Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
A
remarkable synchronicity this week has me thinking about the Purpose of
connectivism. I spent an extraordinary three days this past week with
about thirty other facilitators from across North America at a retreat
on Bowen Island BC, honing our craft. The work of these people is
enabling meaningful conversations in the workplace and with customers
and the public, directed to making work more effective and ultimately
to making the world a better place.
At the same time, at my own
work I have been asked to identify the five most important,
indispensable projects that my group is working on, in case the current
recession and financial system meltdown require some austerity. Some of
our projects are about connectivity and conversation, and all of them
are about learning important new knowledge, ideas, insights and
capacities.
So I began thinking about connectivism and about
what 'good' it is (in both senses of the word -- usefulness and
betterment). Just to recap, for those not following the CCK08 Connectivism MOOC course, here's my understanding of what it's all about, and key definitions:
Connectivism is a theory of learning that asserts that knowledge and learning are not (about) content, but connection. Hence:
Knowledge = patterns of connections, of three types:
neural = know-what,
conceptual =
know-how, and
social = know-who)
Networks = loci of knowledge.
Learning = making new connections (of the above types).
Understanding / coherence / sensemaking = forms of pattern recognition.
Community = those with shared knowledge and shared learning interests.
Workarounds = the mechanism by which individuals make sense of and
apply their own learning, regardless of mandated knowledge
(instruction) or accepted knowledge ('conventional' wisdom).
Accepted knowledge (wisdom) = what evolves as power shifts, people die
and the make-up of communities changes; wisdom is inherently
'conventional' and tyrannical.
The 'wisdom of crowds' is not
'wisdom' at all, but rather collective knowledge = the aggregation and
appreciation of patterns of knowledge of large numbers of independent
people, shared; this is much better than wisdom!
This
past week's course materials have been about the history of networked learning and the
emergence of the social Web, so the issue of its usefulness and social
value is pertinent. What 'good' can it do to think about and apply the
principles and constructs of connectivism to the way we do our work,
particularly (in the broadest sense of the term) 'social work'?
My experience suggests that some of the greatest challenges to doing 'good' work are knowledge and learning related:
Most people are ignorant of how the world really works.
We live in a world of great imaginative poverty, with a dearth of practical ideas about how to make work, and our world, better.
Our conversational skills are abysmal.
While
we learn mostly from conversation, from being shown, and thenceforth
from practice (all collaborative processes), our learning institutions,
programs and systems deprive us of all three, and instead force us to
try to learn from reading, listening, and being told (all individual
processes), after which we are expected to be 'expert' without any real
practice.
This individualized approach to knowledge leads us to
depend on 'experts', 'executives', 'managers' and 'consultants' and
build systems that are hierarchical and support a cult of leadership,
instead of drawing on collective knowledge, collaboration and community
and building systems that are egalitarian and cooperative.
We
are propagandized to be competitive and to lack empathy for others,
which deprives us of the will and opportunity to work and learn
collaboratively and to share knowledge with others.
One could
speculate on the reasons for the emergence of such dysfunctional
learning systems. My thesis is that they have been created to keep the
majority, in our horribly overcrowded world of growing scarcity, from
challenging the power and wealth of those at the top of the hierarchy,
i.e. to create obedience and learned helplessness, stifle imagination
of better ways to live, and ensure ignorance of dangerous (to the
elite) knowledge.
How might the application of connectivism help us deal with these challenges? It seems to me there are five possibilities:
Refocusing Social Tools: Just
as Knowledge Management is now shifting focus and attention from
collection to connection, social media need to turn their attention to
enabling more, more effective, more informed, more valuable
conversations. They need to help us identify 'the right people' (to
live with, make a living with, love, and talk to) and then connect with
them in real time in simple yet powerful ways that mimic, as much as
possible, face-to-face conversations. They also need to help us make
these conversations and meetings and social interactions more effective
-- bring more clarity and context, reach consensus, enable stories to
be told and remembered, capture non-verbal communication, and pick up
from where we left off at the end of the last conversation -- keeping us connected, all the time, everywhere.
Showing Us How the World Really Works:
Take learning out of the classroom and into the real world. Visit real
workplaces and communities with real needs, and interact with people
with different perspectives. Base learning on conversations, not
lectures. Let us witness what is happening -- show us instead of
telling us. Trust us to draw our own conclusions -- we don't need
written examinations to try to assess what we've learned. Let the
learning be collective, the result of us experiencing together, instead
of studying individually a world away from the subject we are studying.
Emphasizing Practice Over Mastery:
In complex systems, the very idea that one can achieve expertise,
mastery, is arrogant and dangerous (just look at what the 'experts'
have wrought in the US financial markets). The pursuit of excellence is
a lifelong and humble apprenticeship towards getting ever better. We
need to enable and encourage practice of the capacities listed on the
mindmap above, and other, more specialized capacities that fall within
areas where we have a Gift or a Passion. We all need to practice
imagining, and conversing, and critical thinking, and story-telling,
and collaboration. We need to find ways to become much better at these
core competencies of living in the 21st century.
Rebuilding Learning Institutions Bottom-Up and Community-Based:
Our learning institutions are not responsible to the needs of our
communities, largely because they are too far removed from those
communities, and to some extent because our communities are so
fragmented and confused (and lied to) that they no longer know what
they need their members to know. The reconstruction of the educational
system therefore needs to be a partnership in
which those whose work it is to teach can help those in the community
understand what is needed and what is possible, and in which the
members of the community can then empower the 'teachers' to provide for
those local needs and to realize what is possible. Thence the whole
community becomes the place of continuous learning for all its members.
Creating a Society of Caring:
Perhaps more than anything else we need to smash the systems that
encourage and tolerate indifference, cruelty, selfishness, fear, greed,
anomie, cynicism and uncaring. Our political systems, our educational
systems, our economic systems, the corporatist workplace systems, and
the mainstream media (both information and entertainment) bombard us
with messages that the world is harsh, that only the strong (should)
survive, that we must compete or fall behind, grow or die, take or be
taken, and that since nothing can be done by us as individuals there is
no point is even learning how terrible the world us. This is dangerous
propaganda, driving us to defensiveness, distrust, hopelessness, fear
and anger, and wearing away our natural inclination to care for others
and to want to do whatever we can for the good of the community, the
planet, the whole. We must fight it by showing what is possible and by
confronting the propagandists and telling the world the enormous harm
their dishonest, violent, manipulative messages convey. If we stop
caring, we are lost.
I want to thank the MOOC participants and
organizers for their responses to my Week 3 post on the Eight
Questions; I hope to get around to responding to them in the coming
week.
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs