Showing posts with label Dave Cormier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Cormier. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 May 2015

#rhizo15 W3: Here come the CONTENT



Where are we? What week is this? Who am I? Am I the sum of my content?

It's Week 3 and the Dave has asked us to consider content and its role in education:

I’ve always been a little confused by the word ‘content.’ There is something lonely and unconnected about the word somehow, when I hear it used with reference to what happens in learning. I imagine a lone student, huddled away in a dorm room, reading sanitized facts in the hopes of passing a multiple choice quiz. The content somehow merging with the learning objective and the assessment to create a world where learning is about acquiring truth from the truth box. … So what happens when we peek under the word ‘content’ to see what lives there? What does it mean for a course to ‘contain’ information? What choices are being made… what power is being used?



I remember teaching my evening Access students (Access = an alternative route into HE for ‘non-traditional’ students who did not have previous academic success or induction) a short Media course that I had designed shortly after taking my own Masters: Film and Television Studies for Education. So excited was I by all that we had read and said and done on THAT course that I tried to shove all of its content into one six-week programme!

Of course, my idea of ‘content’ is not so much me telling – it's discussion, seminars and presentations - a bit of ‘doing’ things – so perhaps not too bad. But – PHEW – you know?

So here we are in the rhizome considering CONTENT – and the tensions of content in education. When we recently presented on our Becoming module, our audience was positive but still they wondered, how had we got away with so little ‘content’? 

And there we have it. 

How, in this surveillance, measurement and target-driven culture, had we managed this?

In this - the students have developed friendship groups and CoP. They have worked together - and creatively alone. The one who definitely HATED blogging has developed the most creative blog EVER (https://noblechloe.wordpress.com/) – with feedback from other students around the world who have taken part in her 30-day drawing challenge. The students have felt and shown their engagement, their commitment, their industry – their pride and joy.

So why do even people who approve, think this is so transgressive? Why are we supposed to feel that we have ‘got away’ with something?



The ignorant school master?
When I first started teaching English Literature A’ levels in the 1980s, we had three three-hour externally set exams that we had to aim for – and these outlined our general content. We had to cover Shakespeare and Chaucer; nineteenth and twentieth century literature; and poetry and prose. There was choice in which texts we chose to focus upon and as tutor I tended to choose the most accessible and the shortest texts. It was an evening class and instead of two years, we had six months to cover the syllabus!

I never taught this class – we discussed and discussed and discussed – and the discussions improved when I discovered the pyramid (think/pair/share) method. The students presented on different topics – and we predicted potential questions on the forthcoming papers – and discussed possible answers.

This to me is no different really from what I still believe to be good ‘teaching’: the course itself emerges from the engagement of the participants. Sometimes you are all signed up for something that has a structure and a quite loose content (the old A’ level literature programme) – sometimes the structure and content are even looser (like Becoming): a TITLE, really BRIEF Learning Outcomes and, in our case, three portfolio items, one research project and an essay… Sometimes you are asked to teach a course or a module with a very fixed pre-ordained CONTENT all spelled out in tightly worded Aims and Learning Outcomes – where each week the Content and extensive reading have been sketched in by another. Even then, you can hack it, flip it, re-work it: get the students to make posters, run workshops and give presentations...

At best, the processes are the same and the course emerges…

Zen and the loss of the ego?

Rancierre’s Ignorant School Master?

If we are all lucky.

Postscript: Our presentation was at an ALDinHE Conference (www.aldinhe.ac.uk) and you are all welcome to join. At least join our jiscmail discussion forum – you would be so welcome: www.jiscmail.ac.uk/ldhen.



