Since
the recent Unschooling
conference call that Jerry
Michalski put together, I've come to realize how much damage schooling
does to us, and how essential it is for us to rediscover natural
learning, if we hope to make the world a better place. I intend to
create a "personal practice guide to unschooling" over the next year,
and I'm starting to think what it might contain.
Because the terminology is fraught with misunderstanding, let me start
with a few definitions:
Unschooling
is taking your child, or yourself, out of the school (institutional
education) system, and allowing learning to occur more
naturally.
Deschooling
a society is the dismantling or abandonment of its school systems. The
term can also be used in the sense of deschooling oneself -- by
becoming aware of and unlearning the institutional propaganda of how
learning really occurs that we have picked up from our own years in the
school system.
Home Schooling
is an ambiguous term. It often means replicating the school system in
the home, with the curriculum and indoctrination of the parents
replacing that of employed teachers -- really the antithesis of
unschooling. But some people use the term to mean unschooling that
occurs principally in the home.
Natural Learning
is my own term for allowing learning to occur naturally, i.e. without
structure, goals, timelines, grades, measures, programs,
teachers, classrooms, coercion or curricula (think of how foxes learn
from their mother).
Many of those whose children are unschooled appreciate that, if you
really want your children to learn naturally, you need to first examine
your own schooling and how it has affected your view of how learning
occurs, and deschool yourself. The paradox is that most of us have no
other model -- we have at some point come to accept that
institutionalized, formal schooling is the only way to learn. And, just
as we cannot be "taught how to learn", my attempt to develop an
alternative framework for learning, to share with others trying to
deschool themselves, could understandably be seen as both fruitless and
ironic.
We have two things going for us: Nature is constantly showing us
another, more natural way to learn; and the Internet has provided us
with an astonishing amount of unstructured information that requires us
to stretch our natural learning muscles to use it effectively.
I had the good fortune to have one
year of unschooling during my
formative years, which ruined me for subsequent schooled education but
which gave me an appreciation for natural learning's effectiveness,
joyfulness and inherent superiority. I know
it works. And while many shrug off this kind of learning as something
only suited for people with unusual native learning ability and parents
willing and able to mentor their children, I think this is defeatism.
This defeatism is evidence of the learned helplessness that is
inculcated in us in order to perpetuate our ghastly neoliberal
education system that, in my opinion, saps children of their natural
creativity and capacity for learning. It's the same defeatism and
learned helplessness that prevents most of us from making a living for
ourselves in Natural Enterprises -- even though we'd be happier and
more productive if we did so, and the world would be much better off.
My model for deschooling yourself, my "personal practice guide" for
natural learning, will be based on a combination of my own unschooling
experience, my observation of how people are using the Internet to
learn, and my observation and study of how wild creatures learn.
It will start with the principle that there is no 'best' or
'right' way to learn -- we
all learn differently. What's more, we are constantly learning --
taking in, assimilating, filtering, processing, storing and applying
information -- even when we're not conscious of it.
Although there are a host of different learning styles, the work of
Nancy Dixon and David Kolb suggests that learning generally involves five
activities: experiencing,
observation, reflection, conceptualization, and application. The richer
the experience, and the more competent we are at observation,
reflection, conceptualization and application, the more we
will learn.
The experience of actually doing something, or at least watching
someone who is competent at doing it, is obviously richer than having
someone at the front of a classroom tell us about it, or reading about
it in a textbook. So one way to rediscover natural learning is to get
out of classrooms and away from books and screens and learn something
by watching experts, by doing it ourselves, and by practice -- the true
meaning of apprenticeship. Alas, in our modern world many craftspeople
no longer have the time, and are insufficiently accessible, to offer to
demonstrate their craft for others to learn. Fortunately, just as young
people are inherently curious and delighted to learn, most skilled
practitioners are delighted to demonstrate what they do. All we need to
do, most of the time, is ask politely and ensure that we aren't
disruptive.
So step one in the process of deschooling yourself is learn something
new, not online or in a book or classroom, but through apprenticeship
-- experience, observe, reflect, conceptualize, apply, and practice it.
And as we do that, ask questions, because that is not only critical to
learning, it is critical to the craftsperson's or practitioner's
development of the capacity to demonstrate, an absolutely critical and
increasingly rare ability that is essential to natural learning. Don't
look up or design a curriculum for your learning of this new skill.
Just go learn. Discover how natural and intuitive it is.
Once we have learned something this way, we can then try learning
something online or through reading and research. If we really want to
learn it competently, we need to identify a mentor -- but not
a teacher. The mentor's role is very similar to the
demonstrator's role in apprenticeship learning -- answering questions
and acting as a 'sounding board'. The mentor doesn't tell you what to
learn, or how to learn, or assess how well you've learned. That's the learner's responsibility.
The mentor is responsive and the process is conversational. The mentor
is selected by the learner, not assigned to him or her.
I learned this as an advisor to entrepreneurs over many years. My role
was to listen, to answer questions and. occasionally, to tell
interesting and useful stories, never to tell people what to do or how
to do it. I've tried to apply the same hands-off, sounding-board
approach in my work as a manager, but it was largely unappreciated --
most people have been so propagandized and beaten down by the school
system and the hierarchical work world that they want to be told what
to do and how to do it. They don't want the responsibility for doing so
themselves. They have lost interest in learning, and then lost the
capacity to learn.
This learning is (like schooling) a collaborative process, but the
roles -- learner, demonstrator, mentor -- are very different from the
roles of "teacher" and "student". Even as we practice things we are
just learning, we are already beginning to exercise all three roles.
Others (including demonstrators and mentors) have much to learn from
observing us demonstrating our mistakes, and the process of our
becoming more competent.
So the
key, I think, to natural learning lies in developing capacity in
all three roles (learner, demonstrator, and mentor), allowing ourselves
more (and more varied and stimulating) first-hand experiences, and
becoming more competent at observing, reflecting,
conceptualizing,
applying and practicing what we've learned. In the process, we learn
not only new skills and competencies, but about ourselves.
The second great challenge in rediscovering natural learning, it seems
to me, is in recognizing the impediments to such learning that our
modern dysfunctional society has put in the way of learning. In my
earlier study I identified these ten obstacles:
We don't allow
ourselves (and our society doesn't allow us) enough time for wonder.
Our workplace
activities and our home routines are often repetitious and
stimulus-poor.
We don't do anything
together anymore.
We get too much of our
life experience second-hand (from books & movies, and online).
We suffer from
imaginative poverty -- we won't let ourselves imagine, and now we've
largely forgotten how to imagine.
Our lives are too
organized and too scheduled to allow serendipitous experiences and
hence serendipitous learning.
In this world full of
terrible knowledge and awful realities, we are becoming afraid to
learn. We cannot bear too much reality, too much bad news, and we don't
want to accept the awful responsibility that knowing and learning
brings with it.
The current
institutional schooling system impedes and discourages self-directed
and undirected learning.
The media have
addicted themselves, and us, to facts rather than meaning.
We have 'desensitized'
ourselves -- we process everything mainly with our left brain, so we no
longer really see, really hear, really smell, really taste, really feel.
The workarounds to these ten obstacles are fairly self-evident, I think.
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