Difference between revisions of "Learning to Learn"

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<div class=teaser-text>Learning processes can be designed with more or less involvement on the part of the participants. In our opinion however, the facilitator’s role in inspiring and empowering learners for active participation in civic and social life is the main topic. That is why we now ask the question: How can one design a learning event so that active participation and self-directed learning are fostered not only after, but from the very beginning?</div>
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<div class=teaser-text>Learning to learn is a necessary competence for self-directed learning and self-development, especially in a lifelong learning perspective. It is one of the transversal competences.</div>
  
 
<div class="methodpage-content">
 
<div class="methodpage-content">
==Personal Competence==
+
==Personal and Learning to Learn Competence==
For self-responsible action people need to ''perceive themselves as agents of change''. They then ''assume responsibility'' for themselves and for others. ''Skills for planning and for following their plans'' are the conditions for their next steps, taking concrete action. Third, reflective competency is crucial for successful action, like the capacity to observe and evaluate challenges, requirements, or options.  
+
In order to be able to take responsibility for oneself and for others and to be able to enter into a new situation or challenge, people need the self-confidence to be able to tackle the new, the ability to plan independently, or to be motivated to also pursue decided plans. In order to check whether the path taken is (still) the right one, or to decide which of the many paths opening up should be taken, a meta-cognitive ability is helpful to be able to observe oneself in one's own actions at the same time - and to be able to draw insights on the basis of this reflection. Hensge, Lorig and Schreiber (2006)<ref name=bibb>Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training (BIBB): K. Hensge, B. Lorig, D. Schreiber: [https://www.bibb.de/dienst/dapro/daprodocs/pdf/zw_43201.pdf Kompetenzstandards in der Berufsausbildung; Abschlussbericht Forschungsprojekt 4.3.201 (JFP 2006)]</ref> describe these aspects as '''personal competence''' dimension (in distinction to the methodological, social and topical/professional dimensions). Other authors come to similar conclusions, some refer to the term self-competence, some to learning to learn, while accentuating differently.  
  
All of these aspects are not born and need to be trained. Your seminar room is the perfect training field for this task. Like all good training it starts with a good trainer: Are you willing to give your participants opportunities to overtake initiative? Are you tolerant enough regarding unexpected developments or possible mistakes? Are you prepared for changes of your plans?
+
Applied to the context of self-organised lifelong learning it is becoming evident, that such personal abilities support learning to learn fundamentally. Personal competence needs to be trained and cannot be taken for granted. Your seminar room is the perfect training field for this task, and personal competence should be addressed as a transversal competence - explicitly or implicitly by methodology addressing the self-learning ability, independent problem-solving or self-organization. Already the decision for a learning arrangement influences how much a process can later address autonomy and self-organization.
  
If you can answer these questions with "yes", this will help you to make the right decisions under real life conditions such like limited time, conflicts in a group, or too much workload. Here facilitators face often a dilemma: Giving their participants place for experimentation or better teaching more topical knowledge for the price of less experimentation. However, at the end we should not conduct traditional teaching. Here are some ideas, how you can show your cooperative attitude toward your participants in your plans made before the seminar started and during your moderation of the common process.
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===Learning Arrangements===
 +
<table>
 +
<tr>
 +
<td width="30%"> </td>
 +
<td>
 +
'''Autodidactic''' 
 +
</td>
 +
<td>
 +
'''Externally Controlled'''
 +
</td>
 +
</tr>
 +
<tr>
 +
<td>
 +
'''Learning Orientation'''
 +
</td>
 +
<td>
 +
Focuses on the person learning
 +
</td>
 +
<td>
 +
Focuses on the person teaching
 +
</td>
 +
</tr>
 +
<tr>
 +
<td>
 +
'''What the person learning does'''
 +
</td><td>
 +
Learning by acting
 +
</td>
 +
<td>
 +
Consuming learning person
 +
</td>
 +
</tr>
 +
<tr>
 +
<td>
 +
'''Time and space restrictions for the person learning'''
 +
</td>
 +
<td>
 +
Flexible
 +
</td>
 +
<td>
 +
Fixed times and learning places
 +
</td>
 +
</tr>
 +
<tr>
 +
<td>
 +
'''Defining objectives and content'''
 +
</td>
 +
<td>
 +
Freely determined by the person learning
 +
</td>
 +
<td>
 +
Defined for the person learning
 +
</tr>
 +
</table>
 +
After Siebert (2006)<ref name=siebert>H. Siebert: Selbstgesteuertes Lernen und Lernbegleitung - Konstruktivistische Perspektiven; Augsburg 2006</ref>
  
