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Marg O'Connell :: Blog

July 22, 2008

http://edge.edublogs.org/2008/07/22/lifelong-learning-as-calm-le

I had a fabulous weekend in Bowral back in the last weekend of May, attending a Calmbirth workshop with my husband. Consequently, our first bub is now due in a couple of - ahem - days! )


a labour of love


This is one reason I haven’t posted in a long while - too much going on and my brain has become more cottony than I had first anticipated! )


Anyway, I’m moved to write following this amazing weekend experience as I see some links to lifelong learning, a phrase that seems to have dropped out of circulation of late (for whatever reason). Let’s first revisit the phrase and then I’ll draw some connections from the Calmbirth workshop itself. In essence, this is an ‘appreciative exploration’ of some thoughts really!


Lifelong learning, particularly as espoused by the OECD, champions the idea of learning for holistic personal, professional and workforce development, which occurs in various learning settings, informal and formal. Closer to home, DEST (now DEEWR) exercises a policy they claim is based on the OECD assumptions:


The lifelong learning policy agenda is built on assumptions about the importance of skills in the new economy. Almost all industrial sectors are increasingly ‘knowledge-based’ and economic returns are obtained from a range of ‘intangible’ inputs, one of which is workers’ skills. Participation in education and training is increasing and economic rewards are flowing to people with high skills…


…which in fact draws a parallel between productivity and further education, and extends further to lifelong learning and the ‘whole person’, especially where the VET sector is concerned. However, in today’s economic rationalist world we are not seeing this in its entirety. We are contending with the worker-learner and have yet to move to the whole person, in reality.


So how does this thinking link to what I experienced as ‘calm birth’ then? Well, from my view it means starting with the person, rather than the system in which the person likely operates. in essence it’s redefining what we have assumed to be learner centred approaches to teaching and learning. Still, we seem to take this as meaning providing options TO the learner to support and enhance their learning; rather, we should take the learner-at-the-centre approach and start there with their networks, their predispositions, their experiences, and so on. We require more discussion around the apparent preoccupation on separating ‘the system’ from the users/producers/agents (see for example, Mejias 2005).


person vs system


Thus, the science behind Calmbirth (as laid out in the workshop booklet and the various parents’ stories, where mums especially are co-teachers), contends with the human design, participatory methods, holistic therapies and healing work, beliefs and attitudes (e.g. Errington, 2004), cultural values and awareness, as well as the health sciences of midwifery and obstetrics.


So what is out there in terms of calm learning practices? How can we progress this to lifelong learning status? For example, Calm Kids, Smart Kids uses


…a mixture of:



  • Physical exercises proven to reduce hyperactivity & increase brain functioning and integration

  • Emotional stress release to help reduce anger and frustration, improve communication and increase self esteem

  • Unique Nutrition Plan identifies allergies and deficiencies specifically for your child.



What is of some interest here is the links made to factors that influence children’s ability to learning and grow, as discussed also in the Calmbirth workshop and booklet, particularly a stressful pregnancy, a traumatic birth, and medications and operations, as well as accidents, family trauma, and allergic reactions. As Peter Jackson stated in the Calmbirth workshop, ‘it all begins in the womb’. Check out Lyn Schaverien’s work on developmental learning (biological aspects of learning) too.


We may also draw links to appreciative inquiry (see also Cooperrider, et al, 2008) and inquiry-based learning which champions the inherent (and essentially positive) motivations of the learner from within. For me this also conjures links with schooling approaches such as the Montessori movement. We could effectively read open learning into this too. These approaches tend to focus on the learner’s self-guided interests, reminding me of a quote by Freire that champions the learner as teacher (as ‘learning by teaching’):


The teacher… is taught in dialogue with the students, who in turn while being taught, also teach.


I understand that I’m touching on a lot of potentially disparate areas of education here, but I think it’s worth noting that whilst we delve into supposedly ‘new’ thinking around learning and teaching, much has been developed in earlier times that remain credible and applicable today - in fact, possibly more so than they did in the past. The time for elements of schooling and education is ripe for change but not always to new and original ideas, but back to ideas that are now seen as befitting our current contexts.


Where can learning go from here? How do we continue to facilitate learning in ways that are relevant to our times? These are some loose connections which I hope to think more deeply about in coming months. I also see connections to networked learning here too, a draft essay of which I will post shortly (this essay picks up on action learning, ‘hot action’, and other action research frameworks that I’ve related to an investigation into VET pedagogy and practice).


References


Errington, E. (2004) The impact of teacher beliefs on flexible learning innovation: some practices and possibilities for academic developers, Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 41(1), 39-47.


Cooperrider, D, Whitney, D & Stavros, J (2008), Apreciative Inquiry Handbook: For Leaders of Change (2nd Ed), Crown Custom Publishing Inc: Brunswick OH.



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July 16, 2008

http://edge.edublogs.org/2008/07/16/business-of-learning-and-lea






I have a presentation lined up next week and have been reviewing my thinking on flexible learning and learning futures generally.


So far, I’ve returned to two slideshows I loaded to Flickr some time earlier this year and will likely focus my thinking on ideas from these for my presentation.


1. Quality through personalised learning

Slide01


2. The business of learning (or, 21st century learning)

slidea01business.jpg


I think I’ll focus on learning futures and how flexible learning is defined and can be promoted through this thinking. Some of the key themes I’d like to draw out include:



  • learner as teacher

  • business IS learning

  • the learning design process is a collaborative one with the learner


I’ll start with that and see where I head - shall post an update soon! What do you reckon?







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June 15, 2008

http://edge.edublogs.org/2008/06/16/christopher-d-sessums-beginn

Sessums pulls out this little gem which I can see immediately applying to our teachers too!


