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Ghosts in the Machine: Rethinking Learning Work and Culture in Air Traffic Control [Pehme köide]

(University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 168 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 340 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Dec-2019
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0367882213
  • ISBN-13: 9780367882211
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 168 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 340 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Dec-2019
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0367882213
  • ISBN-13: 9780367882211
This book provides a socio-cultural analysis of the ways in which air traffic controllers formally and informally learn about their work and the active role that organisational cultures play in shaping interpretation and meaning. In particular, it describes the significant role that organizational cultures have played in shaping what is valued by controllers about their work and its role as a filter in enabling or constraining conscious inquiry. The premise of the book is that informal learning is just as important in shaping what people know and value about their work and that this area is frequently overlooked. By using an interpretative research approach, the book highlights the ways in which the social structure of work organisation, culture and history interweaves with learning work to guide and shape what is regarded by controllers as important and what is not. It demonstrates how this social construction is quite different from a top-down corporate culture approach. Technological and organizational reform is leading to changes in work practice and to changes in relationships between workers within the organization. These have implications for anyone wishing to understand the dynamics of organizational life. As such, this study provides insights into many of the changes that are occurring in the nature of work in many different industries. Previous research into learning in air traffic control has centred largely on cognitive individual performance, performance within teams or more recently on performance at a systems level. By tracing the role of context in shaping formal and informal learning, this book shows why interventions at these levels sometimes fail.
List of figures
ix
List of tables
xi
About the author xiii
Chapter One Introduction
1(14)
Why ghosts?
2(1)
High-3 work and aviation
3(2)
Continuous learning and conscious inquiry
4(1)
Rethinking learning and ghosts
5(1)
Structure as an element of organisation
6(3)
Culture as an element of organisation
9(2)
Organisational culture and organising for safety-critical work
10(1)
Purpose of this book
11(1)
Rest of the book
12(3)
Chapter Two Structure and change in air traffic control
15(22)
Aviation in Australia
15(2)
Practice of ATC
15(2)
Place called the room
17(1)
Continuity and change
18(10)
Inception of civil aviation
18(4)
Changes in physical sentience
22(1)
Development of the radar data interface
23(3)
Organisational restructuring
26(1)
Changes in recruitment
27(1)
Structural reform
28(6)
Symbolic analysis and integration
30(1)
Changes to the bandwidth of experience
30(2)
Abstracting interpretation
32(2)
Conclusion
34(3)
Chapter Three Cultures within ATC work
37(16)
Role of culture in organisations
37(1)
Group memberships
38(6)
Professional affiliation with the aviation industry
39(2)
Work group identification
41(1)
Operational and non-operational work groups
41(2)
Prima donnas and sector wogs: Approach and the rest of the room
43(1)
Language and stories: Work as play and war
44(1)
Shared narratives: War stories
45(1)
Role of collectively held beliefs and values
45(4)
Importance of ability: Having `The Right Stuff'
46(1)
Importance of performance
47(1)
Importance of confidence
48(1)
Myths and legends: Gun controllers and adrenalin junkies
49(3)
Conclusion
52(1)
Chapter Four Rethinking learning
53(14)
Formal and informal learning
55(1)
Defining learning in the workplace
55(1)
Abstracting a learning framework
56(8)
Experience as a process of learning
60(1)
Importance of reflection for learning in the workplace
61(1)
Role of conceptualisation for learning in the workplace
62(1)
Experimenting in the workplace
63(1)
Conclusion
64(3)
Chapter Five Experiencing ATC work
67(18)
Embedded nature of experience in learning: A cautionary note
67(1)
Experiencing ATC work
67(4)
Temporality of ATC work
71(12)
Using artefacts to monitor the temporal dimension of the work
71(1)
Using the body as an artefact to aid performance
72(2)
Complexity of ATC work
74(1)
Gaining `the picture': Using artefacts to aid in visualisation
74(1)
Affective experience of ATC work
75(1)
Affect and performance: Presentation of the confident self
75(3)
Invisibility of knowledge work and the valuing of performance
78(2)
Social experiences of ATC work
80(1)
Synchronising work: Interdependence and the body
81(2)
Conclusion
83(2)
Chapter Six Reflecting on ATC work
85(14)
Complexity of experience and reflection
85(4)
Affective experience and reflection
87(2)
Socially reflexive processes at work
89(8)
Spatio-structural organisation of reflection
89(1)
Watching others -- watching you: Peripheral reflection in ATC work
89(1)
Organising reflection into ATC work: Proximal reflection
90(3)
Socially reflexive cultural practices
93(1)
Collective memory and the telling of `war stories'
93(3)
Learning through war stories
96(1)
Conclusion
97(2)
Chapter Seven Conceptualising ATC work
99(20)
Schemas and conceptualisations about the social world
100(4)
Groups, collective conceptualisation and contested cultures
104(3)
Working approach and enroute: Contested cultures across `The Room'
104(3)
Instructional strategies and conceptualisations about learning
107(11)
Beliefs about trainee learning and performance
108(2)
Acting on
110(3)
Working with
113(1)
Working against
114(4)
Conclusion
118(1)
Chapter Eight Experimenting and ATC work
119(12)
Incidental and personal experimentation: Learning vicariously
119(4)
Sharing incidental experimentation
121(1)
Role of teamwork in sharing incidental experimentation
121(2)
Intentional experimentation
123(6)
Intentional and individual experimentation: The role of culture
123(2)
Intentional and individual experimentation: The role of confidence
125(2)
Intentional collective experimentation and the organisation of work
127(2)
Conclusion
129(2)
Chapter Nine Conclusion: Strategies for learning and design
131(16)
Implications of findings for the creation of educative workplaces
132(6)
Contextual mediation of workplace experience
132(3)
Contextual mediation of reflection
135(1)
Contextual mediation of conceptualisation
136(1)
Contextual mediation of experimenting
137(1)
Summary
138(1)
Mediation of learning in organisational design
138(7)
Structures of formalisation
139(2)
Structures of differentiation and integration
141(2)
Structures of integration and their influence on informal learning
143(1)
Mediation of work experience by physical work organisation
144(1)
Conclusion
145(2)
Appendix A Research 147(4)
Appendix B Selection of war stories narrated by controllers 151(4)
References 155(8)
Index 163
Christine Owen is a researcher with a focus on organisational behaviour and learning. Christine has an established and growing reputation as a human factors researcher and facilitator within emergency management. Her research investigates communication, co-ordination and teamwork practices in high technology, high intensity and safety critical work environments.