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The (unlikely) trajectory of learning in a salmon hatchery

Yew‐Jin Lee (Faculty of Education, University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada, E‐mail: yjl@uvic.ca)
Wolff‐Michael Roth (Lansdowne Professor, University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada)

Journal of Workplace Learning

ISSN: 1366-5626

Article publication date: 1 June 2005

1233

Abstract

Purpose

Sociocultural learning theories, usually premised on participation in some community, explain workplace learning well up to a certain extent. The paper aims to extend beyond these and to account for learning in repetitive and mundane work environments from a dialectical perspective.

Design/methodology/approach

Based on a longitudinal ethnographic study of one salmon hatchery in Canada and the fish culturists that work there, theory (dialectics) is blended with empirical fieldwork (interview data, participant observation data, field notes). Codes that emerged were classified into categories that formed the basis for the tentative hypotheses.

Findings

Two assertions are proposed concerning learning from a dialectical perspective: the dialectic of doing (actions might seem repetitive but are in fact always different and productive in nature) and the dialectic of understanding and explaining (practical understanding develops dialectically with conceptual understanding when the latter is subjected to scrutiny). These can account for learning in places that at first sight are not conducive to change and transformation.

Research limitations/implications

Using the proposed framework, researchers/management can no longer get at individual learning independent of collective learning, which simultaneously is the effect and cause of individual learning. That is, individual and collective are inseparable ontologically.

Practical implications

The study suggests a need to rethink the nature and possibilities of learning in mundane work environments that are believed to be widespread.

Originality/value

Approaches workplace learning from a dialectical, hermeneutical perspective that is not widely appreciated. Affirms the dignity of workers.

Keywords

Citation

Lee, Y. and Roth, W. (2005), "The (unlikely) trajectory of learning in a salmon hatchery", Journal of Workplace Learning, Vol. 17 No. 4, pp. 243-254. https://doi.org/10.1108/13665620510597194

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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