A seat at the table: An investigation of the relationship between knowledge and power in hospitality management education

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

School of Tourism, The University of Queensland

Abstract

In some academic circles it is contended that in the very nature of training potential employees to effectively complete the tasks of today, educators are missing the opportunity to provide learners with access to the powerful knowledge required to challenge industry status quo. In Australia, vocational hospitality education is framed within competency based training (CBT) based on training packages designed by industry skills councils. The power in such processes is strongly in favour of current industry (and often commercial) outcomes and may potentially limit the growth opportunities for both students and industry as a whole. In order to investigate this premise, the following research paper reflects on the experiences of a group of hotel department managers who undertook a CBT framed Graduate Certificate in Management in 2012.

Description

The full text version is available from Informit. Item availability may be restricted. Log in required for WAI staff and students.

Citation

Richardson, L. (2014, January 01). A seat at the table: An investigation of the relationship between knowledge and power in hospitality management education [Paper presentation]. CAUTHE 2014: Tourism and Hospitality in the Contemporary World: Trends, Changes and Complexity, Brisbane, Australia. https://search.informit.org/doi/epdf/10.3316/informit.408649509269450

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

William Angliss Institute is the Government endorsed specialist training provider for the foods, tourism, hospitality and events industries. Over more than 85 years we have earned a strong global reputation for the delivery of innovative higher education, training solutions and consultancy services to clients across Australia and abroad. Read more...