==Digital Challenge==
 
Digital tools and platforms have built-in assumptions about moderation. Although in different ways and intensities, they give power to the moderator or represent an implicit idea of what collaboration should look like. For example, in some platforms it is not possible to give every user the role of administrator. It is not possible to leave a breakout room. Most try to limit side conversations more efficiently than any old-style authoritarian teacher. While in an analog setting a facilitator may notice that participants begin to lose attention as background noise increases, these and similar signals are often not present in digital spaces. While digital spaces represent a new opportunity, we must also remember that they present challenges to presenters. We mention this primarily because they are often not developed in a way that reinforces learners' sense of ownership.
 
  
 +
In consequence, facilitators have to find strategies how to align content, conditions and facilitation attitude. For instance to balance their desire for expected outcome and for control with the goal of strengthening learners' autonomy. <ref name=MEN> N. Zimmermann: [https://civilresilience.net/en/mentoring-handbook/ Mentoring Handbook - Providing Systemic Support for Mentees and Their Projects]; Berlin 2012; MitOst; ISBN 978-3-944012-00-1</ref>
  
 
<hr class=boldline>
 
<hr class=boldline>
==Ways to engage participants before and during...==
+
 
 +
 
  
 
<div class=left-box>
 
<div class=left-box>
===Flexible planning and moderation===
+
===Encouraging self-directed Learning===
*Involving participants every evening in planning of the next day and letting them decide on the direction.
+
*Learners reflect on their learning styles, needs and preferences
*Parts of the event’s content are decided by participants: practical workshops, defining topics, and moderating discussions. Full ownership is here in learners’ hands.
+
* They become familiar with planning approaches and skills: learning plans, assessment, checklist work...
*(Co-)moderation by participants, presentations.
+
* Training an orientation toward opportunities and solutions
 +
* Practicing goal-setting methods
 +
* Using learning diaries or portfolios for self-documentation
 +
* Using self-assessment tools
 +
* Training to deal with ''ambiguity'' and unexpected situations
 
</div>
 
</div>
 +
 +
<hr class=boldline>
 +
 +
==Background==
 
<div class=left-box>
 
<div class=left-box>
===Decision-making===
+
 
* Asking participants how much time they need rather than giving timeframes for task completion.
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===LifeComp: Personal,  Social, Learning-to-Learn Competence===
* Leaving “open windows,” such as one hour each day where learners decide for themselves what they want to work on and how.
+
[[File:Lifecomp.jpg |link=https://doi.org/10.2760/302967| right|250px| border]]
* Whenever a problem or difficulty appears, ask participants to verbalize it and moderate the search for solutions.
+
 
 +
LifeComp is the EU Commission's proposal how to understand learning-to-learn and self-organised lifelong learning as a key competence. The competence framework was published in 2020 and describes learning to learn as "positive attitude towards one’s personal, social, and physical wellbeing and learning throughout one’s life" (p. 12) and more concretely as "ability to pursue and persist in learning, and to organise one’s learning" (p.57). The LifeComp framework includes three dimensions - personal development, social learning and learning to learn. It includes three areas:
 +
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" data-expandtext="Read more">
 +
====Personal Dimension====
 +
This area is dealing with issues of self-regulation, gaining flexibility, and also physical and psychological well-being.
 +
 
 +
*P1 Self-regulation - Awareness and management of emotions, thoughts and behaviour
 +
*P2 Flexibility - Ability to manage transitions and uncertainty, and to face challenges
 +
*P3 Wellbeing - Pursuit of life satisfaction, care of physical, mental and social health; and adoption of a sustainable lifestyle
 +
 
 +
 
 +
====Social Dimension====
 +
This area relates to the ability to be empathic towards others, to communicate, and to collaborate.
 +
 
