Re-embedding situatedness: The importance of power relations in learning theory

Re-embedding situatedness: The importance of power relations in learning theory

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Article ID: iaor20062569
Country: United States
Volume: 14
Issue: 3
Start Page Number: 283
End Page Number: 296
Publication Date: May 2003
Journal: Organization Science
Authors: ,
Keywords: learning
Abstract:

This paper critically addresses the coherence, reception, and dissemination of ‘situated learning theory’. Situated learning theory commends a conceptualization of the process of learning that, in offering an alternative to cognitive theories, departs radically from the received body of knowledge on learning in organizations. The paper shows how elements of situated learning theory have been selectively adopted to fertilize or extend the established terrain of organizational learning. In this process, we argue, Lave and Wenger's embryonic appreciation of power relations as media of learning is displaced by a managerial preoccupation with harnessing (reified) ‘communities of practice’ to the fulfillment of (reified) corporate objectives. We illustrate our argument by reference to Orr's study of photocopier technicians, which is very widely cited as an example of the ‘new,’ situated conceptualization of learning in communities of practice. We commend a revitalization of situated learning theory in which learning practices are understood to be enabled and constrained by their embeddedness in relations of power; and, more specifically, by the unstable institutionalization of power relations within capitalist work organizations.

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