The meanings of learning as described by Polish migrant bloggers

Author: Monika Popow
Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland

Edition: Volume 56, Number 3, November 2016

Summary: This paper addresses the meanings given to learning by Polish migrant bloggers. It presents the result of an analysis of ten blogs, written by Poles living abroad. The blogs under analysis were chosen on the basis of random sample. The analysed material was categorised by recurring themes, which included: learning in Poland, language acquisition, formal education, learning about the new culture, discovering the social norms of the host society and seeing immigration as an all-round learning experience. Four types of meanings given by authors were distinguished: migration as learning experience, learning as effort which deserves a reward, learning as a change, and learning as adapting to multiculturalism. The meanings were analysed according to the principles of critical discourse analysis. The paper discusses how the meanings given by authors are linked to a broad socio-cultural context. It analyses also the impact of learning into identity creation processes.

Keywords: migration, Internet blogs, learning, discourse analysis

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This article is part of AJAL, Volume 56_3. The entire volume is available in .pdf for purchase here.

International vocational education and training—The migration and learning mix

Author/s: Ly Thi Tran, Chris Nyland

Edition: Volume 51, Number 1, April 2011

Summary: International VET students have divergent, shifting and in some cases multiple purposes for undertaking their VET courses. Students’ motives may be instrumental and/or intrinsic and can include obtaining permanent residency, accumulating skills that can secure good employment, gaining a foothold that leads to higher education, and/or personal transformation. Moreover, students’ study purposes and imagining of acquired values are neither fixed nor unitary. They can be shaped and reshaped by their families and personal aspirations and by the social world and the learning environment with which they interact. We argue that, whatever a student’s study purpose, s/he needs to engage in a learning practice and should be provided with a high quality education. Indeed, we insist this remains the case even if students enrol only in order to gain the qualifications needed to migrate. The paper details the association between migration and learning, and argues that the four variations emerging from the empirical data of this study that centre on migration and skills’ accumulation better explain this association than does the ‘international VET students simply want to migrate’ perspective. We conclude with a discussion of why the stereotype that holds VET international students are mere ‘PR hunters’ is unjust and constitutes a threat to the international VET sector.

Keywords: international students, VET, motives, migration, quality, education

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This article is part of AJAL, Volume 51_1. The entire volume is available in .pdf for purchase here.