 +
*S1 Empathy - The understanding of another person’s emotions, experiences and values, and the provision of appropriate responses
 +
*S2 Communication - Use of relevant communication strategies, domain-specific codes and tools, depending on the context and content
 +
* S3 Collaboration - Engagement in group activity and teamwork acknowledging and respecting others
 +
 
 +
====Learning-to-learn Dimension====
 +
Positive attitude towards continuously learning, critical
 +
thinking, and managing the own learning steps.
 +
 
 +
* L1 Growth mindset - Belief in one’s and others’ potential to continuously learn and progress
 +
* L2 Critical thinking - Assessment of information and arguments to support reasoned conclusions and develop innovative solutions
 +
* L3 Managing learning - The planning, organising, monitoring and reviewing of one’s own learning
 +
 
 +
[[File:Lifecomp-at-a-glance.png | center 600px]]
 +
 
 +
Source: [https://doi.org/10.2760/302967 LifeComp]<ref name=lifecomp>European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Sala, A., Punie, Y., Garkov, V. (2020). LifeComp : the European Framework for personal, social and learning to learn key competence, Publications Office of the European Union. https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2760/302967</ref> & Literature Review & Analysis of Frameworks<ref name=LifecompReport>Caena, F., Developing a European Framework for the Personal, Social & Learning to Learn Key Competence (LifEComp). Literature Review & Analysis of Frameworks, Punie, Y. (ed), EUR 29855 EN, Publications Office of the European Union, Luxembourg, 2019, ISBN 978-92-76-11225-9, https://doi.org/10.2760/172528, JRC117987.''</ref>
 
</div>
 
</div>
<div class=left-box>
 
===Reflection and feedback===
 
*Discussing and answering ongoing questions in front of the group.
 
*After each session or working day, establishing transfer rounds where participants clearly define what learning outcome they find useful.
 
* Pairs of participants discuss their reflections independently of facilitators.
 
 
</div>
 
</div>
 +
 
<div class=left-box>
 
<div class=left-box>
===Co-creation in the learning space===
+
 
*Co-creation of the learning environment: shaping the space where the learning event takes place directly after entering the room and according to learners’ wishes.
+
===Self-responsibility under digital conditions===
* Participants deciding on their own music and entertainment.
+
Digital tools and platforms have built-in assumptions about moderation. Although in different ways and intensities, they give power to the moderator or represent an implicit idea of what collaboration should look like. For example, in some platforms it is not possible to give every user the role of administrator. It is not possible to leave a breakout room. Most try to limit side conversations. While in an analog setting a facilitator may notice that participants begin to lose attention as background noise increases, these and similar signals are often not present in digital spaces. While digital spaces represent a new opportunity, we must also remember that they present challenges to presenters. We mention this primarily because they are often not developed in a way that reinforces learners' sense of ownership.
* Teams take care of specific activities (during program and social time).
 
* Shared decisions about social activities.
 
</div>
 
<div class=left-box>
 
===Addressing Self-learning Skills===
 
*Learners reflect on their ''learning styles and preferences'', and gain awareness of their conditions for successful learning
 
*They become familiar with ''planning skills'': learning plans, assessment, checklist work
 
*Training an ''orientation toward opportunities and solutions'' (in contrast to analyzing problems)
 
*Practicing ''goal-setting methods''
 
*Using learning diaries or portfolio tools for ''(self-)documentation''
 
*Using ''self-assessment tools'' for evaluation
 
 
</div>
 
</div>
 +
  
 
<hr class=boldline>
 
<hr class=boldline>
 +
Revision: September 2023
 
<noinclude>{{:Block: Author Nils-Eyk Zimmermann}}</noinclude>
 
<noinclude>{{:Block: Author Nils-Eyk Zimmermann}}</noinclude>
 
<noinclude>{{:Block: Author Elke Heublein}}</noinclude>
 
<noinclude>{{:Block: Author Elke Heublein}}</noinclude>
 
<hr class=boldline>
 
<hr class=boldline>
<div class=left-box>
 
===Holistic Learning===
 
[[File:Holistic-learning-book-cover.png |160px | link=Handbooks for Facilitators | right]]
 
  
Planning experiential, inspirational and participatory learning processes in non-formal education.
+
==References==
 
