Program of Study

 

Doctor of Education (Ed.D.) 

 

COLLABORATIVE DEGREE IN WORKPLACE LEARNING AND SOCIAL CHANGE

     Department of Adult Education & Counselling Psychology and

     Department of Sociology & Equity Studies in Education

 

PROGRAM OVERVIEW

The program caters to students interested in developing their understanding of work and learning trends in Canada and internationally, with a focus on social change. Students learn to situate workplace learning within broader social trends such as globalization, neo-liberalism, and organizational restructuring. The program introduces students to learning strategies that work to foster social change through greater equality of power, inclusivity, participatory decision making and economic democracy.

     Upon graduation, students receive an annotation on their academic transcripts in addition to their doctoral degrees. The requirements of the collaborative program can be met without extending the length of the degree program.

     All students who have been admitted to a doctoral program in Adult Education & Community Development (AECD) or Sociology and Equity Studies in Education (SESE) are eligible to participate in this exciting new collaborative program.

 

CORE FACULTY MEMBERS

Faculty associated with this collaborative program have particular expertise in issues related to workplace learning amongst immigrant workers, foreign trained professionals, marginalized workers, as well as workers embedded within progressive organizational structures. Faculty do research in the areas of social and workplace policy, organizational development, skills development paradigms, technological change, industrial relations, labour market analysis, and school-to-work transitions.

 

Nancy Jackson (AECP)

Marilyn Laiken (AECP)

David Livingstone (SESE)

D'Arcy Martin (SESE)

Kiran Mirchandani (AECP)

Shahrzad Mojab (AECP)

Roxana Ng (AECP and SESE)

Jack Quarter (AECP and SESE)

Peter Sawchuk (SESE)

 

CORE COURSES

This course is cross-listed and will be counted towards regular home department requirements in SESE and AECP.

WPL3931H Doctor’s Seminar in
                  Workplace Learning and Social Change

D. Livingstone

This course will allow students to engage in advanced learning and research on the central national and international debates in the field. Students will develop extensive analytic and conceptual knowledge in the areas of the historical development of the notion of "workplace learning" and its links to diverse agendas of social change. The course will require the critical assessment and research applications of theories of workplace learning and social change, as well as practice and policy in the area.

 

ELECTIVE COURSES

AEC3131H Special Topics in Adult Education
                 Students may seek the permission of the instructor to attend
                 
one of the following additional courses

AEC1113H Gender and Hierarchy at Work

AEC1119H Creating a Learning Organization

AEC1131H Workplace Literacies: Theory, Policy and Practice

SES2942H Education and Work

The purposes of this course are to engage critically with issues involved in the interrelations of learning and work, and to explore alternative explanations of these relationships. Learning and work will be broadly defined.  The sphere of learning encompasses formal schooling, continuing education courses and training programs, informal education, group and self-directed learning and tacit learning throughout the life course. The sphere of work may include paid employment as well as other activities such as union activism, schoolwork, unpaid household labour, community volunteer work and so forth. We will critically analyze current dominant ideologies and contending theories of education-work relations, review relevant research literature on socio-economic and educational changes and on education-job matching, on-the-job learning, and we will study alternative models of future learning-work relations. Practical implications will be considered throughout the course. Special attention will be devoted to building awareness of different disciplinary and methodological traditions in the study of education, learning and work.

AEC1107H Developing and Leading High-Performing Teams

AEC1182H Teaching, Learning, and Working in Nonprofits and
                 Public Sector Organizations.

AEC3140   Post-colonial Relations and Transformative Learning

AEC1266H Career Counselling & Development: Transition from School to Work

 

FUTURE OFFERINGS

AEC3131H Immigrants and Professional Learning

AEC3131H Rethinking Skills: Theory, Policy, and Politics

AEC3182H Work, Technology, and the Knowledge Economy

SES3999H Learning Community Unionism

CTL2007H  Discourse Analysis

 

 

PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS

Ed.D. students (SESE) must complete eight half courses for their degrees. In order to fulfill the requirements of the collaborative program, students must take one core course (WPC3931) and one elective course from the list provided. The remaining courses will be those required for the fulfillment of the degree requirements of the program of admission. Students will be required to complete a thesis which incorporates issues of workplace learning and social change. Students’ thesis committee must include at least one member of the WLSC Core Faculty as supervisor or committee member.

 

ADMISSION PROCESS

Students may apply to the collaborative program either at the time of application to OISE or after they have been admitted to AECD or SESE. To apply, please submit a short statement of interest that includes relevant personal or professional experiences, motivation for seeking advanced training in Workplace Learning and Social Change, a brief outline of your proposed thesis, a preferred supervisor, your student number and degree program. Upon acceptance, students will be registered in both the home departments (AECP or SESE) as well as in the collaborative program in Workplace Learning and Social Change.

Continuing students can also enter the collaborative program by submitting an application and taking the required course. If students have already taken a suitable course on workplace issues, that course may be counted as their elective.

 

Centre for the Study of Education and Work

Students in this collaborative degree program will have the opportunity to participate in the intellectual field of Workplace Learning and Social Change through involvement in activities organized by the Centre for the Study of Education and Work. Students are encouraged to use the CSEW online library, join a working group, or attend the speaker series.

 

FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:

Kiran Mirchandani, Director

Collaborative Program in Workplace Learning and Social Change

Department of Adult Education and OISE, the University of Toronto

Counselling Psychology

252 Bloor Street West,
Toronto ON, M5S 1V6 Rm. 7-111

Peter Sawchuk
Centre for the Study of Education and Work

Department of Sociology and Equity Studies

OISE, the University of Toronto

252 Bloor Street West
Toronto
ON, M5S 1V6

Telephone: 416-978-0518

E-mail: psawchuk@oise.utoronto.ca

 

 

About CSEW  |  Programs  |  Faculty  |  Research  |  Other Members  |  Resources  |  Site Map  |  Contact

CSEW, 2008