Friday, 17 April 2015

#rhizo15 And so it begins…



So we start with a little challenge:
I remember training to teach and being told to write my Aims and Objectives – that got me right there – Aims and Objectives? Aren’t they the same thing? Apparently not – we could separate them out – parse and refine them down to the nth degree… Well they could 
– and we could 
learn to play the game.
And given that it is such a tricky game – surely it is a good idea to let people know 
roughly 
Where we were going?
Wasn’t that fairer?
Didn’t that help those not groomed from birth
To succeed
In this game
To make sense of it – didn’t it level the playing field?
(They sold the playing fields!)
Naturally resistant
(they called me a working class zealot – and my mate Elizabeth is so proud of that for me – thank you Elizabeth!)
I never really understood that these really were boundaries, borders
THEY SHALL NOT CROSS!!
It was so obviously MORE
A jump off point
Fly from here
Ride those dragons!!
Build habits
Of fun and fury
Of risk and danger
Of trial and error
Let the games begin
Woo hoo #rhizo15!

Check it out:

Join in the conversation:

Bonus – cos it seems to fit – Henry Reed and ‘The Naming of Parts’ – you can listen to it as well:

Wednesday, 23 April 2014

ALDinHE Conference 2014: Learning Development spaces and places

Spaces and Places
This year’s ALDinHE Conference took place in – and was facilitated by Huddersfield University: http://www.aldinhe.ac.uk/news/6/aldinhe_conference_2014:_registration_closed.html?p=7_6
There was a full programme of workshops, events and fabulous Key Note speakers, including Lesley Gourlay and Etienne Wenger-Trayner – on the topics of:
  • Who owns Learning Development?
  • Changing Staff and Student Identities: the impact of Learning Development
  • Addressing the Marginalisation of Learning Development
  • Working Collaboratively to support Learning Development.

Communities of Practice?
Like many people in Education I have been aware of Etienne Wenger-Trayner (EWT) and his Communities of Practice arguments in theory and for many years. EWT in practice and in person was a revelation: warm, inspiring and profound in his outlining of the learning trajectory which takes us from peripheral encounters into the centre of various communities of practice – and various learning identities.

EWT locates his theory in studies of apprenticeship practice. Apprentices especially at the beginning rarely interact directly with a ‘master’ but engage more in apprentice-to-apprentice interactions. In this way learning is ineffably located in the group and in our group interactions: learning is social, embodied and whole person.

For EWT, learning experience models this apprenticeship trajectory. He described ‘learning’ as circled by complementary processes involving community (which offers belonging and a meaningful cadre with which to negotiate and define competence); practice (what we do – and how meaningful and valuable it is); meaning (that is rooted with relevance in the now – and not deferred to some indefinable point in the future); and identity (who we are becoming). In this model learning is not the transmission of a corpus of knowledge nor even a process or set of processes with which to engage with a corpus of knowledge; learning is how we negotiate a range of processes of becoming – that oscillate between the individual and the group.

Becoming
The EWT model allows us to see learning as becoming: it involves a realignment of competence and experience; it is socially defined – but personally experienced. Learning involves negotiating identity in a complex dance in complex landscapes of practice that navigate multiple tensions and meaning.  It is identity-construction in a time of super-complexity: it is a learning relationship between the social world and the personal.

The community is the curriculum
As one who is still part of the ongoing MOOC: #rhizo14: the community is the curriculum, I could not help but see parallels between the EWT model and the rhizomatic model of learning espoused by Dave Cormier – and as poetically described by Deleuze and Guattari (1997, 2005) in A thousand plateaus. Cormier - who spoke at last year’s ALDinHE in Plymouth - gave birth to our radical un-MOOC. In #rhizo14, learning is/emerges from the connections, contingent or purposeful, between the participants in the different learning spaces we inhabit – Forum, FaceBook, Google+, Twitter, Blogs, Zeega… - and which are fruitfully complicated by the diversity and complexity and internationality of the participants. It is a tricky trickster idea – but actually very helpful when we take back to our classrooms whether F2F or virtual: for to enable learning to happen we must at the very least foster human relationships between the participants.

