Accounting for student/educator diversity: resurrecting coaction theory
Contribuinte(s) |
Fayolle, Alain |
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Data(s) |
2010
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Resumo |
This chapter challenges current approaches to defining the context and process of entrepreneurship education. In modeling our classrooms as a microcosm of the world our current and future students will enter, this chapter brings to life (and celebrates) the everpresent diversity found within. The chapter attempts to make an important (and unique) contribution to the field of enterprise education by illustrating how we can determine the success of (1) our efforts as educators, (2) our students, and (3) our various teaching methods. The chapter is based on two specific premises, the most fundamental being the assertion that the performance of student, educator and institution can only be accounted for by accepting the nature of the dialogic relationship between the student and educator and between the educator and institution. A second premise is that at any moment in time, the educator can be assessed as being either efficient or inefficient, due to the presence of observable heterogeneity in the learning environment that produces differential learning outcomes. This chapter claims that understanding and appreciating the nature of heterogeneity in our classrooms provides an avenue for improvement in all facets of learning and teaching. To explain this claim, Haskell’s (1949) theory of coaction is resurrected to provide a lens through which all manner of interaction occurring within all forms of educational contexts can be explained. Haskell (1949) asserted that coaction theory had three salient features. |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
Edward Elgar |
Relação |
DOI:10.4337/9781849806688.00013 Jones, Colin (2010) Accounting for student/educator diversity: resurrecting coaction theory. In Fayolle, Alain (Ed.) Handbook of Research in Entrepreneurship Education. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham UK, pp. 71-85. |
Fonte |
QUT Business School; School of Management |
Palavras-Chave | #130100 EDUCATION SYSTEMS #150304 Entrepreneurship #Educator Diversity #Coaction Theory #Entrepreneurship |
Tipo |
Book Chapter |