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What
is a learning Area?
A Tourism Learning Area Definition
Here are three ways how pilot Learning Area Coordinators described what
a Learning Area is:
'A learning area aims to bring together people in a destination
(or thematic area) in order to work together to improve their individual
performance and the quality of tourism (in the area) through the development
and exchange of skills, knowledge and experience. This should include
public sector bodies involved in tourism management and development,
representatives of tourism enterprises and facility managers, and training
and enterprise support bodies.'
'A Learning Area aims to maximize the opportunities for learning within
an area (destination). Learning may arise from participation in courses
and from local experiences. Opportunities will be stimulated and coordinated
to take into account of what enterprises need to learn. Such needs will
be determined by a co-operative approach between public authorities,
learning institutes and enterprises themselves.'
'A Tourism Learning Area (TLA) is a concept aimed at improving skills
in tourism. It is based on an exchange of learning experiences aimed
at increasing quality and competitiveness within the industry. A TLA
consists of a network of all sectors and individuals who contribute to
tourism (including local authorities, entrepreneurs, learning institutions,
community groups, and farmers). It can focus on a geographical area or
a specific type of tourism activity. A TLA recognises the importance
of Life-Long Learning and accepts that learning takes place in a variety
of formal and informal settings, from classrooms to chatting in the street.
The process requires an element of central coordination, but ultimately
depends on the contribution of all suppliers and consumers of tourism-related
learning.'
From both the theoretical concept in the previous section, and now these
viewpoints of how to describe a Tourism Learning Area, we can formally
define the concept using a technical definition that elaborates both
the processes and structure found in the approach: ' A Tourism
Learning Area (TLA) is a concept of a multi-stakeholder, inter-sectoral,
partnership approach aimed at improving human potential for running
the tourism sector at the local/regional level. The TLA approach holistically
engages a broad range of stakeholders with an interest in employment,
education and new technology. A Tourism Learning Area brings stakeholders
together in coherent information and cooperation networks, in order
to pay specific attention to the sector's performance and governance
issues related to regional eco-system security, human capital and SME/Micro-enterprise
development. A TLA network addresses contemporary tourism sector challenges
by developing inter- and intra-organisational collaboration and learning
experiences aimed at improvements in entrepreneurial quality, innovation,
competitiveness and sustainability.'
Benefits of a Tourism Learning Area
From that definition, it's worth asking what would be achieved in practical
terms if the concept were to be implemented and functioning effectively.
When applied to the tourism sector, a Learning Area should develop
stakeholders who are more capable of:
- Creating quality products and services,
- Demonstrating innovative capability,
- Increasing performance and outputs
- Being more autonomous
- Forming partnerships, networks and clusters
- Displaying greater work-place flexibility
- Operating in an entrepreneurial context
- Working with changing technology
- Developing adaptive strategies in the face of globalisation and
global change
- Understanding how to work in a more sustainable way
Decision makers should be made aware of these benefits so that
a Learning Area implementation is backed by the necessary level of political
support .
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