‘I Robot’? Voices from the margins: narratives of LD in a Digital Age
Following on from EWT, and after Julia Dawson and Peter Bray speaking on ‘Peer Support reaching out beyond the institution’, from Plymouth, it was our presentation where we asked: What are the stories that students and staff tell themselves and each other about studying at University?

‘We have developed creative blended learning practice and embedded this within our Becoming an Educationalist and its paired Peer Mentoring in Practice modules. We and our students write reflective learning logs and online blogs to engage with our materials - to write to learn - and to struggle with narratives of the self in times of transition… We wish to share narrative extracts from these places of struggle, voice and play (Winnicott 1971) and discuss the lessons that we can learn about our students and our own blended practice. We also want to explore how we can celebrate and sustain such creative practices.’

How cool is that?
We were very happy to follow on from Wenger and his arguments about learning as a process of becoming – and to talk about our Becoming module and its various practices which we think facilitate these processes: Role playing and simulations; creative and visual learning strategies; Inquiry Based and Problem Based Learning; Reflective learning; Visual practices development; Poetry and Prose analysis and discussion; Analysis of Case Studies; Real research and other projects; Digital artefact and resource development; Peer-to-peer learning: both face-to-face and virtual; Student contribution to the University’s annual student-facing Get Ahead conference; Blogging and other Social Network activities to support learning (Becoming Educational blog: http://becomingeducational.wordpress.com/ and
Learning Development Blog: http://lastrefugelmu.blogspot.co.uk/).

Spaces and places/fissures and cracks
Our students swim in educational currents composed of the over-riding narratives of assessment, SATs, League Tables, OFSTED, moral panics about plagiarism – and the ‘dumbing down’ of education – for which they are personally blamed: There are Mickey Mouse students for whom Mickey Mouse degrees are quite appropriate (Starkey 2002/3). They are caught on a cultural cusp (Medhurst in Munt) negotiating tricky academic space which is more of a trickster space for them – for just how far are they supposed to lose themselves and become another in this alien landscape; and who gets to choose the transformation – and where do the boundaries lie?

Why writing? The essay – The blog
Arguably the academic essay as a genre exemplifies academic writing per se: it is non-polemical - yet invites certainty of argumentation. It is ‘your’ argument whilst excluding ‘you’: the personal, the emphatic, the confused, the flippant and the humorous. In many ways it can be seen as a metonym for the academic world our students have entered: implacable, reified, classed. It is the space where they most feel like ‘a fish out of water’.

We want our students to succeed in academic writing for it is the sine qua non (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sine_qua_non) of the University experience. But we wanted writing that was not the ultimate erasure of the self. We wanted a space where students could have something to say, could have their struggle to achieve authorship; but without the ‘jostling voices’ (Carter et al. 2009) asking them to ‘write and reference properly’ and to ‘be more academic’ – and less like the passionate, engaged and committed whole people that they are. We suggested blogging and wanted their blogs to be a powerful virtual tool – a quasi-academic, multimodal, public space in which to perform the self as it becomes academic – and to perform that more wholly than in an academic essay.

A little bit of Deleuze will do ya
Blogs especially can constitute the cracks – the boundaries – the borders - the space for disruption, irruptions and eruptions: the place of collision and encounter. Those representations become where space and time collapse – compressed – intensified – because finite – become finite – existing in a fixed place and time. Their composition emerges from a compressed space, time and setting: meaning and communication become one narrative. And as Deleuze might argue this offers an opportunity not to re-trace the compilation of the sign – but a moment – just before it becomes fixed – when all the potential and possibilities still exist. A moment of and for transformation – for recognition of the self… A crack in space and time to re-territorialise educational spaces – to become educational nomads.

