Saturday 25 April 2020

It's the learning that's the thing

With forty years of experience in education, I continue to be gobsmacked at the arrogance with which we seem at times to think about 'education'. Perhaps the problem lies with the word itself, it almost seems to posit the idea that 'education' and 'learning' are totally different things, which in turn seems to lead us to think that one thing is possibly more important than the other.

But it's the 'learning' that's the thing, isn't it? If you disagree, then you are certainly going to find the rest of what you are about to read rather challenging. I suggest you stop right now.

Still with me?

I more and more frequently laugh at our professional conceit when we assume that teenagers will sit down in front of us when we tell them to do so, to learn what we tell them to learn, the way we tell them to learn it. 'Damn it all, do as you are told, we know what's best for you'. Of course to some degree we DO know much about what young people need to know and to be able to do in order to be more fulfilled human beings, better able to participate in our society, and we do so within the framework of a national curriculum which is still amongst the best in the world.

If I reflect on my own learning it is, these days, almost always 'just in time' learning. I learned how to use Screencastify four weeks ago because i realised that writing lots of words for our community (not just now but at any time) is NOT the best way to communicate. Job done!!! I can now make Screencastify recordings at will, although I am still not yet very accepting of hearing and seeing myself.. my inner vice says "EEEwwwwwkkk .. b***y hell".

If we accept that it's the 'learning' that's the thing, then I suspect that you are highly likely to agree that there are many different paths to learning. The concept I am hedging around here is what in the educational jargon we call 'agency': our capacity and the capability to determine what we will learn, when, and to some degree how.

Now I'm not trained in primary education, so don't know what this could/should look like for younger children, but for secondary aged/teenage learners I think I have a little more clarity. Our own Hornby High School experiences with distance learning have put the spotlight on some of these issues.

Here is one absolutely delightful example of what I mean. A staff member emailed me with this after a GoogleMeet with members of her Year 12 form class.

"<Teacher A> said XXXX had made a bonfire in the backyard, XXXX told me in Classics Meet it was in fact a forge, complete with bellows but he didn't have the right fuel to build up heat. XXXX had made a metal tipped spear bound, in Hippolyte fashion, to a spear head, with a round shield including metal cup to defend the fist- he shared a video of a reenactment fight, critiquing their formations and linking how the hippolyte method influenced the Roman legions. He and his brother had a battle which he linked  to the Drama curriculum- method acting [he doesn't do Drama]. In passing he discussed how Leonardo di Vinci invented a tank, based on the Roman battle formation;  then explained to me how to present screen properly.  Is learning happening without school?  I like the way XXXX thinks and connects ideas!"
Consider for a moment the depth of thinking and problem solving that is apparent in that description. I contacted XXXXX to discuss what he had done, seeking his permission to share his work (which he readily and graciously granted). He said:
"Here is just some of the many things I have made over this last month. But sadly i couldn't get any photos of the forge as i did get in trouble for it as big looms of smoke went up into the sky. And the crossbow is what I am still working on."
He sent me these photos:






I asked him if he had been set these tasks or whether he just did it off his own bat. His reply:

"Yeah I got bored and just started to use stuff laying around the house so I did this purely because of boredom."
This reply reminded me that being 'bored' is actually an important part of creativity. The mind needs to rest, to be allowed to wander and ponder, something we do NOT grant our learners  as we push them in the 'busyness' of 'education'. If as a kura we are to continue our pursuit of our vision as a 'centre of creative excellence', one ongoing challenge for us will be how we empower learners to harness their innate creativity.

This is the impact of 'agency'.  XXXX was empowered, he dug into stuff that interests him, using his own talents.

I added to the discussion a suggestion to a range of XXXX's teachers that they consider whether there are NCEA standards that could be attached to any of his work. Isn't that the way NCEA was intended, before we subverted it in the interests of 'education'?

And then there are these examples of students completing some great work at home, when they are ready. Take a look at these two blog posts:

Desharn's creative writing

Trisha's analysis of dystopian writing

These are both junior students.

All of this challenges the school/home paradigm under which we have worked for the past 150 years. We have subverted learning in the name of education. Yes learning and education are the classic examples of the economists' 'Merit goods', and yes we are all better off when individuals get more of it (which is the LIE to the whole idea of charging student loans etc.. but that's another story).

However our assumption that learning can only take place in our institutionalised setting is (as we are seeing right now) flawed.  We need to consider and develop a new paradigm for learning, one that acknowledges the cultural and emotional capital that sits within the home, one that builds student agency, and also one that is founded on kindness to ourselves and each other.

Perhaps one of the biggest obstacles to all of this is the set of 19th century definitions of school attendance that require physical presence on site, that define what attendance looks like (2 hours before and 2 hours after midday, for 380 (or 384) weekly teaching half days).  These things I believe are technically easy to change.

The bigger elephant in the room is the problem of equity - for agentic learning to happen in the home, learners need supportive whānau. What do our whānau think? This lovely piece of research  headed by Dr Riwai-Couch is more than informative, it should be central to our thinking. Our levels of wealth and income inequality, and that raft of problems that come with poverty, and substance abuse and addiction, mean that we already have an underclass of disempowered young people who will find access to learning difficult without whānau support at home.

How do we address that?  Economists are the first to agree that Government intervention is an essential tool to providing suitable 'quantities' of Merit and Public goods (education is defined by those economists as a Merit good). These are good reasons for government intervention against the 'market'. So a caution to any neoliberals who might have read this far .. your own dogma supports government action. Don't you DARE try to tell me that the market will solve these problems. The market has singularly failed to solve the problems of inequality,  and inequity (and yes for the uninformed out there these ARE very different things). The market has merely exacerbated them.

