posted on 2024-07-11, 12:57authored byPamela Green
Within our lives there are spaces of influence or opportunities in which the impact of an ‘influential other' enables learning in ways that might not otherwise occur. This paper focusses on learning in terms of the learning of others, and in particular the professional impact of John Bowden. Building on the work of Vygotsky (1978), and Wood, Bruner and Ross (1976), the notion of supported learning is revisited and extended. A range of actual stories involving Bowden as key influence are presented through which the term: spaces of influence is developed. The stories flow from varied contexts including those pertaining to research students, communities of practice around methodological positions steeped in qualitative methods, phenomenography, and a scholarly review network. Five spaces within a metaspace of influence-action, explicit discourse, learning, practice development and trust are developed through the analysis of the stories. The paper pays tribute to the significant work of John Bowden, through the telling of embedded stories, the interweaving of theory such as Bowden and Marton's (1998) theory of learning for an unknown future, and through the development of the notion of spaces of influence that emerged from reflection here on Bowden's contribution within communities of practice.