And our student voices said:
‘Week 9 was all about my nightmare….drawing!
My drawings always mock me:
“Ha! I have defeated you! You may have many words, but give you a pencil, and watch the intelligence disappear! That’s not how you wanted it to look, is it? Is that a person or a tree? Dumbo!’’
In a class of five year old children, I am quite happy to display my ridiculous sketches. I explain to the children that drawing is not my strong point, and they assure me that I have done a very good job of representing the characters, props and scenery in the storyboard. However, if someone were to come in, they would be quite convinced that the children had drawn the pictures – and not the most artistically gifted children, either!
At the moment, I feel afraid of failure, but I have to remember that I have been here before. In 2011, I graduated with merit at the Barbican, from a Foundation Degree in Education: Primary Pathway. So I need to keep three things in mind:
Keep taking risks!
It will be worth all the hard work!
There are people to help me on my journey!’
                     
‘In this week’s lecture, we were subjected to a 10 minute free writing exercise. If we stopped writing, then we were to write the reason why we did so on a separate piece of paper. Seemed easy enough, but the question given was very ambiguous to us: Winnicott (1971) argued that play is necessary to           counteract the implicit threat of transitional...
“What?” I asked myself. “Who is Winnicott? What does he mean by play? Implicit threat?” I started writing, even though I had no idea what the question was asking. It took three attempts to get my writing flowing.’

‘Today has been so proactive that I hardly had the time to take down any academic notes and just kept on listening. There was a guest speaker today, Chris O’Reilly, who spoke to us about the presentation and making of a short 3 minute film and what kind of research and methods go into making and preparing for it. I was so intrigued and fascinated throughout the whole piece that it just had given me so many ideas. I was bursting to how these ideas could relate to my research project Report.’ 

Nomads all!

Talking of re-territorialising: do we want a Learning Development MOOC?
And so to Andrew Doig, Becka Colley, Carol Elston, David Mathew, Sandra Sinfield and our workshop on the nuts and bolts and why and ‘what fors’ of a Learning Development MOOC. The session had a great energy and buzz - and we are hopeful that a positive working group will emerge from those present – and from others in the LDHEN if they want to join in.

cMOOC, xMOOC, SPOOC – OOD??
There seemed to be two main approaches to our potential open online course emerging:
* Set the context: Where a group of us gather together to design and devise a course with quite formal and defined Aims and Outcomes. Different elements of the course might be 'owned', developed and delivered online by different people.

* What might be called the 'bring your own context' approach: a group gathers together and sets up a course that may or may not have formal aims and learning outcomes - but that can be experienced differently by participants depending on their own contexts, wants and needs. In this model, some participants may want to explore the philosophy, pedagogy and epistemology surrounding elements of the course - whilst others may just want a 'pick up and teach’ set of strategies...  Different elements might be delivered online by different people, with participants bringing as much to the table as the person 'running' the course that week/fortnight/month. I think that this community can manage that! 

To me this latter more of a #rhizo14: the community is the curriculum approach; and in actual fact, I do not think that these two approaches are incompatible if framed in a participative way.

Watch the www.jiscmail.ac.uk/ldhen list for developments - and if people are interested in taking part – could they email Andrew Doig: Andrew.Doig@solent.ac.uk ?


End Notes: There was more, so much more to ALDinHE – but I reckon that this is enough for a blogpost. So if anybody else has blogged – can you put the link in the Comments below – and perhaps we can have a conversation of sorts to keep the LD flag flying?

Friday, 28 February 2014

Farewell to #rhizo14 (– hello #LiveArtHistory – next post)

So it’s a sort of goodbye to the wonder that was #rhizo14 – but not quite and not yet… For one thing we are taking forward the autoethnography project – so if you were part of #rhizo14 for any amount of time – we would love to have your experiences here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1mSrZFBt1cYjDSAaFc6Et-BAZ95oEEBMi-AvAX8Fz8Qs/edit


