TY - GEN AB - This book presents a collection of chaptersboth empirical and conceptualthat challenge existing paradigms of learning and teaching, provides examples of pedagogical spaces and practices that nurture future-oriented learners, explicates identities and transitions in learning, and offers alternative frames for moving forward. Educational structures have proven remarkably resilient. More often than not, pedagogical designs still privilege the lecture-tutorial format, front-end loading and the positioning of the teacher as expert. In a similar vein, pedagogical spaces tend to privilege the formal educational institution and its discourses, rather than productively engage with naturally-occurring learning spaces at work and in communities. To better prepare and support learners for dynamically changing futures, we need to truly flip the lens from teaching to learning, positioning at the core, the learner in contexts where learning and becoming occurs. This means considering what counts as a future-oriented learner and educator, recognising the importance of evolving identities, transitions and pathways that facilitates the processes of being and becoming. Equally important is the design and appropriation of pedagogical spaces and practices that are in themselves dynamic and future-oriented. This book questions the current delineation between the spaces of work, learning and communities. AU - Bound, Helen, AU - Tan, Jennifer Pei-Ling, AU - Lim Wei Ying, Rebekah, CN - LC5215 CY - Cham, Switzerland : DA - 2022. DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-92867-4 DO - doi ID - 1445251 KW - Continuing education. KW - Adult education. KW - Éducation permanente. KW - Éducation des adultes. LK - https://univsouthin.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-030-92867-4 N1 - Includes index. N2 - This book presents a collection of chaptersboth empirical and conceptualthat challenge existing paradigms of learning and teaching, provides examples of pedagogical spaces and practices that nurture future-oriented learners, explicates identities and transitions in learning, and offers alternative frames for moving forward. Educational structures have proven remarkably resilient. More often than not, pedagogical designs still privilege the lecture-tutorial format, front-end loading and the positioning of the teacher as expert. In a similar vein, pedagogical spaces tend to privilege the formal educational institution and its discourses, rather than productively engage with naturally-occurring learning spaces at work and in communities. To better prepare and support learners for dynamically changing futures, we need to truly flip the lens from teaching to learning, positioning at the core, the learner in contexts where learning and becoming occurs. This means considering what counts as a future-oriented learner and educator, recognising the importance of evolving identities, transitions and pathways that facilitates the processes of being and becoming. Equally important is the design and appropriation of pedagogical spaces and practices that are in themselves dynamic and future-oriented. This book questions the current delineation between the spaces of work, learning and communities. PB - Springer, PP - Cham, Switzerland : PY - 2022. SN - 9783030928674 SN - 3030928675 T1 - Pedagogies for future-oriented adult learners:flipping the lens from teaching / TI - Pedagogies for future-oriented adult learners:flipping the lens from teaching / UR - https://univsouthin.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-030-92867-4 VL - v. 27 ER -