Hybrid Learning Environments in VET

Authors Aimee Hoeve, Ilya Zitter
Publication date 2014
Research groups Vocational Education
Type Lecture

Summary

Vocational education and training (VET) plays a central role in preparing young people for work, developing adequate skills and responding to the labour-market needs of the economy. The transition learners are required to make from education to the workplace is a complex, and often problematic, process (Tynjälä, Välimaa, & Sarja, 2003). Studies show a gap between what is learned and what is required of competent professionals in an ever more complex world (Baartman & De Bruijn, 2011). The integration of students? learning experiences across academic and practice settings is currently of considerable interest within the educational sectors in a number of countries (Billett, 2011), among which the Netherlands. The last decade Dutch VET institutes haven been experimenting to design learning environments that cross the traditional school boundaries into working life. Zitter (2010) introduced the term hybrid learning environments . "A learning environment can be considered as a hybrid learning environment? When different formal and informal elements are woven together into coherent programmes of learning and into single learning environments, rather than a programme that combines different components with the aim of offering a more enticing menu of learning for the students" (Zitter & Hoeve, 2012 in OECD, 2013, pp. 138).

On this publication contributed

  • Ilya Zitter
    Ilya Zitter
    • Professor
    • Research group: Vocational Education

Language English

Ilya Zitter

Ilya Zitter

Ilya Zitter

  • Professor
  • Research group: Vocational Education

Vocational Education