Learning Over Each Other's Shoulders
(Note: this poor blog post has been in limbo since August 30th. There is so much more to add, but I decided it is time to put it in the wild and not lock the partial thinking in the "draft" queue!)
I have been part of quite a few informal conversations recently about how to "learn how to do this web 2.0 stuff." Not just learn it, but learn it in the context of it adding something useful to our work and lives. The volume, the subtleties of useful practice, can feel overwhelming. Our sense of inadequacy can paralyze.
In Cali, Colombia, I led a workshop about facilitating online interaction and we used the Social Media Game to add context to this flood of "cool new tools with weird names. " I think the most engaged moment was when people were in small groups, explaining new tools to each other and thinking about what might be useful in their work. It was still pretty abstract. We did not get hands-on. But people noted that the tool stuff was of a great deal of interest.
I always try and promote the people and process stuff, but the reality is that tools are often the "door opener" to the process conversations because they are more tangible. So being able to "look over the shoulder" as someone uses the tools in a social context would be really useful.
In Bogota, Colombia at the very well attended "Quality in eElearning" conference I had a side conversation about ways to usefully use Twitter, Wikispaces and del.icio.us with a couple of my co-presenters, and a separate conversation with Jay Cross about doing an "Over the Shoulder" camp. Inthe instance with Ulf-Daniel Ehlers it didn't start out as a conversation. I had mentioned and showed a Wikispaces page in my presentation the day before. During the third day where we were relaxed in the "participant" role, I was sitting next to Ulf and noticed he was messing with a wikispaces page he had set up. I showed him a couple of things. He shared a few links. Together, we figured out how to embed del.icio.us links into a Wikispaces page from a great blog post I had found a while back. In the mean time, Virginie Aimard was looking over from the other side, following silently along on our digital journey. Back and forth.
A few weeks later I was the guest for a "10 Minute Lecture" for Leigh Blackall's Online Learning Communities course, centered in New Zealand. (You can see the slides, audio and Elluminate recording here.) The theme was peer learning - a communities of practice perspective. Leigh had initially asked me to talk specifically about Peer Assists, but I felt a larger issue tugging at me - this "over the shoulder" stuff.
We talked about this mode of learning from each other. I really enjoyed the conversation and poof, the hour was up. But then the blog posts from course members started showing up - those who were in the live session and those who viewed the recording. There the themes of inadequacy, of the pressure of time to do this learning, of possibility. I felt this little frisson of learning, that was a bit of learning over each others' shoulders. For me, it was then important to comment on each of the blog posts that mentioned my name, thus showing up in my feed reader, because learning from each other has that back-and-forth quality. It is iterative. Conversational.
And so, this thinking, doing, experiencing, advocating for over the shoulder learning comes back to a reflective blog post. Because reflection is the final piece that cements it together.
2 Comments:
Nancy: I love the idea of "over the shoulder" camps. At one point, durin my circuit riders - we used the term "shoulder-to-shoulder" to describe informal, small group computer instruction. So, what you are talking about is the network effect of this type of learning?
Fascinating...absolutely fascinating. I am currently engaging in an effort to provide a perspective on the state of "learning" for a npo client...will be sure to include your futuristic thoughts around where we are headed...!
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home