Purpose: This article compares theoretical conceptions that reclaim and re-think material practice – ‘the thing’ in the social and personal mix – specifically in terms of work activity and what is construed to be learning in that activity. Approach: The article is theory-based. Three perspectives have been selected for discussion: cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT), actor-network theory (ANT), and complexity theory. A comparative approach is used to examine these three conceptual framings in context of their uptake in learning research to explore their diverse contributions and limitations on questions of agency, power, difference, and the presence of the ‘thing’. Findings: The three perspectives bear some similarities in their conc...
Abstract: A review was conducted of literature addressing learning in work, focusing on relations be...
In recent sociomaterialist, materialist and post-human theorizing which foregrounds the importance o...
Workplaces are constituted in socially embedded communicative practices. When interpreting work-rela...
Purpose: This article compares theoretical conceptions that reclaim and re-think material practice –...
Discussions of practice, particularly those focused on learning, tend to focus more upon the socio-c...
This chapter provides an introduction to perspectives that may be described as ‘sociomaterial&...
Despite the long recognition in HRD theory that learning is socially and materially situated in acti...
This paper aims to discuss the implications of adopting an STS (science and technology studies)- bas...
This article argues that understandings of work learning within human resource development (HRD) the...
In this chapter we outline a “sociomaterial” configuration that has been circulating in ...
Despite the long recognition in HRD theory that learning is socially and materially situated in acti...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to argue that foundational terms in work-learning research, s...
Sociocultural constructivist perspectives advance learning in and through work as the process and pr...
Actor Network Theory (ANT) is used to explore how work-learning is enacted in informal online commun...
© 2017, © Emerald Publishing Limited. Purpose: This paper aims to introduce, explain and illustrate ...
Abstract: A review was conducted of literature addressing learning in work, focusing on relations be...
In recent sociomaterialist, materialist and post-human theorizing which foregrounds the importance o...
Workplaces are constituted in socially embedded communicative practices. When interpreting work-rela...
Purpose: This article compares theoretical conceptions that reclaim and re-think material practice –...
Discussions of practice, particularly those focused on learning, tend to focus more upon the socio-c...
This chapter provides an introduction to perspectives that may be described as ‘sociomaterial&...
Despite the long recognition in HRD theory that learning is socially and materially situated in acti...
This paper aims to discuss the implications of adopting an STS (science and technology studies)- bas...
This article argues that understandings of work learning within human resource development (HRD) the...
In this chapter we outline a “sociomaterial” configuration that has been circulating in ...
Despite the long recognition in HRD theory that learning is socially and materially situated in acti...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to argue that foundational terms in work-learning research, s...
Sociocultural constructivist perspectives advance learning in and through work as the process and pr...
Actor Network Theory (ANT) is used to explore how work-learning is enacted in informal online commun...
© 2017, © Emerald Publishing Limited. Purpose: This paper aims to introduce, explain and illustrate ...
Abstract: A review was conducted of literature addressing learning in work, focusing on relations be...
In recent sociomaterialist, materialist and post-human theorizing which foregrounds the importance o...
Workplaces are constituted in socially embedded communicative practices. When interpreting work-rela...