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Research group leader

Thematic focus areas

The research group has three main thematic focus areas. The common denominator for all three areas is educational practice, and all sub-themes focus on characteristics of learning situations that are conducive for learning – in technology rich learning environments, in higher education, and in schools or informal learning situations. The first theme is ICT and learning, learning and leadership in organisations, educational policy and philosophy. The second theme lies within higher education and life long learning, whereas the third theme focuses on teacher education, assessment and professional development. These three themes are closely connected as they influence and strengthen each other.
 
1. ICT and learning, learning and leadership in organisations, educational policy and philosophy
2. Higher education and lifelong learning
3. Teacher education, assessment and professional development

pc data
PLP

The research group Productive Learning Practice is headed by Professor Sølvi Lillejord, Professor Olga Dysthe and Professor Kari Smith, and consists of educational researchers from the Department of Education. The participants are all involved in ongoing research on education, more specifically on topics with relevance to applied education, focusing in particular on ICT and learning, higher education, professional knowledge and school related issues. In contemporary educational research the relevance for practice is pertinent. As applied education is the prioritized research area for educational research at the University of Bergen, we are well situated in the competition for external funding. Researchers in Productive Learning Practice are studying problems of diverse and contested concepts of knowledge with relevance to various learning processes – whether they are individual, intersubjective or in organisations. Questions related to continuous professional development and lifelong learning are put in focus. Furthermore, the understanding of what it means to be literate and employable throughout life is of vital importance in contemporary education. In several of the subprojects, research questions centre on how the introduction of ICT influences, challenges and changes traditional educational activities and learning processes. The research group is examining issues which can help us, as educators, to plan for the future, to be ahead of and initiating changes.