scholarly journals Intercultural Competence Cultivating in Higher Vocational Education from the General Education Perspective

Author(s):  
Sheng-Hua ZHANG
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 248-255
Author(s):  
Yi Yang

The state council meeting strongly supports the establishment of vocational schools and promotes the integration and mutual recognition of academic results between vocational education and general education. By analyzing the dilemmas and problems in the development of higher vocational schools in China, it is found that higher vocational education has long been in an awkward situation. On one hand is to provide the supply of talents for enterprises, on the other hand is to break the obstacles in the development of higher vocational schools. To put vocational schools play active role in educational field and job market is the key objective of this study.


Author(s):  
Rebecca Ye

AbstractThis paper addresses the question of how higher vocational education and training programmes socialise participants for future work, where the occupational pathways they are to embark on are weakly defined. The analysis focuses on organisational rituals as a means to understand individual and collective transformative processes taking place at a particular intersection of education and labour markets. Building on organisational and sociological theories of rituals, as well as drawing empirically from a longitudinal qualitative interview study of a cohort of students in Swedish higher vocational education for work in digital data strategy, I explore how rituals are enacted in a vocational education and training setting and what these rituals mean to the aspirants who partake in them. The findings illustrate how rituals initiate, convert, and locate the participants in a team. These repeated encounters with rituals socialise, cultivate and build vocational faith amongst participants, despite the nascency and unstable nature of their education-to-work pathways. However, while rituals can serve as a catalyst to ignite processes of collective identification and vocational socialisation, they are not always successful. The paper discusses implications of faith-building in weak-form occupational pathways when the labour market is strong and conversely, when the economy is in recession. The text concludes by advocating the need for examining the power of educational institutions in shaping transitional experiences of participants in vocational education.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document