Workplace learning in break rooms and other hybrid spaces

These notes are part of a series for the book. When a person enters a transitional space (such as break rooms at work), they also adopt a transitional identity, which allows the person to take greater risks. This is something people value, and is a reason people don’t want to formalize the informal spaces.

Solomon, N., Boud, D., and Rooney, D. (2006) ‘The In-between: Exposing Everyday Learning at Work’, in Hall, K., Murphy, P., and Soler, J. (eds) (2012) Pedagogy and Practice: Culture and Identities, London, SAGE Publications Ltd. in association with The Open University.

Outline

  1. Background to the study
  2. The meaning of space
  3. Spaces within: some vignettes
    1. Ambivalent sites: the trade teachers’ tearoom
    2. Non-ambivalent site: work-based program teaching group
  4. Discussing the in-between

Notes

The authors look at spaces in which learning occurs in the workplace.

Examples of hybrid spaces (time-spaces):

The type of learning that occurs in these spaces is informal and/or incidental learning.

One group of teachers acknowledged that they were sharing ideas, but did not want to call it learning. Another group was open to the idea of naming their activity and spaces as learning, but they did not want it formalized. Further, they identified staff development days as mostly useful for the networking that happens during the breaks.

I thought this was interesting: “Part of the original design of the research project was a stage in which some of the practices identified through the study would be developed as formal interventions to ‘improve’ learning at work. This idea was abandoned at an early point once it became clear that the richness of learning we identified could be compromised by attempting to move it into the system world of the organization” (Solomon et al., 2006, p. 83).

See also

Compare with notes about incidental learning: Sharples, M., Adams, A., Alozie, N., Ferguson, R., Fitzgerald, E., Gaved, M., McAndrew, P., Means, B., Remold, J., Rienties, B., Roschelle, J., Vogt, K., Whitelock, D. and Yarnall, L. (2015) Innovating Pedagogy 2015: Open University Innovation Report No. 4.

Trend toward redesigning learning spaces: Johnson, L., Adams Becker, S., Estrada, V. and Freeman, A. (2015) NMC Horizon Report: 2015 Higher Education Edition.