+
<references></references>
* Second Handbook for Facilitators: [[Holistic learning]]
+
<hr class=boldline>
</div>
+
<noinclude>{{:Block: Book: Holistic Learning}}</noinclude>
 +
<hr class=boldline>
 +
<noinclude>{{:Block: Book: Steps toward Action Handbook}}</noinclude>
  
 
</div>
 
</div>
Line 68: Line 144:
 
<hr class=simpleline>
 
<hr class=simpleline>
 
===Related:===
 
===Related:===
*[[The Facilitation Mindset]]
+
*[[What Competency-based learning is...]]
 +
*[[Before]]
  
 
<hr class=simpleline>
 
<hr class=simpleline>
 +
 
===Also interesting:===
 
===Also interesting:===
 
* [[Checklist: Possible ways to activate participants]]
 
* [[Checklist: Possible ways to activate participants]]

Latest revision as of 15:41, 4 March 2024

Learning to learn is a necessary competence for self-directed learning and self-development, especially in a lifelong learning perspective. It is one of the transversal competences.

Personal and Learning to Learn Competence

In order to be able to take responsibility for oneself and for others and to be able to enter into a new situation or challenge, people need the self-confidence to be able to tackle the new, the ability to plan independently, or to be motivated to also pursue decided plans. In order to check whether the path taken is (still) the right one, or to decide which of the many paths opening up should be taken, a meta-cognitive ability is helpful to be able to observe oneself in one's own actions at the same time - and to be able to draw insights on the basis of this reflection. Hensge, Lorig and Schreiber (2006)[1] describe these aspects as personal competence dimension (in distinction to the methodological, social and topical/professional dimensions). Other authors come to similar conclusions, some refer to the term self-competence, some to learning to learn, while accentuating differently.

Applied to the context of self-organised lifelong learning it is becoming evident, that such personal abilities support learning to learn fundamentally. Personal competence needs to be trained and cannot be taken for granted. Your seminar room is the perfect training field for this task, and personal competence should be addressed as a transversal competence - explicitly or implicitly by methodology addressing the self-learning ability, independent problem-solving or self-organization. Already the decision for a learning arrangement influences how much a process can later address autonomy and self-organization.

Learning Arrangements

Autodidactic

Externally Controlled

Learning Orientation

Focuses on the person learning

Focuses on the person teaching

What the person learning does

Learning by acting

Consuming learning person

Time and space restrictions for the person learning

Flexible

Fixed times and learning places

Defining objectives and content

Freely determined by the person learning

Defined for the person learning

After Siebert (2006)[2]


In consequence, facilitators have to find strategies how to align content, conditions and facilitation attitude. For instance to balance their desire for expected outcome and for control with the goal of strengthening learners' autonomy. [3]



Encouraging self-directed Learning

  • Learners reflect on their learning styles, needs and preferences
  • They become familiar with planning approaches and skills: learning plans, assessment, checklist work...
  • Training an orientation toward opportunities and solutions
  • Practicing goal-setting methods
  • Using learning diaries or portfolios for self-documentation
  • Using self-assessment tools
  • Training to deal with ambiguity and unexpected situations

Background

LifeComp: Personal, Social, Learning-to-Learn Competence

Lifecomp.jpg

LifeComp is the EU Commission's proposal how to understand learning-to-learn and self-organised lifelong learning as a key competence. The competence framework was published in 2020 and describes learning to learn as "positive attitude towards one’s personal, social, and physical wellbeing and learning throughout one’s life" (p. 12) and more concretely as "ability to pursue and persist in learning, and to organise one’s learning" (p.57). The LifeComp framework includes three dimensions - personal development, social learning and learning to learn. It includes three areas:

Personal Dimension

This area is dealing with issues of self-regulation, gaining flexibility, and also physical and psychological well-being.

  • P1 Self-regulation - Awareness and management of emotions, thoughts and behaviour
  • P2 Flexibility - Ability to manage transitions and uncertainty, and to face challenges
  • P3 Wellbeing - Pursuit of life satisfaction, care of physical, mental and social health; and adoption of a sustainable lifestyle


Social Dimension

This area relates to the ability to be empathic towards others, to communicate, and to collaborate.

