Showing posts with label Learning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Learning. Show all posts

Friday, 13 March 2020

Wanted: Tectonic shift in teaching & Learning


Geetha Shankar at the Learning Tree!
The yawning gap between teaching and learning has to be bridged, writes Geetha Shankar
A couple of months ago, I received an email from a person who was recently laid off from his job. He in his early thirties and was a participant in one of my training programmes conducted for a company. I didn’t have direct work experience with him, and it was only a classroom passing for a day.  I called him over for coffee and spent a couple of hours with him.  This is a pretty common occurrence–I get these types of distress calls regularly.   
The new dynamics of digital, education, work, family culture   is transforming not only the way we communicate, learn, work, live but how we think, feel, see, hear, talk and change.  We cannot afford to be naïve and experience knee jerks to witness the job market changing.  The word “Job” is a misnomer now.  Because “jobs are going to be replaced d by tasks or contracts”  Philip Brown in his book Global Auction talks how companies are slashing costs by reducing or closing full time jobs into tasks through auctions and the lowest bid gets it. “The youth need to get their portfolio careers and bid for contracts than apply for jobs. Because that is where the future is.” 
As days go by, I wonder and realise how progressively the youth are transforming how they communicate, share and learn from each other. In a nutshell they are going open. Going open is a social Revolution according to David Price, because it represents a fundamental challenge to the established order of things and something that cannot be ignored. It disrupts everything and things are not going to be the same again.
In this Renaissance, the Youth stand as winners and losers as well.  Winners because they are connected and are motivated by the easy access to ideas and information and are better connected than ever. Barriers in learning have been dismantled and their capacity to learn has spiraled.
And the Youth stand as losers too in this game. The exaggerated prediction of the knowledge economy that its value will flow in abundance, has probably turned out to be a blind faith. We have a market flooded by unemployed graduates and learning has not led to earning nor up-gradation of any skills.  There is a dearth of commodity jobs and innovation jobs.

Where did we go wrong?  I vividly remember the endless lessons in my school and colleges, where I was taking notes so rapidly, as my teacher wrote on the black board or said something (before it was rubbed off or vanished from my memory). I believed that writing down will assist my memory. It did of course to get good grades in my exams. I mock at myself when I read Mark Twain:  “College is a place, where a professor’s lecture notes go straight to the students’ lecture notes without passing through the brains of either”.
If we wonder sometimes why we don’t remember what we learnt in schools and colleges, it could be because of many factors like distraction and lack of passion etc. Learning is ultimately an act of self-determination.
Please consider these points:
Ø  No one can be made to learn anything - For knowledge and understanding to stick we need the learner’s intent, which is the desire to learn.
Ø  Teachers can only help learners to see the relevance which drives self-motivation and how learning can make a difference in one’s life. But cannot motivate learners to learn.
Ø  Engagement has to precede learning - Learners have to be in the flow to learn without being unaware of the time. Otherwise learning becomes superficial, without depth
Ø  Survey shows that informal learning is more favored than formal.   L L& D professionals like me would agree on the 70: 20: 10 principle. 70%gained through experience in job, 20%through coaching/ mentoring, 10% through formal structured course / syllabus
Ø  Indulging in Repeated application of Knowledge is more efficient than Recalling information.
Ø  Capacity to learn is also affected by our mind sets. If we conclude that our intelligence is limited because of our brains rather than effort, our capacity to learn also comes down. 

As parents, educators and professionals of the 21st Century, let us start looking within ourselves and stop looking around.  We can join together to make schools, colleges and universities an engaging place for the Youth. We can prepare youths for life beyond formal education.
Heng Swee Keat speaks about the hats to be worn by Educators-.   They are the Hats of an Ethical Educator, Hats of a Competent Professional, Hats of a Collaborative Learner, Hats of a Transformational Leader, and the Hats of a Community Builder through Service learning.
It’s time for us to rethink radically as to how we learn, innovate at work, and reshape our education system and do what is essential in supporting the youth to enjoy vocationally focused education and lifelong learning in response to the societal shifts. (The author is Director-PRCI and Chairperson- YCC)