Learning Beyond the Classroom and Textbook: Client Projects’ Role in Helping Students Transition From School to Work

Elisabeth Kramer-Simpson New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology ; Julianne Newmark New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology ; Julie Dyke Ford New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology

Abstract

To prepare students for careers postgraduation, many academic programs have added components, such as service-learning projects (civic oriented, real-audience tasks) and client projects (real-audience corporate or nonprofit tasks), which aim to acclimate students to the expectations of “real world” clients while they are still in the relatively “safe” domain of the classroom. The two studies reported in this paper examine whether participating in client projects as part of regular technical communication classes aids students in internships and later on the job. Research questions: Overall question: How does legitimate peripheral participation in client projects give students opportunities for learning beyond the end of the client project? Literature review: Service-learning and client projects are intended to benefit students by offering real-world audiences and complex experiences with professional practitioners. Client projects help students face these challenges when moving from school to work, such as acculturating into the organization or completing tasks designed for purposes other than the learner's development. Methodology: To evaluate experiences on a particular client project, study one surveyed six students with open-ended questions about their experiences on it. To explore how the client project prepared them for internships, study two used semistructured interviews with interns and supervisors, observations of interns at work, and documents that interns created. Results and conclusions: Through recursive analysis, client projects emerged as being important in students' internship experiences. Students participate in client projects in ways that support their learning and development as members of a community of practice in internships and on the job. This learning is gradual and varied. One particular finding for teachers is that rather than shield students from client interactions, it may be helpful to promote frequent, structured interactions with clients to better prepare students for the workplace.

Journal
IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication
Published
2015-03-01
DOI
10.1109/tpc.2015.2423352
CompPile
Open Access
Closed
Topics
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Citation Context

Cited by in this index (6)

  1. Computers and Composition
  2. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication
  3. Communication Design Quarterly
  4. Journal of Technical Writing and Communication
  5. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication
Show all 6 →
  1. Technical Communication Quarterly

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