000 03404nam a2200313Ia 4500
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008 230305s2019 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9789811306372
040 _cTBS
041 _aeng
043 _aen_UK
050 _aLC1047.A7
_bS783 2019
245 4 _aThe study of food, tourism, hospitality and events
_b: 21st-century approaches
_c/ edited by Sue Beeton, Alison Morrison.
260 _aSingapore : Springer Singapore : Imprint: Springer, 2019.
300 _axv, 274 pages : illustrations, charts, portraits (black and white) ; 24 cm.
490 _aTourism, Hospitality & Event Management,
_v2510-4993.
505 _a1. Introduction — 2. Framing scholarly practice — pt. 1. The study of food, tourism, hospitality and events : past, present and future — 3. Tourism and food : necessity or experience? — 4. Event studies : progression and future in the field — 5. The Australian quality framework and lifelong learning : an educator's perspective — 6. Cooking the books — 7. An indigenous journey — pt. 2. From vocational to higher education : a continuing journey or full stop? — 8. Curricular reform in food education — 9. Supporting scholarship : reshaping a vocational educational library for higher education — 10. Better together : negotiating the tension between liberal and practical knowledge in event management curriculum design — 11. Mobility as the teacher : experience-based learning — 12. Student learning and employability : immersion in live events — 13. Designing and running overseas study tours — pt. 3. Research informed teaching — 14. Bridging the gap : making research 'useful' in food, tourism, hospitality and events - the role of research impact — 15. Participatory action research as development tool for industry training — 16. Outside the classroom walls : understanding war and peace on the western front — 17. Student leadership development — 18. International students as tourists : implications for educators — 19.through the camera lens : utilising visual imagery with short study tours abroad — pt. 4. Pushing the boundaries of scholarship — 20. Fuelling a praxis-exegesis cyclical model — 21. Context specific language : critical to student learning — 22. Simulated pedagogies and auto-ethnographic reflections — pt. 5. Conclusions : into the 21st century — 23. Plausible futures : transforming ourselves, transforming our industry — 24. Conclusion : studying scholarship in changing times.
520 _aThis book elaborates upon, critiques and discusses 21st-century approaches to scholarship and research in the food, tourism, hospitality, and events trades and applied professions, using case examples of innovative practice. The specific field considered in this book is also placed against the backdrop of the larger question of how universities and other institutions of higher learning are evolving and addressing the new relationships between research, scholarship and teaching.
590 _bPreview available on publisher's website.
650 0 _aHigher education
_97088
650 0 _aTourism
_91154
650 0 _aManagement
_9319
650 0 _aProfessional education
_911010
650 0 _aService industries
_91728
650 0 _aVocational education
_923490
700 _aMorrison, Alison
_eeditor
_922127
700 _aBeeton, Sue
_eeditor
_922128
942 _2lcc
999 _c2729
_d2729