For another – who could let go of a FB Group (Sarah, Simon, Apostolos, Scott, Dave… you know who you are!!) that sprouted wonderful discussions like this:
Heeeeelp! I have to write a piece titled: "What does the metaphor of the rhizome mean for collaborative learning. How would it impact on teaching methods?" and I am stuck. What the heck is this rhizomatic learning anyway? [How can learning] be structured, but still be spontaneous. 
Be still. Let em sing/dance/write/graft/dig and together make a show. This came to mind: http://youtu.be/xlvf1Jawg6E
It's all very woolly. My thesis might be about collaborative learning in undergraduates, it's up to me to make up some models. There's this thing called patchwork text that I am quite drawn to, also some comments by John Seely Brown that I have half remembered ... 
I suggest knitting.
I’m always knitting, fecking uni won't accept it as a PhD thesis!
Our Dave: What does the metaphor of the rhizome mean for collaborative learning - the rhizome challenges collaborative learning to allow learners to really be at the centre of the learning. If there is no beginning and end, and all is middle, then we need to allow for student to make their own map of the territory being studied. The facilitator sets the ecology for learning, tends the garden, but allows the rhizomes to spread, be cut off, and re-grow elsewhere. It also challenges the possibilities of outcomes as being seen as objectives. Goals can be shared as a community, in face, they shape the community, but objectives grow as part of the mapping process.
How would it impact on teaching methods - many teaching approaches start from the hoped for outcomes and work their way backwards. The rhizome challenges this as an artifice that is a child of hierarchy. Hierarchies for learning and knowledge that are legacies of a book driven, yes/no, final product history that overlays a deep complex human experience. If the outcomes are actually the coming together of the lines of flight that occur in the middle space, they will shape themselves differently for each learner, and the maps themselves will be unique (or close enough to it). This actually mirrors the 'real life' experience of professionals and more closely emulates our goals in that as educators to prepare students to be creative participants in their field of study: https://docs.google.com/.../1-Jqr08jT.../edit This course hopes to prepare the learner for dealing with uncertain situations with respect to educational technologies. The goal is *not* to teach any specific area of edtech nor to achieve a level of competency with a specific tool but rather to introduce and develop the literacies required for being able to make good decisions with respect to technologies in an educational context.
There are lots of tools out there, and, in some cases, they change all the time. The communication skills involved in being social... those are constant. The process of converting your existing skills in being social, in doing research, in project management, in information literacies - this is the focus of the course. And I expect that to work out differently for each student. We all come to this kind of course with different understandings and a different background and I expect we’ll all come out with different outcomes. That’s good. And expected. If I do my job in this course as an instructor, you’ll be working for yourself... not for me.  
I talk about literacies. uncertainty. decision making. creativity. lots of nice buzz words. This year I'm going to be adding 'abundance' and 'permission'…
People like terminology. From what I was reading recently: Agent-Based Modeling ABM's (fits with shaken not stirred). "Thus relying mainly on experimental and descriptive approaches places limitations on a quest to seek understandings of the possibility space over which an emergent phenomenon may unfold." Dad, you're talking out your ass again. "...can reveal insights that may otherwise remain elusive..." (I love "elusive" much better than "slippery." … I'll keep slippery then. Goes with just having our car fixed. They took 3 days and claim it was because they were "short one seal and had to order another." I can see this as problematic for an active circus but not a car dealership. Having fish left over at the end of the day should have alerted someone? … Don't the slippery town fathers always take the badge away from in-corruptible sheriff in the westerns? Badge-less I stand on the side of honesty and the more elusive, justice.
If that leaves you a bit breathless and hungry – join the #rhizo14 FB Group – you will be welcome. Spread the rhizome. Be the fungus!


