The Bachelor of Learning Management (BLM) and education capability : why we do not prepare 'teachers' anymore.
journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00authored byRichard Smith, David Lynch, James Mienczakowski
This paper explains the underlying logic of a four-year pre-service preparation program, the Bachelor of Management (BLM). The program was designed for post-New Economy knowledge workers in education and training. Its intent is to graduate work-place ready and future-oriented 'learning managers' who have a particular skill in achieving student learning outcomes, rather than 'teachers'. A professional 'business-to-business' arrangement between the teaching profession and Central Queensland University's Faculty of Education and Creative Arts developed the BLM collaboratively in October 2000 and the program enrolled its first students in 2001. The BLM signals a definite shift in emphasis to that of the conventional B.Ed model of teacher education by its four knowledge domains: pedagogy, essential professional knowledge, futures and networks and partnerships. The paper describes how the BLM was developed, some of the major challenges to such innovation and reviews the core concepts of 'learning management' and 'portal task'.
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)