Publication | Closed Access
Learning and Professional Practice: A Study of Four Professions
194
Citations
31
References
2001
Year
NursingEducational PracticeTeacher EducationIn-service Professional DevelopmentProfessional LearningSocial WorkersProfessional PreparationDifferent ProfessionsEducationFour ProfessionsProfessional DevelopmentContinuing Professional DevelopmentProfessional Work
The study investigates how knowledge becomes meaningful in professional practice across four professions. The study used eighty semistructured interviews with social workers, lawyers, adult educators, and nurses who had attended continuing education programs 9–24 months earlier. Professionals make meaning by oscillating between continuing education and practice, and each profession frames this process through its understanding of professional work, with implications for research and practice.
The purpose of this research was to investigate how knowledge becomes meaningful in professional practice across four different professions. Eighty semistructured interviews were conducted with social workers, lawyers, adult educators, and nurses who had attended continuing education programs 9 to 24 months previously. Findings indicate that professionals make meaning by moving back and forth between continuing professional education programs and their professional practice. In addition, each profession studied framed their meaning-making process through an understanding of the nature of their professional work. Implications for research and practice in continuing professional education are drawn.
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