Learning for vocations

Authors Maaike Koopman, Liesbeth Baartman, Annoesjka Boersma, Kristin Vanlommel, Elly de Bruijn
Publication date 2025
Research groups Vocational Education
Type Report

Summary

This article reports on a literature review on empirical research investigating learning for vocations in the context of vocational education. We included 36 studies in which learning for vocations is empirically studied. Learning for vocations is characterised based upon prevalent research traditions in the field and framed from the perspective of vocational education and organised learning practices. This framing and characterisation directed the search terms for the review. Results show empirical data on vocational learning and illustrate how learning processes for the functions of vocational education - vocational identity development, development of a vocational repertoire of actions, and vocational knowledge development - actually take place. The review further shows that, empirical illustrations of learning processes that occur in the context of vocational education and organised learning practices are relatively scarce. The findings can be typified in relation to our theoretical framework in terms of three learning processes, that is learning as a process of (a) belonging, becoming, and being, (b) recontextualization, and (c) negotiation of meaning and sense-making. We argue that more empirical research should be carried out, using the functions of vocational education and the three learning processes to better understand vocational learning.

On this publication contributed

Language English
Key words vocational learning, learning processes, vocational education, literature review

Maaike Koopman

Maaike Koopman | Researcher

Maaike Koopman

  • Researcher
  • Research groups: Vocational Education, Working in Education