From E-Learning V |
Fig.1. Kent & Medway's Timeline of the Great War
Made with Tiki-toki
And someone's wonderful creation
From E-Learning V |
Fig.1. Kent & Medway's Timeline of the Great War
Made with Tiki-toki
And someone's wonderful creation
From E-Learning V |
Fig.1. This IMHO is what learning has become in the 21st century - and how it got there
There's more going on here than you may realise!
From E-Learning V |
Fig.2. Traditional top down learning
Two triangles, one above the other and linked with a downward arrow suggests traditional top down learning ... or simply knowledge transfer from someone who knows something to someone who does not.
From E-Learning V |
Fig. 3 By someone's side
Two triangles, one facing the other, may represent a shift towards collaborative or horizontal learning in a formal setting, though for me it represents the learning you do away from the institution - with friends, with family 'on the same level' as it were.
From E-Learning V |
Fig. 4. Participatory and situated, networked learning on the periphery
From E-Learning V |
Fig.5 The thinking starts with Vigotsky and his research into behaviourist learning
It then progressed to the study and analysis of learning in communities
From E-Learning V |
Fig. 6. Activity Theory as conceived of and developed by Yrjo Engeström.
From E-Learning V |
Fig.7 The interplay between two entities or communities coming together to solve a problem and thus producing something unique to them both (object 3) - a fresh idea.
From E-Learning V |
Fig.8. Activity Theory re-connected - breaking out
Though developed over some thirty years the structure of 'Activity Theory' as a model is breaking down because of the quality, speed and way in which we now connect overrides barriers and invades silos making communication more direct and immediate.
From E-Learning V |
Fig. 9 Activity Theory in a connected world
Everyone and everything is just a click away.
From E-Learning V |
Fig.10 Visualizing the maelström of original ideas generated by people sharing their thoughts and ideas as they form
The maelström of new ideas where people and groups collide and interact. Historically this had been in grounded 'communities of practice', whether a London coffee shop or the senior common room of a prestigious university, the lab, the studio, the rehearsal room ... today some gatherings online are frequent, enabled by the Internet and no less vibrant as like-minds and joiners contribute to the generation of new ideas.
This, drawing on Engestrom via Vygotsky, might be a more academic expression of Open Learning. Here a host of systems, expressed in model form, interpose their drive to achieve certain objectives into the common whole. That mess in the middle is the creation of the collective powers and inputs of individuals, groups, departments or institutions. The Open bit are the connections between any node in one system, and any other node from any othe one of the systems ... which blows apart the actions within a single system, making them more open, though not random.
From E-Learning V |
Fig. 11 It's going on inside your head.
fMRI scans reveal the complex way in which ideas form and memories are recalled and mixed-up, challenged and re-imagined. We are our very own 'community of practice' of conflicting and shared viewpoints.
From E-Learning V |
Fig.11. Perceiving brain activity as the interplay between distinct, interacting zones
From E-Learning V |
Fig. 12 Ideas enter your system, your brain and are given a fresh spin
From E-Learning V |
Fig.13 Ideas coalesce until you reach a point of understanding. The penny doesn't so much as 'drop' as to form.
Where would we be without one of these. 98 billion neurons. A uniquely connected mass of opportunity and potential. This is where, of course, memories are formed and thoughts had. Increasingly we are able to share ideas and thoughts as we have them, typically through the tips of our fingers by sharing our thinking online, especially where it comes to the attention of like-minds, and troubled-minds - anyone in fact or strongly agrees or strongly disagrees enough to contribute by adding their thinking and revealing their presence.
'The power of images is very great and it can be harnessed as many interpreters of fairy tales in pictures and on film have understood'. Marina Warner
Fig.1. David Hockney - Etchings for Grimms Fairy Tales
'What's the use of a book without illustrations?' Ask Marina Warner reading from Alice in Wonderland.
A question she goes on to answer. To mark the bicentenary of the first edition of the Grimm brothers' Children's and Household Tales in 1812 Marina Warner explores the many compelling and often controversial aspects of the tales in this BBC Radio 4 Series.
These evocative stories have always stirred vivid images in the minds of artists, from the angular drawings of an early David Hockney to Dickens' Victorian illustrator George Cruikshank. Through these artists' impressions, we paint a new picture of the tales' vital contribution to the long tradition of visual storytelling.
"Filling up your mindscape"
Fig.3. David Hockney - Etchings for Grimms Fairy Tales
'The pot is winking ... brimming with poisonous menace, the banal hold terrible'.
You should attract then hold the attention of your audience - these may be readers, listeners or students, but you have to be sensitive to the craft skills of storytelling. It requires a good deal to keep the mind alert.
The last 29 months I have been introduced to all kinds of tools, both those used by the OU, as well as those recommended by fellow students. I am always trying tools for creating diagrams, getting close to making 'Infographics' simple, visualise ways to express information and ideas. I find them easier to recall.
If you've studied the history of the First World War please offer your thougths on this, absences, errors or exaggerations. It can all be shifted around with remarkable ease, entirely on a mutli-touch screen such as an iPad.
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