Here’s a video that sets the stage nicely–a set of fresh eyes, ears, and minds, sharing their reflections on blogging and their “business:”







Or visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch/v/7PIiizu4yVg


Back in 2005, I blogged about the brain of the blogger, posted by the Eide Neurolearning Blog. I’m sure I blogged about my own blog processes too, in fact it was back in 2004 that I did a three-part posting about my blogging process (in my early days of fascination with this medium)! Heh, this is one of the reasons I blog, in fact, to keep track of my own thinking and writing )


I’ve done this recently in preparing for an essay in my Masters course - I found it useful to be able to dedicate some writing and thinking time to drawing out various parts without the sense that I had to work on the ‘whole’. In all I found myself writing freely and with opinion that was not constrained by the structure of an essay, nor by the conventions of a Masters-style essay.


So, blogging for me, is a way in which I can exercise my brain and process my thinking - and I enjoy the writing process too. The content and the process are both emergent.


OK, back to the the brain of the blogger post then. The 5 points the Eides cover include:



  1. Blogs can promote critical and analytical thinking.

  2. Blogging can be a powerful promoter of creative, intuitive, and associational thinking.

  3. Blogs promote analogical thinking.

  4. Blogging is a powerful medium for increasing access and exposure to quality information.

  5. Blogging combines the best of solitary reflection and social interaction.


We’re three years on (and given the half-life of knowledge and information these days that’s about 6 internet years isn’t it?), how do these points hold up? I particularly like the 5th point which suggests the intersection between reflection and social interaction; it is a wonderous tension that can cripple some and spur others on!


So, why do YOU blog? Or, as Christopher himself asks, what makes it your ‘business’ to blog?





Blogged with the Flock Browser


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http://www.firstmonday.org/issues/issue12_9/sterpka/index.html

The aesthetics of networks: A conceptual approach toward visualizing the composition of the Internet by M.K. Sterpka


Abstract
Hierarchy is an entrenched social concept. The Internet however, presents the possibility of envisioning social relations a

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http://www.networkedlearningconference.org.uk/abstracts/Alexander.htm

Methodologies for researching the learning in Networked Learning: Shirley Alexander*
Lynette Schaverien
University of Technology, Sydney
Shirley Booth*
Lund University, Sweden,
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
Steve Fox
L

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June 14, 2008

http://edge.edublogs.org/2008/06/14/social-media-in-plain-englis

Commoncraft come through with the goods again! Ever been stuck for ways to describe the Social Web or Web 2.0? Here’s a way that does it so you don’t have to.



Social media in plain english


On another note, I’ve been working on bringing together action research and networked learning in developing a research proposal. This video also demonstrates the affordances of media rich approaches to research don’t you think? Like this project really…



Digital Ethnography



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June 10, 2008

http://edge.edublogs.org/2008/06/10/wheres-wally-the-crowded-pic

Most of us have heard of ‘Where’s Wally‘ right? I used to love the ‘great picture hunts’ and the after-school cartoon!


Where's Wally - Entertainment Rights


image: Entertainment Rights


Well, ‘where’s Marg’ applies equally well, as I haven’t blogged since end of April! ) Time just evaporates doesn’t it??


There are many reasons for this which altogether looks and feels like a ‘where’s Wally’ crowded picture! I’ve been active elsewhere that has left me with little time to blog - I’ve only just this week caught up on my blog feeds from other blogs!


I’m co-preparing an action research, action learning conference through ALARA (of which I’m a member), in partnership with CIT’s Centre for Education Excellence, as well as (slowly) working through my masters units, some thoughts of which I’ve posted on my ALARA blog in recent times. I’ve also kept some conversation going regarding the conference via my ALARA blog too. More information regarding the conference will be forthcoming shortly, but if you’re keen to attend, keep September 11th and 12th free in your diaries!


Of course, those of you who have been following my other news now know that the birth of my first bub is imminent! Some pics are here (although some are hidden due to ‘belly-cam’ shyness on my part!)… not long to go now, and as a consequence, you can imagine I’ve been preparing for leave at work, which is in itself a major process (certainly a major ‘unhooking’ process for me particularly)!


The ‘nesting’ syndrome has also hit, and we’ve been renovating as well - we certainly made the most of the long weekend! We’re recording our progress here.


Back to work then, and we’ve been supporting the submissions and successful recipients of the E-learning Innovations funding available this year through the Framework and have 7 projects based at CIT as a result. With us looking down the barrel of the second half of 2008 already, these projects will be our main focus along with supplementary PD activities and the like to ensure the projects are successfully completed by early December!


I’m developing a post on the notion of ‘calm learning’, based on my recent experiences of a wonderful weekend-long workshop on calmbirth, in Bowral NSW. This triggered much in me (for obvious reasons outlined above) and I saw some interesting connections between birthing, conscious parenting and engagement with learning. Stay tuned on that!


Thank you to those who have wished me luck and showed your support for the impending birth and I hope to introduce you to the latest addition sometime around the end of July!! )



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April 27, 2008

http://edge.edublogs.org/2008/04/27/moments-ballooning-in-canber

April 24 saw Canberra host the Beijing Olympic Torch Relay. This was how I saw the day emerging.






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April 21, 2008

http://www.thewebworks.bc.ca/netpedagogy/

The Net Pedagogy Portal is a resource whose purpose is to increase understanding, knowledge,
and awareness of the changing landscape of teaching and learning online.

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http://www.ascilite.org.au/ajet/ajet21/mitra.html

Earlier work, often referred to as the "hole in the wall" experiments, has shown that groups of children can learn to use public computers on their own. This paper presents the method and results of an experiment conducted to investigate whether such unsu

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