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An entrepreneurial view of universal work-integrated learning

AnneMarie Dorland (Bissett School of Business, Mount Royal University, Calgary, Canada)
David J. Finch (Bissett School of Business, Mount Royal University, Calgary, Canada)
Nadège Levallet (Lang School of Business and Economics, University of Guelph, Guelph, Canada)
Simon Raby (Bissett School of Business, Mount Royal University, Calgary, Canada)
Stephanie Ross (Bissett School of Business, Mount Royal University, Calgary, Canada)
Alexandra Swiston (Bissett School of Business, Mount Royal University, Calgary, Canada)

Education + Training

ISSN: 0040-0912

Article publication date: 20 April 2020

Issue publication date: 8 June 2020

434

Abstract

Purpose

Work-integrated learning (WIL) has emerged as a leading pedagogy that blends theory with application. In recent years, policymakers, educators and practitioners have called for a significant expansion of WIL, one which would enable every undergraduate student has at least one WIL experience during their program of study. Despite these appeals, there remains a significant divide between the aspiration of universality and the realities. Consequently, the study asks the following question: How can post-secondary institutions expand their WIL initiatives to universal levels that deliver transformative learning?

Design/methodology/approach

In this exploratory study, the authors leverage research from entrepreneurship and management to develop a conceptual model of universal work-integrated learning (UWIL). Entrepreneurship and management research is relevant in this context, as the rapid introduction of a UWIL has transformative implications at the level of the individual (e.g. students, faculty), organization (e.g. processes) and the learning ecosystem (e.g. partners, policymakers) — issues at the core of research in entrepreneurship and management over the past two decades.

Findings

At the core of the authors’ proposal is the contention that the high-impact talent challenge and the delivery of UWIL must be reframed as not simply a challenge facing educators, but as a challenge facing the broader ecosystem of the workforce and the larger community. The authors propose the implementation of UWIL through an open innovation framework based on five strategic pillars.

Originality/value

Ultimately, the findings the authors present here can be leveraged by all members of the learning ecosystem, including administrators, faculty, policymakers, accreditation bodies and community partners, as a framework for operationalizing a UWIL strategy. The study’s model challenges all members of this learning ecosystem to operationalize a UWIL strategy. This entrepreneurial reframing introduces the potential for innovating the delivery of UWIL by leveraging the broader learning ecosystem to drive efficiencies and transformative learning.

Keywords

Citation

Dorland, A., Finch, D.J., Levallet, N., Raby, S., Ross, S. and Swiston, A. (2020), "An entrepreneurial view of universal work-integrated learning", Education + Training, Vol. 62 No. 4, pp. 393-411. https://doi.org/10.1108/ET-11-2019-0260

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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