Perhaps one of the best things Government can do right now is to empower educators to solve the problems. Changing the rules can only enable improvements in learning outcomes for learners, as long as we focus on learning. not education, as as long as we can keep focussed on the greater good of society, not the benefit of the privileged few.

We have over the past five weeks of lockdown seen the capacity that teachers (and schools in general) have for innovation and simple bloody hard graft. The voices railing against longer term change are the voices of the entitled, the voices of those who have been the historical winners from our 150 year old paradigm.

I am hopeful that this Government will allow a collaborative, cooperative, and empowering, philosophy, coupled with a good dose of pragmatism, to hold sway.




10 comments:

  1. Kia ora Robin, this lockdown is providing you with far too much time to think! You got me thinking about education and learning. I wonder whether the "sit down and do as you are told" is the education bit and your student XXXX provides a wonderful example of learning and empowerment/agency. Is our job to educate or facilitate learning, or are the the same? I think we need a 'slow education' movement, similar to the 'slow food' movement. And neoliberalism and market forces reminds me of the saying ... a good crisis creates socialists out of everyone! We (including the government) have a unique opportunity to address the inequities in education and society, let's not waste the moment! Love your work!

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    1. Kia ora e hoa
      'Slow education' movement.. I LOVE that analogy. Yes yes yes!!! I am absolutely and firmly in the 'learning is more important than education' camp.
      Indeed let's not waste the moment.
      You keep up your own awesome work too.. you are an inspiration.... Ka mau te wehi!!!

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  2. I was JUST about to Tweet how I didn't think I was 'doing this right' with the home learning but your post has assuaged any feelings I am having of inadequacy because my 'gut instinct' has been winning the war against 'do learning' the conventional way. Keeping the 'periods' short, letting them go off and learn how to manage their time, (but with me still being available to 'chat'), inviting them to direct the trajectory. I keep reminding them of the why (of it all - to challenge you to think, to question, to test, to explore, to understand more, to learn better ways of letting other people into your world...). My hope is that the best thing to come out of this time is TIME to learn how to be. Time to observe the world's response, the community's response.
    Thanks for providing me with reassurance that I'm doing okay by my 'babies' and, though I miss the face to face interaction, I'm not wrong in encouraging them to go off on tangents. Mauri ora.

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    1. Tania
      Rawe e hoa. I am glad my words have provided that reassurance... none of us have been here before, so to some degree we are all making this up as we go along.. We are potentially on the cusp f something amazing, a 'nexus' in the evolution of systemised learning (note that I avoided using the word education there). My personal frustration is that I just can't quite reach/see the next step.. there's a piece of this puzzle missing for me, and I can't quite see it. I think what you are acknowledging is that 'learning' is more important than 'education'? Keep doing what you are doing.... i.e. keep on doing the awesome job that you re.
      Thanks for taking the time to read, and to comment.
      Kia tau e mauri

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  3. As usual your post generated some thinking! For me there is a key difference between schooling, education and learning. Schooling is the traditional structure we place around young people in their formative years. It has come to mean a place rather than a dynamic learning environment. I think of education as being the place of learning that is structured but has many routes - some more formal than others. This may be tertiary education, MooCs, microcredentials etc. Learning is the ongoing recalibration of our thinking based on our experiences and interactions. It is ongoing and less formal.

    One of my favourite readings by the way was the Delors Report written by UNESCO in 1996. It identified four pillars of learning - learning to know, learning to do, learning to be and learning to live together. Not much progress in many of these areas and the tensions are still the same.

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  4. Cheryl
    A great comment.. Yes I think I am indeed confusing 'schooling' with 'education'.. nicely put. So that would mean it;'s the schooling paradigm we need to shift, not the educational paradigm?

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  5. Kia ora Robin,
    A thought-provoking post indeed. I agree with your statement around boredom, the best homework a parent can give a child. I grew up being bored, and I remember the early morning's waiting for the newspapers to be delivered to our depot so we could provide home delivery on our bikes. We could be waiting up to an hour, with no distractions your mind wandered to many magical places.

    I wonder to what degree boredom is playing in all the educators blogging about their experiences presently. I certainly know for myself this time has been an excellent time to let my mind wander and ponder the big picture "stuff". Is that boredom or just having space to think?

    How do we shift our schooling paradigm to allow time for students to be bored and develop their wonderings and investigations? How do we remove the busyness?
    I know this time out of school is stressing some educators and parents who have their learners at NCEA level. Maybe it is my primary training; however, like you, I think home learning examples when shared, would meet several achievement standards. Is that not why the development of NCEA occurred?

    I wonder if the idea that education can only happen at school is one of the reasons schools are struggling to engage their communities in learning. Do the inequalities, especially around devices compound this stopping the process of learning being visible to the community?

    Nga mihi,
    Mark

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    1. Mark
      Love your thinking there... your question around the schooling paradigm is possibly one of the 'biggies' for us?

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  6. Quick note to say I am still rewferncing this post. Such powerful examples of Creativity Empowering Learning. Thank you so much for making the time as a busy tumuaki to stop and share this with us all - and all your body of work here .

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    1. Kia ora/thank you Dorothy. You prompted me to re-read my own words... I'm not sure I have been able to 'fill that missing piece' yet...

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