November 20, 2012

The Cicle is Closing


After a very inspired and great meeting on Saturday with neuromarketing experts, one sentence came all the time to my mind:
"Knowledge rests in the diversity of people."


I have to admit that I only knew this sentence and couldn't built any connection to any topic. After googling I found this:
Description of Connectivism
Connectivism is a learning theory for the digital age. Learning has changed over the last several decades. The theories of behaviourism, cognitivism, and constructivism provide an effect view of learning in many environments. They fall short, however, when learning moves into informal, networked, technology-enabled arena. Some principles of connectivism:
  • The integration of cognition and emotions in meaning-making is important. Thinking and emotions influence each other. A theory of learning that only considers one dimension excludes a large part of how learning happens.
  • Learning has an end goal - namely the increased ability to "do something". This increased competence might be in a practical sense (i.e. developing the ability to use a new software tool or learning how to skate) or in the ability to function more effectively in a knowledge era (self-awareness, personal information management, etc.). The "whole of learning" is not only gaining skill and understanding - actuation is a needed element. Principles of motivation and rapid decision making often determine whether or not a learner will actuate known principles.
  • Learning is a process of connecting specialized nodes or information sources. A learner can exponentially improve their own learning by plugging into an existing network.
  • Learning may reside in non-human appliances. Learning (in the sense that something is known, but not necessarily actuated) can rest in a community, a network, or a database.
  • The capacity to know more is more critical that what is currently known. Knowing where to find information is more important than knowing information.
  • Nurturing and maintaining connections is needed to facilitate learning. Connection making provides far greater returns on effort than simply seeking to understand a single concept.
  • Learning and knowledge rest in diversity of opinions.
  • Learning happens in many different ways. Courses, email, communities, conversations, web search, email lists, reading blogs, etc. Courses are not the primary conduit for learning.
  • Different approaches and personal skills are needed to learn effectively in today's society. For example, the ability to see connections between fields, ideas, and concepts is a core skill.
  • Organizational and personal learning are integrated tasks. Personal knowledge is comprised of a network, which feeds into organizations and institutions, which in turn feed back into the network and continue to provide learning for the individual. Connectivism attempts to provide an understanding of how both learners and organizations learn.
  • Currency (accurate, up-to-date knowledge) is the intent of all connectivist learning.
  • Decision-making is itself a learning process. Choosing what to learn and the meaning of incoming information is seen through the lens of shifting reality. While there is a right answer now, it may be wrong tomorrow due to alterations in the information climate impacting the decision.
  • Learning is a knowledge creation process...not only knowledge consumption. Learning tools and design methodologies should seek to capitalize on this trait of learning.
Of course!!! Suddenly I understand what this theory do really stand for. Yes, I have already read and studied that in my first semester at this Programme, but now I do REALLY understand what it means.

Source: http://www.connectivism.ca/about.html

2 comments:

  1. Dear Katharina!
    Thanx for your post, that reminded me of something "I read about" about a year ago ((O;
    I love your little picture, bright and upbeat- I hope that is how you are feeling at the moment, as things are coming to a close!
    And yes, I think it is really true for the learning process...sometimes we don´t understand something, until we are able to use it as a tool and put it into action. It´s a bit like learning choreography in dance. You can watch an idea and your brain picks up bits and pieces and the general gist of it. Then you can try learning something by standing behind the person rehearsing in the studio- and you get a bit more out of it. And then you can also be taking it nice and slow, analysing every part of the movement, step, by step...and you really learn it.....and understand it...and then carefully add the music (so you know on which "bling" in the music you move your foot...etc) and then you repeat doing that many many many times...until you go out on stage and are able to perform your bit of choreography with out even thinking about it....I think that is what is just happening to you...you are able to perform, all thoughts and ideas and knowledge you have acquired over the past 14 months and beyond...((O;
    Keep moving!

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  2. Fione, Thank you very much for your lovely comment :-). I completely agree with you and really, really like your comparison with dancing! This is exactly the process I feel at the moment and yes the my image do express this in the bester manner. Do you feel the same? A

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