VET Again: Now as a VET Teacher

In 2010, a mandatory teacher training course was introduced for new vocational college teachers in Denmark. Since then, all vocational teachers have to complete the same course, regardless of practical work experience and educational background. After completion, they apply the knowledge to a very...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Henriette Duch, Karen Egedal Andreasen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Research Network Vocational Education and Training (VETNET) 2017-11-01
Series:International Journal for Research in Vocational Education and Training
Subjects:
VET
Online Access:https://journals.sub.uni-hamburg.de/hup2/IJRVET/article/view/204
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spelling doaj-f67938274da744e69208800a1f2dce252020-11-25T02:19:38ZengEuropean Research Network Vocational Education and Training (VETNET)International Journal for Research in Vocational Education and Training2197-86382197-86462017-11-014310.13152/IJRVET.4.3.6204VET Again: Now as a VET TeacherHenriette Duch0Karen Egedal Andreasen1Aalborg University, DenmarkAalborg University, Denmark In 2010, a mandatory teacher training course was introduced for new vocational college teachers in Denmark. Since then, all vocational teachers have to complete the same course, regardless of practical work experience and educational background. After completion, they apply the knowledge to a very specific practice (i.e. teaching within a specific vocational field at a specific type of college). Thus, individual teachers experience different ‘learning trajectories’, depending on the vocational field and place of employment. They amass different experiences, including going back to school, just like newly enrolled students at a vocational college. This paper is based on empirical data from a qualitative study. It examines the learning trajectories of vocational teachers who choose to return to vocational colleges as VET teachers. Based on the analyses of two cases, we discuss the consequences for teachers’ pedagogical practice at vocational colleges and its potential for solving various challenges that colleges face. https://journals.sub.uni-hamburg.de/hup2/IJRVET/article/view/204VETVocational Education and TrainingVocational TeacherTheory and PracticeAdult EducationTransfer and Transformation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Henriette Duch
Karen Egedal Andreasen
spellingShingle Henriette Duch
Karen Egedal Andreasen
VET Again: Now as a VET Teacher
International Journal for Research in Vocational Education and Training
VET
Vocational Education and Training
Vocational Teacher
Theory and Practice
Adult Education
Transfer and Transformation
author_facet Henriette Duch
Karen Egedal Andreasen
author_sort Henriette Duch
title VET Again: Now as a VET Teacher
title_short VET Again: Now as a VET Teacher
title_full VET Again: Now as a VET Teacher
title_fullStr VET Again: Now as a VET Teacher
title_full_unstemmed VET Again: Now as a VET Teacher
title_sort vet again: now as a vet teacher
publisher European Research Network Vocational Education and Training (VETNET)
series International Journal for Research in Vocational Education and Training
issn 2197-8638
2197-8646
publishDate 2017-11-01
description In 2010, a mandatory teacher training course was introduced for new vocational college teachers in Denmark. Since then, all vocational teachers have to complete the same course, regardless of practical work experience and educational background. After completion, they apply the knowledge to a very specific practice (i.e. teaching within a specific vocational field at a specific type of college). Thus, individual teachers experience different ‘learning trajectories’, depending on the vocational field and place of employment. They amass different experiences, including going back to school, just like newly enrolled students at a vocational college. This paper is based on empirical data from a qualitative study. It examines the learning trajectories of vocational teachers who choose to return to vocational colleges as VET teachers. Based on the analyses of two cases, we discuss the consequences for teachers’ pedagogical practice at vocational colleges and its potential for solving various challenges that colleges face.
topic VET
Vocational Education and Training
Vocational Teacher
Theory and Practice
Adult Education
Transfer and Transformation
url https://journals.sub.uni-hamburg.de/hup2/IJRVET/article/view/204
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