Will Richardson

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Making Ourselves Vulnerable

January 14, 2014 By Will Richardson

George Siemens:

Learning is vulnerability. When we learn, we make ourselves vulnerable. When we engage in learning, we communicate that we want to grow, to become better, to improve ourselves. When I first started blogging, I had a sense of fear with every post (“did that sound stupid?”), loss of sleep soul-searching when a critical comment was posted, and envy when peers posted something brilliant (“wow, why didn’t I think of that?”). When a student posts an opinion in a discussion forum or when someone offers a controversial opinion – these are vulnerability-inducing expressions. On a smaller scale, posting a tweet, sharing an image, or speaking into the void can be intimidating for a new user. (I’m less clear about how being vulnerable becomes craving attention for some people as they get immersed in media!). While the learning process can’t be short-circuited, and the ambiguity and messiness can’t be eliminated, it is helpful for educators to recognize the social, identity, and emotional factors that influence learners. Often, these factors matter more than content/knowledge elements in contributing to learner success.

Walk down the vendor floor of any big edu-conference and you’ll see our obsession with making learning less messy and less “vulnerable.” Struggle, patience, courage, persistence, failure, passion…none of these are quantifiable to the degree that reformers or most edupreneurs need them to be to “count.” Yet schools will spend time and money (lots of it) on stuff that organizes, compartmentalizes, personalizes, standardizes, and captures “learning” in order to be compared “successfully” to other districts down the road.

If we fail to recognize the inherent risk that goes with learning something new, we fail our kids. Yet we try to mitigate that risk in almost every decision we make. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: edreform, education, george siemens, learning, risk, schools, teaching

Wasting Access

June 22, 2012 By Will Richardson

I find this George Siemens quote interesting on a number of levels:

Higher education is searching for a new value point, a new narrative that communicates what it offers learners and society. Part of this new value point is communicating what the university offers in an age where the mediator role of content curation and teaching is now starting to be addressed through organizations or agents other than the university. The Internet is happening to education. As a consequence, many of the previously held value points (content and teaching, for example) are being in a sense, reduced.

First, as a parent of two teenagers, I’m looking hard for the “new value point” of higher ed for my own kids moving forward. I’ve been thinking about how the “organizations or agents other than the university” will play into their learning for quite some time, and I remain convinced those alternatives will play a big role in their ongoing education.

But more, I think George captures the challenge for K-12 as well. What now do WE offer at a moment when it’s not so much about mediating content and teaching as much as it is about finding and creating one’s own content and the sharing of learning and knowledge? I’m not so sure it’s a “new” narrative as much as it’s about the appeal that a interest based, self-directed, co-operative progressive education has right now. I mean what good is access if we’re not using it in ways to develop the important mindsets and dispositions of learners?

Read the whole interview. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: education, george siemens, higher ed, learning

It Will Change Education

September 2, 2011 By Will Richardson

George Siemens was nice enough to share a presentation he gave in South Africa yesterday, and while it’s always better to hear the context that any speaker brings to the ideas on the screen, a couple of the points in his slide deck got me thinking. Even though it’s articulating his thoughts around higher ed, I think there is a lot of relevance for K-12 as well.

In the accompanying blog post, George says:

I’m concerned about the narrowness of thought in higher education reform today…If you have one solution to the problem of education, you have missed the true nature of the problem. Many, many stakeholders have a vested interest in what goes on with our universities. Doing a better job of giving learners control and better tools for creating and accessing content is not enough. Most of reform suggestions are at best additive to the current model. None that I’ve seen have the prospect of replacing it.

Same can be said of the reform conversation in public schools; we’re tinkering on the edges, not understanding the true transformative nature of what technology is bringing. I’m reminded of this great Neil Postman quote:

Technological change is not additive; it is ecological, which means, it changes everything and is, therefore, too important to be left entirely in the hands of Bill Gates.

Amen.

But here is the deal, and this is one of the clearest points in George’s presentation: this technology thing and specifically the web is going to change us whether we want it to or not. He writes:

If it changes how information is created…
If it changes how information is shared…
If it changes how information is evaluated…
If it changes how people connect…
If it changes how people communicate…
If it changes what people can do for themselves…

Then it will change education, teaching and learning.  

It already is.

So here is our challenge, I think. We can go along kicking or screaming, or we can LEAD. As I said the other day, we are the learning experts (or at least we should be) in our communities. We need to become the learning with technology experts in our communities, the ones who understand deeply and personally the really powerful opportunities we have right now and who also understand the difficulties and hazards that technology presents us as well.

You have a choice. Which will it be?

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: education, george siemens, learning, Neil Postman, technology

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