학술논문

Missing things and methodological swerves: Unsettling the it-ness of VET.
Document Type
Article
Source
International Journal of Training Research; 2012, Vol. 10 Issue 3, p204-218, 15p
Subject
Methodology
Vocational education
Theory of knowledge
Cyborgs
Heterogeneity
Language
ISSN
14480220
Abstract
This paper argues for approaches to research methodologies that interrupt the machinic metaphors and relationships for living circulating in so much VET research. Using the schematic of 'cyborg as a figuration' and Wilson's (2009) four epistemological interventions (witnessing, situating, diffracting, acquiring) the authors practice a form of 'materialised refiguration' (Haraway, 1994) to re-engage with experiences of doing vocational education and training research over more than two decades. The approach manifests as story telling of/for complexity and opens up a research methodology guided by two questions: How are researchers deeply implicated in knowledge-making practices in and of VET? What vocational lives do we make in and through those practices? The aim of this approach is to call into question machinic VET stories as the only way to narrate vocational education and training research/practice. In so doing, the authors affirm hybrid methodological work that invokes vocational education and training researchers as authors-in-themaking of heterogeneous worlds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]