posted on 2018-04-20, 10:46authored byNicholas J. Tate, Claire H. Jarvis
A principal focus in GIS higher education has been with developing curricula or accommodating new technologies to reflect the needs of the developing discipline. Pedagogy has largely reflected traditional metaphors of acquisition and transfer in the context of formal education, and this extends to preparation of students for the workplace. In this paper, the authors explore the potential for communities of practice, and in particular virtual communities of practice as a complement to more formal GIS education to provide a route to more situated, participatory learning. In so doing, the emphasis towards creating a GIS professional community of practice offers both the recognition of the role of situated knowledge in developing professional GIS expertise, and provides an important bridge from higher education to the workplace.
Funding
Nicholas Tate would also like to thank the University of Leicester for a period of study leave during which some of the research for this paper was undertaken.
History
Citation
Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2017, 41 (3), pp. 327-340 (14)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/School of Geography, Geology and the Environment/GIS and Remote Sensing