Food for Thought. Communication and the transformation of work experience in web-based in-service training
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Date
2009-08-31T06:36:58Z
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Publisher
Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis
Abstract
The background of the present study is an interest in the use of digital technologies for in-service
training activities in industry. Globalization, international competition and transnational
production are elements that currently transform work practices and work organizations. In the
food industry, which is the empirical context of this study, globalization has resulted in a number
of changes including new forms of production, new international regulations and an increase in
quality control of food and food production. These food quality initiatives and the new
regulations, in turn, have resulted in a need for in-service training of staff. By analyzing how
people actually engage in and use web-based environments as part of in-service training efforts,
the overall aim of the research is to contribute to our understanding of the kind of
communication and agency that emerges in web-based environments, and how such
environments constitute contexts for communicative socialisation and learning for people
employed in industry. The focus of the present study is on the nature of activities that unfolds
when using digital media and learning resources in such settings. Analytically, such a focus is
pursued employing a sociocultural perspective on communication and learning. Empirical
material has been collected from archived chat log files from web-based in-service training
courses. The results from this study, as outlined and discussed in four empirical articles, show
that the participants accommodated rather smoothly to the affordances of the technology. They
also managed to increase their skills and exert agency when engaging in communicative activities
mediated by chat technology. Through chat interaction with other participants and experts, the
course participants gradually appropriated some of the analytical tools and practices of quality
assurance. Put differently, they literally wrote themselves into a different understanding of their
current work practices. One of the productive features in these training activities is that they
constituted hybrid contexts for learning. For instance, they are hybrid in the sense that practices
of instruction, on the one hand, and practices of production work on the other, were salient
resources for participation. From a pragmatic point of view, this study indicates that these
activities supported by web-based technologies seem to offer feasible models for organizing
distance learning in both further and in-service training
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Keywords
in-service training, food production industry, quality assurance, computer-mediated communication, chat interaction, digital technologies, appropriation, mediation, communicative strategies, framing, footing, hybrid learning activity