Overview
- Provides concrete examples of networked professional learning in applied contexts
- Explores networked professional learning from a range of disciplinary perspectives
- Questions the impact of networked professional learning on higher education rather than focusing on formal education and digital tools
- Examines specifically the implications of networked professional learning for the teachers and professionals of the future
Part of the book series: Research in Networked Learning (RINL)
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About this book
Over the past decades a new form of professionalism has emerged, characterized by factors of fluidity, instability and continual change, leading to the necessitation of new forms of professional development that support agile and flexible expansion of professional practice. At the same time, the digitization of work has had a profound effect on professional practice. This digitization opens up opportunities for new forms of professional learning mediated by technologies through networked learning. Networked learning is believed to lead to a more efficient flow of complex knowledge and routine information within the organization, stimulate innovative behaviour, and result in a higher job satisfaction. In this respect, networked learning can be perceived as an important perspective on both professional and organizational development. This volume provides examples of Networked Professional Learning, it questions the impact of this emerging form of learning on the academy, and it interrogates the impact on teachers of the future. It features three sections that explore networked professional learning from different perspectives: questioning what legitimate forms of networked professional learning are across a broad sampling of professions, how new forms of professional learning impact institutions of higher education, and the value creation that Networked Learning offers professionals in broader educational, economic, and social contexts. The book is of interest to researchers in the area of professional and digital learning, higher education managers, organizational HR professionals, policy makers and students of technology enhanced learning.
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Keywords
- networked professional learning
- professional development
- higher education
- informal learning
- teacher learning
- distance-based police education
- organizational agility
- change agents for networked learning in professional development
- using community of inquiry within the crisis management context
- new educational formats for professional development
- invisible learners
- non-completing course participants
- professional learning in massive open online courses
- protopublic spaces for collaborative inquiry
- professional development with mobile and blended learning
- the public and higher education
- digital competence in a remote teaching
- teacher learning groups on ICT professional development
- teachers’ experiences and value creation in networked learning
- sustainable knowledge creation in teacher learning groups
Table of contents (14 chapters)
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Networked Professional Learning Across the Professions
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The Impact of Networked Professional Learning on the Academy
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Networked Professional Learning in Teacher Learning Groups
Reviews
Editors and Affiliations
About the editors
Allison Littlejohn is a Dean in the College of Social Sciences at the University of Glasgow, where she Directs a programme of research in Professional and Digital Learning. Throughout her career she has worked in the area of learning innovation, technology, knowledge creation and academic-business partnerships. She envisions bringing together ideas from higher education and industry, encourages cross-sector thinking and working across traditional boundaries between sectors and disciplines to transform the ways professionals learn.
Jimmy Jaldemark is an Associate Professor in the Department of Education at Mid Sweden University. His areas of research focus are game-based learning, higher education, learning theory, mobile learning, online supervision, power, socio-cultural perspective, and technology-enhanced learning. Throughout his career, he has worked with the application of these areas in professional development projects at different levels of the educational system.
Emmy Vrieling-Teunter is an Assistant Professor of Teachers’ Professional Development in Social Networks and Self-Regulation at the Open University of the Netherlands. Her work concentrates on exploring social learning dimensions as well as self-regulated learning processes that facilitate professional development in educational institutes. Her research addresses informal learning, social learning, social media, self-regulated learning, metacognition, reflection and motivation. She has published and presented her research in national and international research journals, books and conferences. Emmy is also Staff Member of the Dutch Interuniversity Center for Educational Research and Editorial Board Member of the Dutch Association for Teacher Educators.
Femke Nijland is an Assistant Professor at the Welten Institute, Research Centre for Learning, Teaching, and Technology at the Open University of the Netherlands. Her research focuses on networked learning and value creation. She aims at bridging the gap between educational research and practice, working in close collaboration with teachers and schools at innovative educational projects to stimulate teacher professional development.
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Networked Professional Learning
Book Subtitle: Emerging and Equitable Discourses for Professional Development
Editors: Allison Littlejohn, Jimmy Jaldemark, Emmy Vrieling-Teunter, Femke Nijland
Series Title: Research in Networked Learning
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-18030-0
Publisher: Springer Cham
eBook Packages: Education, Education (R0)
Copyright Information: Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2019
Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-030-18029-4Published: 24 July 2019
Softcover ISBN: 978-3-030-18032-4Published: 14 August 2020
eBook ISBN: 978-3-030-18030-0Published: 11 July 2019
Series ISSN: 2570-4524
Series E-ISSN: 2570-4532
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XX, 264
Number of Illustrations: 11 b/w illustrations, 14 illustrations in colour
Topics: Educational Technology, Higher Education, Teaching and Teacher Education, Professional & Vocational Education