Hidden knowledge

Hidden knowledge2003
About this book
Explodes the dual myths that working-class adults have inferior learning capacities and that talented youths naturally leave blue-collar careers, and documents the genuine learning practices of working-class people, using accounts of prior school experiences; current adult education course participation; and a wide array of learning resources in paid workplaces, households, and community settings. The authors criticize dominant theories of learning and work and develop an alternative explanation of working-class adult learning.
Pays careful attention to the ways in which differential economic power, labor processes, sectoral contexts, union cultures, and access to organized educational resources shape individual and collective learning activities. Also provides a discussion of research processes suitable for democratic knowledge production in partnership with workers and their organizations, as well as workers' own practical recommendations for changes in learning and work relations. [publisher web site].
Details
- First published
- 2003
- OL Work ID
- OL2228928W
Subjects
Occupational trainingTraining ofEffect of technological innovations onLabor unionsLabor union membersWorking classInformation technology