1st Edition

Activity Theory in Practice Promoting Learning Across Boundaries and Agencies

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    This ground-breaking book brings together cutting-edge researchers who study the transformation of practice through the enhancement and transformation of expertise. This is an important moment for such a contribution because expertise is in transition - moving toward collaboration in inter-organizational fields and continuous shaping of transformations. To understand and master this transition, powerful new conceptual tools are needed and are provided here.

    The theoretical framework which has shaped these studies is Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT). CHAT analyses how people and organisations learn to do something new, and how both individuals and organisations change. The theoretical and methodological tools used have their origins in the work of Lev Vygotsky and A.N. Leont’ev. In recent years this body of work has aroused significant interest across the social sciences, management and communication studies.

    Working as part of an integrated international team, the authors identify specific findings which are of direct interest to the academic community, such as:

      • the analysis of vertical learning between operational and strategic levels within complex organizations;
      • the refinement of notions of identity and subject position within CHAT;
      • the introduction of the concept of ‘labour power’ into CHAT;
      • the development of a method of analysing discourse which theoretically coheres with CHAT and the design of projects.

    Activity Theory in Practice will be highly useful to practitioners, researchers, students and policy-makers who are interested in conceptual and empirical issues in all aspects of ‘activity-based’ research.

    Introduction (HARRY DANIELS AND ANNE EDWARDS) Chapter 1 From diagnosis to clients - constructing the object of collaborative development between physiotherapy educators and workplaces (JAAKKO VIRKKUNEN, ELISA MÄKINEN AND LEILA LINTULA) Chapter 2 The meaning of physical presence (KIRSI KALLIO) Chapter 3 Towards co-configuration in home care of the elderly: cultivating agency by designing and implementing the mobility agreement (JAANA NUMMIJOKI AND YRJÖ ENGESTRÖM) Chapter 4 Expansive learning, expansive labour: conceptualising the social production of labour-power within multi-agency working (PAUL WARMINGTON AND JANE LEADBETTER) Chapter 5 Identifying learning in inter-professional discourse: the development of an analytic protocol (DAVID MIDDLETON) Chapter 6 Implicit or invisible mediation in the development of interagency work (HARRY DANIELS) Chapter 7 Working Relationally at Organisational Boundaries: negotiating expertise and identity (ANNE EDWARDS AND IOANNA KINTI) Chapter 8 Breaking through silence: tackling controversial barriers through inter-professional engagement (TONY GALLAGHER AND KAREN CARLISLE) Chapter 9 Agency vs. constraint: the role of external agencies in inter-professional engagement (ROSEMARY KILPATRICK, TONY GALLAGHER AND KAREN CARLISLE) Chapter 10 Adaptation and Generalisation in Software Product Development (ANDERS I. MØRCH, KATHRINE A. NYGÅRD AND STEN R. LUDVIGSEN) Chapter 11 Joint designs for working in wikis: a case of practicing across settings and modes of work (ANDREAS LUND, INGVILL RASMUSSEN AND OLE SMORDAL)

    Biography

    Harry Daniels is Professor of Education at the University of Bath, UK. He is also Research Programme Director at the Centre for Sociocultural and Activity Theory Research.

    Anne Edwards is Professor of Education and Director of Research at the Oxford University Department of Education, UK.

    Yrjö Engeström is Professor at the Center for Activity, Development and Learning (CRADLE) at the University of Helsinki, Finland.

    Tony Gallagher is Professor at the Department of Education, Queen’s University Belfast, UK.

    Sten R. Ludvigsen is a Professor and Director at InterMedia, University of Oslo, Norway.