Learning about workplace learning and expertise from Jack: A discourse analytic study
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to highlight some methodological problems concerning the neglect of participants' voices by workplace ethnographers and neglect of the highly interactional and co‐constructive nature of research interviewing. The study aims to use discourse analysis, to show the phenomena of workplace learning and expertise to be constituted in participants' talk.
Design/methodology/approach
From excerpts of natural talk and research interviews by fish culturists speaking about their learning in a salmon hatchery, discourse analysis is used to analyze how workplace learning and expertise are rhetorically performed.
Findings
The paper finds that fish culturists drew on two discursive repertoires/resources – school‐ and workplace‐based learning – to account for their learning and expertise. The main participant affirmed the primacy of interest and practical workplace experience in his job just as he presupposed a weak correlation between school‐based (theoretical) and workplace (practical) knowing. However, both kinds of learning were deemed important though articulating this view depended on the social contexts of its production.
Research limitations/implications
Discourse analysis does not establish immutable truths about workplace learning and expertise but rather it is used to understand how these are made accountable through talk in real‐time, that is, how the phenomenon is “done” by participants.
Practical implications
There is increased sensitivity when using ethnographic and interview methods. No method can avoid being theory‐laden in its conduct and reporting but discourse analysis perhaps does it better than its alternatives.
Originality/value
While some contributors to this journal have also approached workplace learning from a discursive perspective, this paper attempts to understand the phenomenon solely from participants' categories and interpretations.
Keywords
Citation
Lee, Y. and Roth, W. (2006), "Learning about workplace learning and expertise from Jack: A discourse analytic study", Journal of Workplace Learning, Vol. 18 No. 4, pp. 205-219. https://doi.org/10.1108/13665620610665818
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited