Transcript Slide 1
Learning through life
Professor Gina Wisker
Head of Centre for Learning &
Teaching
Please consider
• How, when and why we learn?
• From what do we learn?
• In what ways?
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Learning theories and practices
Our own experiences
Learning curves
Personal and professional planning of learning
• There is more to learning than meets the eye
• Like the Tardis, it opens up greater and more
exciting spaces - inner as well as outer
Research and experience tell us
that
• There are many different ways to learn
• We are all different kinds of learners at different
points in our lives in relation to different contexts
and needs
• We learn better from some situations than others
• Sometimes we have to develop new learning
strategies to cope with new experiences and
demands in work and in life
Why do we learn what we do when we
do?
• Think of something you have learned in the past or
recently - in the last couple of years - either formally
(course) or informally (at work, in life outside work)
• Why did you learn it? What motivated you to learn?
• How did you learn it? Repetition, trial and error,
experience, reading, listening…
• Did you have any difficulties with this learning? If so, how
did you overcome them? What kinds of pleasure and
success did you experience in this learning? And in its
outcomes? What have you gained from it?
• What can you do now?
• Are you changed as a result?
• What do you know about how you learn, why
you learn, what helps or hinders you, because of
this experience?
• Please share
What have you in common?
What differs?
What have you learned about learning yours and others’ - from this sharing?
Learner diversity presents in many
ways
• Learning preconceptions, learning background,
approaches, styles, previously rewarded learning
behaviours all also affected by
culture, origin, age, gender, class, mental state,
distance, learning environment, expectations and
learning outcomes of the subject, and the level of
study - on the job, workplace, whether informal or
formal, what else is going on in your life and that of
others, how good or appropriate a teacher,
mentor, support you have, others learning around
you
• Formal learning can be in a professional work
context or on a course - foundation,
undergraduate, postgraduate, adult education
Some learning theories about
learning styles and approaches
• There is some debate about the usefulness dependability/reliability/validity - of any kind of
inventory or questionnaire or theory about
learning styles and approaches
• However they can be helpful in giving us a
sense of the variety against which we can
measure our own changes and differences
• Approaches to study inventory
Deep, surface and strategic learning
• Reflections on learning inventory
(i) What is learning (ii) How we go about our learning
(iii) Why we learn i.e. motivation (iv) What outcomes we
seek from our learning (v) How we know when we are
learning
• Theories about kinaesthetic, auditory, sensory
learning
• Theories about experiential learning - Kolb’s learning
cycle of experience, reflection, planning, action,
evaluation, reflection and change - more action
• Schon’s reflective practitioner
Learning styles - Honey & Mumford
• Please consider the brief descriptions of the
learning styles
Activist
Reflector
Theorist
Pragmatist
• Which style or ‘mixture’ are you and when?
• What does that say about how, when and why
you learn (or don’t learn) from what experiences
and in what situations? How might you develop
your style further to benefit from other learning
experiences?
Learning curves - context and
change
• How have you developed as a learner? When
were, or are, your peaks and troughs?
• Explore your own learning curve
• Are you learning formally and/or informally? On
the job? Working with others and learning from
and with them? Because of experiences?
• Explore a very recent professional learning
moment - either formal or informal - what were
its characteristics?
• We probably juggle
and spin more than
our predecessors did in work, and as
members of families
and of the community
• Being careful not to
drop any of the balls
• What are the
implications of
balancing for you as a
learner and a
professional?
• Managing stress and
time, keeping your eye
on the ball
Life and learning
And informal learning
Formal
learning
Work and learning during and on the job
Continuing professional
development planning
• At any one point in our lives there are probably
personal, professional, formal and informal
things we would like to learn whether
Knowledge
Skills
Behaviour/attitude
Some of this is available through
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Formal courses
Staff Development workshop programme
CLT events
Outside training and development
Informal working groups
Coaching and mentoring
Critical friends
Other outside activities
Planning
• Please complete the grid individually, then share
with your neighbours
• Think of THREE things you would like to learn
over the next TWO years
• Then discuss:
Why?
For what reason?
How?
Where?
When?
• How will you know when you have learned?
• Then COMMIT! And enjoy!
informal
knowledge
attitude
skills
formal
personal
professional
Learning changes our perceptions