This paper reviews contemporary debates about tourism and hospitality education to conceptualise a curriculum space framework that can be used to facilitate understanding and decisionmaking. The paper is conceptual and makes two key contributions: it draws together diverse discourses about the balance between higher order knowledge in liberal education and skills-based vocational education required by industry; and it builds upon the Philosophic Practitioner Education to conceptualise a curriculum space that is socially constructed, dynamic and flexible. The proposed framework incorporates the idea of phronesis and the need for students to develop practical wisdom but acknowledges that these opportunities are bounded by a forcefield of influences on higher education.
Journal article
The philosophic practitioner and the curriculum space
Annals of Tourism Research, Vol.39(4), pp.2154-2176
2012
Metrics
84 Record Views
Abstract
Details
- Title
- The philosophic practitioner and the curriculum space
- Creators
- Dianne Dredge - Southern Cross UniversityPierre Benckendorff - University of QueenslandMichele Day - Southern Cross UniversityMichael J Gross - University of South AustraliaMaree Walo - Southern Cross UniversityPaul Weeks - Southern Cross UniversityPaul Whitelaw - Victoria University
- Publication Details
- Annals of Tourism Research, Vol.39(4), pp.2154-2176
- Identifiers
- 4056; 991012822070002368
- Academic Unit
- The Hotel School; Centre for Gambling Education and Research; Faculty of Business, Law and Arts; Faculty of Education; Management; School of Business and Tourism
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Local Fields
- Original Research - SoLT