InnoOmnia – a knowledge community of vocational education and entrepreneurship

Authors

  • Elina Oksanen-Ylikoski
  • Teemu Ylikoski

Keywords:

working life orientation, vocational education, knowledge community, enthusiasm, entrepreneurship

Abstract

Working life orientation and entrepreneurial thinking are pivotal in today’s vocational education. Through a case study, we discuss the multi-actor knowledge community of InnoOmnia in Espoo, Finland. By breaking traditional silos, education transforms into co-learning, where entrepreneurs, students, educators, and other parties can all contribute equally. However, the transition is not painless. Based on rich qualitative text and image data, we identify tensions pertaining to community boundaries, operational culture, structure, and leadership. There is no single shared view of a community, but rather, every participant seems to hold an individualised interpretation of InnoOmnia. Diverging expectations result in inter-actor conflict. Our analysis suggests that by default, an innovative, entrepreneurial community inevitably contains criticising and destructive forces. In terms of community support, enthusiasm and joy of work emerge as particularly meaningful forces. Further research focusing on work enthusiasm and tolerance of conflict in knowledge communities could advance vocational education substantially.

Section
Tiedeartikkelit

Published

2015-06-01

How to Cite

Oksanen-Ylikoski, E., & Ylikoski, T. (2015). InnoOmnia – a knowledge community of vocational education and entrepreneurship. Journal of Professional and Vocational Education, 17(e), 5–16. Retrieved from https://journal.fi/akakk/article/view/102535