Friday, 17 January 2014

#rhizo14: the Community is the Curriculum

This week I sort of started two MOOCS – NovoEd’s Storytelling for Change and Dave Cormier’s Rhizomatic Learning: #rhizo14: The Community is the Curriculum.
I had a go at both of them – and they do both look good. BUT – I’m only going to proceed with #rhizo14 – it is more flexible and self-directed – it is setting us free to work together - and I already know and like quite a lot of the other participants.
Here’s some info on Storytelling for change in case it appeals – then I will paste in some cool stuff about #rhizo14 – including links to some of the best blogs that I’ve already stumbled across.
#storytelling-change
Home:
Key Learning Outcomes
By the end of this course, participants will:
Be confident in using stories, especially personal stories, as part of their communication toolkit.
Know how to tell stories and use a specific set of storytelling skills so that they connect with the hearts and minds of their audiences (an audience of one or many).
Have developed, rehearsed, and received feedback on one personal story as a replicable model so that they can build a personal “library” or “back pocket” of stories that can be used in different situations.
Be able to use a 5-step process to integrate story into presentations for change, work, or many other situations.
Forums:

#rhizo14: And so it begins:
The tour:
The FB group:
Dave’s opening blog posts thoughts:
“Rhizomatic Learning posits, among other things, that the community is the curriculum. That being able to participate with and among those people who are resident in a particular field is a primary goal of learning. In each of my classes the curriculum is, of course, filled with the ideas and connections that pre-exist in the field but the paths that are taken by the students are as individual as they are, and the path taken by the class is made up of the collected paths chosen by all the students, shaped by my influence as an instructor and the impact of those external nodes they manage to contact.”

Week 1 Things to do:
Introduce yourself, follow one of the threads of discussion somewhere. Comment on someone's work. Get acclimated.
Week 1 Challenge - Use cheating as a weapon. How can you use the idea of cheating as a tool to take apart the structures that you work in? What does it say about learning? About power? About how you see teaching?
Bonus - Do lots of rhizomatic teaching? Tell us about it.
Some cool blogs:
Emily P: un content ed – Blog http://t.co/E00BGoyCsi Challenge everything!
This fits:
Failing Superman: http://t.co/6aDQHGGhts - curriculum as endurance.
As does this:
Everything is a re-mix: http://t.co/LjNmTlLvRa - especially the richly textured beginning.
I just love this:
Irrational art series: http://danariely.com/2012/06/15/creative-dishonesty/ Not dishonesty as much as a really cool research method.
And @dkernohan’s daily create challenges: http://t.co/OQ6j7uUMpp 
A big takeaway for the weekend:
And if you’re holding back cos the tech scares you… this PPT essay on technology made me smile: http://t.co/Q3IzZMjufF

But the best note on cheating to learn comes from Ary’s wonderful blog: A small plot of land (http://fearlesstech4teachers.wordpress.com/):
I am a former high school teacher with rhizomatic tendencies so I have been at war with public education for the last 20 years, defending my students’ right to think, question, create and express themselves, so hell yeah I’ve cheated! …for one I never taught from a textbook or assigned a workbook. I always got to know my students to discover what they wanted to read and write about. I asked them what they wanted to learn, and I listened. …It took months to set up this type of infrastructure and culture in my classroom, and honestly there were always those students and (their parents) who preferred to passively learn, answer questions at the end of the chapter, or complete a worksheet than to rewrite, remix and modernize an act of Romeo and Juliet, podcast it, or perform it live for their classmates. Some people prefer traditions. It‘s safe. My students took risks.  They weren’t students; they were actors, producers, writers, directors, poets, pod-casters, radio show hosts, bloggers, analysts, reporters, detectives, mentors, lawyers, teachers, game show hosts, artists, mimes…they did it all!  They created “stuff” all the time…”

Frankly in awe of Ary here for being able to do this in the public education system, and for younger students. I like to think that I managed a fraction of this in my evening A’level classes, mainly attended by adults wanting to wrestle with Shakespeare and Chaucer. I definitely try to mix it up in my University classes … but against the sheer monolithic power of state education ???!!!!! That is an achievement!

Right now we (my partner Tom Burns and I – with Quaco Cloutterbuck) are running ‘Becoming an Educationalist’ (http://becomingeducational.wordpress.com/). Deleuzian in form and content, we’ve started to de-territorialise – we are nomads – we are taking our lines of flight – and our lines of escape…