Questions I'm No Longer Asking
November 30, 2010 • By George Siemens
I strive to strike a reasonable balance between reading
blogs, books, and peer-reviewed articles. Different topics flair up in
popularity (such as web 2.0 and now social media) and then fade. A few concepts
have longevity such as "How effective is technology enhanced learning when
contrasted with traditional classrooms?" Questions like this are boring. And
unanswerable given the tremendous number of variables involved in teaching
online and in classrooms.
I'm firmly convinced of the following:
1.
Learners should be in control of their own
learning. Autonomy is key. Educators can initiate, curate, and guide. But
meaningful learning requires learner-driven activity.
2.
Learners need to experience confusion and
chaos in the learning process. Clarifying this chaos is the heart of learning.
3.
Openness of content and interaction increases
the prospect of the random connections that drive innovation.
4.
Learning requires time, depth of focus,
critical thinking, and reflection. Ingesting new information requires time for
digestion. Too many people digitally gorge without digestion time.
5.
Learning is network formation. Knowledge is
distributed.
6.
Creation is vital. Learners have to create
artifacts to share with others and to aid in re-centering exploration beyond
the artifacts the educator has provided.
7.
Making sense of complexity requires social and
technological systems. We do the former better than the latter.
Obviously there
are numerous questions that need to be addressed in terms of social/relational
impact of technology, how individuals connect and create information with
participative tools, and so on. But many of the previously "hot" questions
about technology in education no longer interest me. Some of these include:
·
Is online
learning more or less effective than learning in a classroom? Who cares? That
question is irrelevant. Society answered the need to use technology through its
broad adoption of the web/internet/online medium.
·
Does technology
use vary by age? Nonsensical. It would only matter if people couldn't learn new
skills. They can. They do. And most software is easier to use today than it was
10 years ago. Motivation, not age, is key.
·
How do learning
styles influence learning online? I had a spike in blood pressure this last
week when my 14-year-old son came home from school and informed me he was a
visual learner, but couldn't learn audibly. They still use destructive
classification structures like learning styles in schools? Educators too
readily fall for an attractive model that can be easily implemented.
·
What role do
blogs or microblogging [insert tool in question] play in classroom or online
learning? Any role you want. Answers to questions like this don't exist in
advance of exploration.
·
How can educators
implement [whatever tool] into their teaching? Simple: do it. With technology,
every teacher is a researcher. Find your own answers, don't appropriate from
other contexts.
·
Is connectivism a
learning theory? Again, who cares? There is more evidence to support a
connectivist view of learning than exists for other theories: neurology,
sociology, psychology, and philosophy support the "connectedness" aspects of
knowledge and learning. Similarly, innovations, new ideas, and complex problem
solving are driven by surfacing (and fostering desired) connections.
Which questions
are you no longer asking about the role of technology in learning?
Which questions about technology and learning are still relevant for educators
to consider?
George Siemens works with the Technology
Enhanced Knowledge Research Institute at Athabasca University, Alberta, Canada
and blogs regularly at elearnspace.org.
This blog posting from November 2 was used with permission.