The Performative Relation Between Storyteller, Story, and Children

Studying an oral storytelling situation taking place within a school context gives us the opportunity to look at the situation as a narrative event facilitated for children’s participation and co-construction. The oral storyteller does not only use langua

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THE KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY AND EDUCATION Volume 9 Series Editors: D.W. Livingstone, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto, Canada David Guile, Faculty of Policy and Society, Institute of Education, University of London, UK Editorial Board: Stephen Billett, Griffiths University, Australia Jian Huang, East China Normal University, Shanghai, China Emery Hyslop-Margison, Concordia University, Canada Karen Jensen, University of Oslo, Norway Johan Muller, University of Cape Town, South Africa Scope: The aim of this series is to provide a focus for writers and readers interested in exploring the relation between the knowledge economy and education or an aspect of that relation, for example, vocational and professional education theorised critically. It seeks authors who are keen to question conceptually and empirically the causal link that policymakers globally assume exists between education and the knowledge economy by raising: (i) epistemological issues as regards the concepts and types of and the relations between knowledge, the knowledge economy and education; (ii) sociological and political economic issues as regards the changing nature of work, the role of learning in workplaces, the relation between work, formal and informal learning and competing and contending visions of what a knowledge economy/knowledge society might look like; and (iii) pedagogic issues as regards the relationship between knowledge and learning in educational, community and workplace contexts. The series is particularly aimed at researchers, policymakers, practitioners and students who wish to read texts and engage with researchers who call into question the current conventional wisdom that the knowledge economy is a new global reality to which all individuals and societies must adjust, and that lifelong learning is the strategy to secure such an adjustment. The series hopes to stimulate debate amongst this diverse audience by publishing books that: (i) articulate alternative visions of the relation between education and the knowledge economy; (ii) offer new insights into the extent, modes, and effectiveness of people’s acquisition of knowledge and skill in the new circumstances that they face in the developed and developing world, (iii) and suggest how changes in both work conditions and curriculum and pedagogy can led to new relations between work and education.

Learning across Contexts in the Knowledge Society

Edited by Ola Erstad Department of Education, University of Oslo, Norway Kristiina Kumpulainen Department of Teacher Education, University of Helsinki, Finland Åsa Mäkitalo Department of Education, Communication and Learning, University of Gothenburg, Sweden Kim Christian Schrøder Department of Communication, Business and Information Technologies, Roskilde University, Denmark Pille Pruulmann-Vengerfeldt Institute of Social Studies, University of Tartu, Estonia and Thuridur Jóhannsdóttir School of Education, University of Iceland, Iceland

A C.I.P. record for this book is available from the Library of Congr