Abstract

Two higher education courses involving students, teachers, and customers in multifaceted experiences of knowledge creation are described. The Trialogical Learning Approach (TLA) provides a theoretical framework to address learning and teaching organized around authentic problems and the development of shared knowledge objects, such as reports, products, and new practices. The approach directs attention to those aspects of social interaction and artifact-mediated activities, which focus on the development of shared objects and the pursuit of novel knowledge and understanding. The roles of technology-mediation, customer involvement, and guidance in developing effective pedagogical practices for knowledge creation were addressed. It appears necessary to design sufficient open-endedness and complexity for students’ teamwork to generate unpredictable, practical, and epistemologically challenging situations. Pedagogical design for such a process has different foci in the four central phases: planning, project initiation, project execution, and presentation and evaluation. Planning and initiation are central to establishing relevance and project awareness for the collaboration of student teams with a customer. Guidance and expert modeling during project initiation and execution is needed to overcome feelings of uncertainty during a challenging and complex assignment. Mediation provided by collaboration tools facilitates reflection on collective practices, iterative development of knowledge objects, and documentation of the learning outcomes of customer projects.

Highlights

  • The education of new professionals for knowledge work is a multifaceted endeavor

  • The aim of the present paper is to explore what kinds of knowledge creating processes higher education students are engaged in when they work on real customer projects and how these processes can be supported by means of technology, customer involvement, and instructor guidance

  • The present paper explored how two courses in university education were set up to teach and support knowledge creation practices

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Summary

Introduction

The education of new professionals for knowledge work is a multifaceted endeavor. A means for teaching professional knowledge work practices involves creating spaces for interdisciplinary collaboration within projects or workshops (Latucca, 2002; Manathunga, Lant, & Mellick, 2006; Derry & Fischer, 2005; Nance, 2000). These are meant to simulate work life practices in cross-functional environments (Muukkonen, Lakkala, Kaistinen, & Nyman, 2010). In contrast to situations confined to studying within one discipline alone, multi-disciplinary course settings can optimally prepare an individual for these kinds of challenging cross-functional environments (Lantos, Brady, & McCaskey, 2009)

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