive range of academic disciplines are covered including political science, economics, human geography, philosophy, linguistics, higher education, working life science, management and organization, and marketing.

While a single, overall, unified conclusion is not provided, Making Sense of the Learning Turn presents a variety of voices and perspectives. Some contributors are critical towards the learning turn, explaining it in terms of fashion-following, manipulation, and seduction. Others interpret the learning turn more lightly or suggest a more collective form of learning as an alternative to the individualization of learning that some authors argue has been the case thus far.
1145687703
Making Sense of the Learning Turn: Why and In What Sense Toys, Organizations, Economies, and Cities are "Learning"
From "learning toy" and "learning society" to "learning city" and "learning organization", what is meant by "learning"?

The main focus of this volume is to increase our understanding of the "learning turn" referring, in this book, to the frequent occurrence and usage of terms in the last few decades where the word "learning" is the premodifier. The authors also offer insights into the use of the word "learning" as a premodifier in the future and discuss what, if anything, may replace it, such as "knowledge" (as in "knowledge management") and "smart" (as in "smart city").

An extensive range of academic disciplines are covered including political science, economics, human geography, philosophy, linguistics, higher education, working life science, management and organization, and marketing.

While a single, overall, unified conclusion is not provided, Making Sense of the Learning Turn presents a variety of voices and perspectives. Some contributors are critical towards the learning turn, explaining it in terms of fashion-following, manipulation, and seduction. Others interpret the learning turn more lightly or suggest a more collective form of learning as an alternative to the individualization of learning that some authors argue has been the case thus far.
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Making Sense of the Learning Turn: Why and In What Sense Toys, Organizations, Economies, and Cities are

Making Sense of the Learning Turn: Why and In What Sense Toys, Organizations, Economies, and Cities are "Learning"

by Anders Örtenblad (Editor)
Making Sense of the Learning Turn: Why and In What Sense Toys, Organizations, Economies, and Cities are

Making Sense of the Learning Turn: Why and In What Sense Toys, Organizations, Economies, and Cities are "Learning"

by Anders Örtenblad (Editor)

Hardcover

$170.00 
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Overview

From "learning toy" and "learning society" to "learning city" and "learning organization", what is meant by "learning"?

The main focus of this volume is to increase our understanding of the "learning turn" referring, in this book, to the frequent occurrence and usage of terms in the last few decades where the word "learning" is the premodifier. The authors also offer insights into the use of the word "learning" as a premodifier in the future and discuss what, if anything, may replace it, such as "knowledge" (as in "knowledge management") and "smart" (as in "smart city").

An extensive range of academic disciplines are covered including political science, economics, human geography, philosophy, linguistics, higher education, working life science, management and organization, and marketing.

While a single, overall, unified conclusion is not provided, Making Sense of the Learning Turn presents a variety of voices and perspectives. Some contributors are critical towards the learning turn, explaining it in terms of fashion-following, manipulation, and seduction. Others interpret the learning turn more lightly or suggest a more collective form of learning as an alternative to the individualization of learning that some authors argue has been the case thus far.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780192865977
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 09/24/2024
Pages: 480
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.45(h) x 1.18(d)

About the Author

Anders Örtenblad, Professor of Working Life Science, University of Agder, Norway

Anders Örtenblad is Professor of Working Life Science at the University of Agder, Norway. With his keen interest in learning and education, as both phenomena and concepts, he has extensively researched and authored on the idea of the learning organization, organizational learning, and management education. He has edited numerous books and journals, including The Oxford Handbook of the Learning Organization (OUP, 2019) and The Oxford Handbook of Metaphor in Organization Studies (OUP, 2024). He is a keen advocate of research as open, academic debate.

Table of Contents

Foreword, Norman LongworthList of ContributorsPART I. THE LEARNING TURN: A BACKGROUND AND INTRODUCTION1. Toward an Increased Understanding of the Learning Turn: Background and Introduction, Anders Örtenblad2. On the Usage of the Premodifier Learning Among Scholars and Practitioners, Anders Örtenblad3. Linguistic Modifiers and the Construction of Concept Meaning, Bertus van RooyPART II. REFLECTING ON LEARNING AND ITS USE AS A PREMODIFIER4. Learnification, Premodifiers and Learning(s), Marianna Papastephanou5. Recognition in a Learning World - Topics of Global Education, Anke Redecker6. Learning Your Place, Malcolm Tight7. What is Learning that an Organization (or Anything Else) Can Do It?, Leonard Holmes8. Is Learning Viewed as a Synonym of Training?, Rob F. PoellPART III. EXAMINING SINGLE TERMS IN WHICH LEARNING IS THE PREMODIFIER9. "Learning Toys" as Education through Commodification, Tyson E. Lewis10. The Impossibility of the Learning Organization, Norman V. Jackson11. Learning Climate, Max Visser12. The Learning Economy: What do we Mean by the Modifier Learning?, John A. Cotsomitis13. The Global Learning Economy, Frederik Hertel and Michelle Wicmandy14. Can Regions Learn?, Hans Chr. Garmann Johnsen and Jon P. Knudsen15. The Meanings of "Learning Organization" from the Perspective of Usage, Bertus van Rooy and Roosmarijn RentierPART IV. EXAMINING MULTIPLE TERMS IN WHICH LEARNING IS THE PREMODIFIER16. Being Alone Together: A Critical Exploration of Learning in "Learning Group" and "Learning Community", Michael Reynolds and Russ Vince17. "Fortune Favors the Prepared Mind": Learning Knowledge without Experience is Not so Smart, Philip Cooke18. Comparing Two Similar Terms in which Learning is the Premodifier: A Study of Seven Term Couples, Anders Örtenblad19. Belonging and Being Unique: The Dual Function of the Learning Premodifier, Anders ÖrtenbladPART V. BEYOND LEARNING: ON ITS WAY TOWARD BEING REPLACED BY OTHER COGNITION-ORIENTED PREMODIFIERS SUCH AS KNOWLEDGE AND SMART20. Interpreting the Decline in the Common Use of the Learning Premodifier, Marianna Papastephanou21. Learning City, Knowledge City, Smart City: Three Mountains in the Same Range, Anders ÖrtenbladAfterword: Reflections on the Learning Premodifier and the Learning Turn, Ken Spours
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