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Connecting Culture and Learning in Organisations: A Review of Current Themes

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posted on 2009-12-14, 16:16 authored by Daniel Bishop, Alan Felstead, Alison Fuller, Nick Jewson, Tracey Lee, Lorna Unwin
While the respective literatures on organisational cultures and workplace learning are fairly well developed, the potential insights to be gained from combining the two have been largely ignored. The primary aim of this paper is to connect some of the main themes in the two literatures. In particular, the paper highlights some of the ways in which organisational cultures and subcultures can support – or inhibit – workplace learning. It is hoped that the paper provides a starting point for understanding more precisely the types of assumptions, beliefs and practices that might support workplace learning, thus providing a possible foundation for the construction of a model of a learningsupportive culture.

History

Citation

Learning as Work: Teaching and Learning Processes in Contemporary Work Organisations, Research Paper No.5

Published in

Learning as Work: Teaching and Learning Processes in Contemporary Work Organisations

Publisher

Cardiff School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University

Available date

2009-12-14

Publisher version

http://learningaswork.cf.ac.uk/outputs.html

Notes

This working paper is Research Paper No. 5 of a series produced for Learning as Work: Teaching and Learning Processes in the Contemporary Work Organisation, an ESRC Teaching and Learning Programme (TLRP) Phase III funded project (2003 - 2008). It is available from http://learningaswork.cf.ac.uk/outputs.html

Book series

Learning as Work;5

Language

en

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