The Conversable World: Finding Our Compass in A Post 9/11 World
This article explicates the idea of conversation as the primary opening for learning to occur in all domains of society. The “age of conversation” emerges in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. This historical analysis is followed by a discussion of the features of “good conversations” to create benchmarks for creating democratic learning cultures at work and in public spaces. The author argues that these benchmarks must be translated into lived reality if people are to create empowered workers and developmental work.
Year of publication: |
2018
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Authors: | Welton, Michael R. |
Published in: |
International Journal of Adult Vocational Education and Technology (IJAVET). - IGI Global, ISSN 1947-878X, ZDB-ID 2695795-4. - Vol. 9.2018, 3 (01.07.), p. 14-23
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Publisher: |
IGI Global |
Subject: | Age of Conversation | Consultative Virtues | Deliberative Democracy | Democratic Learning Cultures | Empowerment | Good Conversations | Identity | Listening Skills | Public Debate | Public Spaces | Public Spheres |
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