The Push and Pull of the World: How Experience Animates Practice

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Bibliographic Details
Title: The Push and Pull of the World: How Experience Animates Practice
Language: English
Authors: Wagenaar, Hendrik, Cook, S. D. Noam
Source: Evidence & Policy: A Journal of Research, Debate and Practice. May 2011 7(2):193-212.
Availability: Policy Press. University of Bristol, 1-9 Old Park Hill, Bristol BS2 8BB, UK. Tel: +44-117-954-5940; e-mail: pp-info@policypress.co.uk; Web site: https://policypress.co.uk/journals/evidence-and-policy
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 20
Publication Date: 2011
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Descriptors: Experience, Interaction, Knowledge Level, Theory Practice Relationship
DOI: 10.1332/174426411X579225
ISSN: 1744-2648
Abstract: A refreshed and expanded understanding of experience can contribute to a relevant reassessment of the nature of practice and its relationship with knowledge and context. We characterise experience as essentially transactional, as entailing constitutive interaction with the elements of the social, institutional and physical world. It is within this transactional experience--within the push and pull of the world--that practice addresses the constraints and affordances of what we know and the contexts within which we generate and deploy what we know. Practice is animated by and within experience. Building on a concrete case of police work, we propose and explore three characteristics of the animation of practice by experience: "actionable understanding", "ongoing business" and "the eternally unfolding present".
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2017
Accession Number: EJ1132989
Database: ERIC
Description
Abstract:A refreshed and expanded understanding of experience can contribute to a relevant reassessment of the nature of practice and its relationship with knowledge and context. We characterise experience as essentially transactional, as entailing constitutive interaction with the elements of the social, institutional and physical world. It is within this transactional experience--within the push and pull of the world--that practice addresses the constraints and affordances of what we know and the contexts within which we generate and deploy what we know. Practice is animated by and within experience. Building on a concrete case of police work, we propose and explore three characteristics of the animation of practice by experience: "actionable understanding", "ongoing business" and "the eternally unfolding present".
ISSN:1744-2648
DOI:10.1332/174426411X579225