Abstract

In the literature, informal learning is considered to be of great importance to employees’ development of workplace learning. The aim of this study, which involves respondents from a Swedish police education unit, was to contribute knowledge about Swedish police education teachers’ informal learning as regards conditions for learning, learning activities and learning experiences resulting from their engagement in these activities. The results of the study are based on daily digital logbook notes made by 25 police and university teachers during one month and subsequent interviews with these teachers. The main conclusions can be summarised as follows: 1) The culture, structure and materials of the workplace are important parts of teachers’ conditions for informal learning. 2) The teachers’ informal learning activities are characterised by intentional learning, where supporting interactions with colleagues in their own teams and other, more knowledgeable, colleagues are highly valued. Furthermore, the most common triggers for teachers’ informal learning are issues relating to pedagogy and digital technology, and face-to-face contacts with colleagues are preferred. 3) The police teachers describe their learning experiences made in the course of informal learning activities as a transition from an instructor-based to a teaching-oriented approach, while the learning of the university teachers is focused on contextualisation of their teaching by integrating academic knowledge into the police practice. The article concludes with a brief discussion about the possibilities and limitations of informal learning.

Highlights

  • The literature shows that professional learning to a large extent emerges through working, and that increasing the understanding of how people learn through work is important (Billett 2011)

  • 3) The police teachers describe their learning experiences made in the course of informal learning activities as a transition from an instructor-based to a teaching-oriented approach, while the learning of the university teachers is focused on contextualisation of their teaching by integrating academic knowledge into the police practice

  • As a result of this new constellation of teachers, the studied police education unit can be regarded as a kind of melting pot for different professional experiences and skills which, if integrated, can be an important asset for the teachers’ workplace learning

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Summary

Introduction

The literature shows that professional learning to a large extent emerges through working, and that increasing the understanding of how people learn through work is important (Billett 2011). As a result of this new constellation of teachers, the studied police education unit can be regarded as a kind of melting pot for different professional experiences and skills which, if integrated, can be an important asset for the teachers’ workplace learning. Workplace learning is sometimes related to formal educational activities, but more often to informal daily work-related activities such as reflection on job activities, collegial sharing of knowledge (Bednall et al 2014), performing new tasks and working with and observing others (Crouse et al 2011). As these examples of activities suggest, informal workplace learning may include both an intentional and an incidental dimension (Jeong et al 2018)

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