  • S1 Empathy - The understanding of another person’s emotions, experiences and values, and the provision of appropriate responses
  • S2 Communication - Use of relevant communication strategies, domain-specific codes and tools, depending on the context and content
  • S3 Collaboration - Engagement in group activity and teamwork acknowledging and respecting others

Learning-to-learn Dimension

Positive attitude towards continuously learning, critical thinking, and managing the own learning steps.

  • L1 Growth mindset - Belief in one’s and others’ potential to continuously learn and progress
  • L2 Critical thinking - Assessment of information and arguments to support reasoned conclusions and develop innovative solutions
  • L3 Managing learning - The planning, organising, monitoring and reviewing of one’s own learning

center 600px

Source: LifeComp[4] & Literature Review & Analysis of Frameworks[5]

Self-responsibility under digital conditions

Digital tools and platforms have built-in assumptions about moderation. Although in different ways and intensities, they give power to the moderator or represent an implicit idea of what collaboration should look like. For example, in some platforms it is not possible to give every user the role of administrator. It is not possible to leave a breakout room. Most try to limit side conversations. While in an analog setting a facilitator may notice that participants begin to lose attention as background noise increases, these and similar signals are often not present in digital spaces. While digital spaces represent a new opportunity, we must also remember that they present challenges to presenters. We mention this primarily because they are often not developed in a way that reinforces learners' sense of ownership.



Revision: September 2023

Nils-Eyk Zimmermann

Nils-Eyk Zimmermann

Editor of Competendo. He writes and works on the topics: active citizenship, civil society, digital transformation, non-formal and lifelong learning, capacity building. Coordinator of European projects, in example DIGIT-AL Digital Transformation in Adult Learning for Active Citizenship, DARE network.

Blogs here: Blog: Civil Resilience.
Email: nils.zimmermann@dare-network.eu

Elke Heublein

Co-founder of Working Between Cultures. Co-author of Holistic learning. Facilitator since 2004, certified intercultural facilitator (Institute for Intercultural Communikation, LMU München) and trainer (IHK Akademie München/Westerham), adult education (Foundation University Hildesheim). Focus: Cooperation and leadership in heterogenouos teams, higher education, train-the-trainer.


References

  1. Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training (BIBB): K. Hensge, B. Lorig, D. Schreiber: Kompetenzstandards in der Berufsausbildung; Abschlussbericht Forschungsprojekt 4.3.201 (JFP 2006)
  2. H. Siebert: Selbstgesteuertes Lernen und Lernbegleitung - Konstruktivistische Perspektiven; Augsburg 2006
  3. N. Zimmermann: Mentoring Handbook - Providing Systemic Support for Mentees and Their Projects; Berlin 2012; MitOst; ISBN 978-3-944012-00-1
  4. European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Sala, A., Punie, Y., Garkov, V. (2020). LifeComp : the European Framework for personal, social and learning to learn key competence, Publications Office of the European Union. https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2760/302967
  5. Caena, F., Developing a European Framework for the Personal, Social & Learning to Learn Key Competence (LifEComp). Literature Review & Analysis of Frameworks, Punie, Y. (ed), EUR 29855 EN, Publications Office of the European Union, Luxembourg, 2019, ISBN 978-92-76-11225-9, https://doi.org/10.2760/172528, JRC117987.

Handbook for Facilitators: Holistic Learning

Holistic-learning-book-cover.png


E. Heublein (ed.), N. Zimmermann (ed.) (2017). Holistic learning. Planning experiential, inspirational and participatory learning processes. Competendo Handbook for Facilitators.


Skoro.png
Mitost.png
If.png
Erasmusplus.jpg

Handbook for Facilitators: Steps toward Action

Empowerment-book-cover.png


M. Gawinek-Dagargulia (ed.), N. Zimmermann (ed.), E. Skowron (ed.) (2016). Steps toward action. Empowerment for self-responsible initiative. Help your learners to discover their vision and to turn it into concrete civic engagement. Competendo Handbook for Facilitators.


Skoro.png
Mitost.png
If.png
Erasmusplus.jpg

Related:


Also interesting:


Our Handbooks Holistic-learning-book-cover.png

E. Heublein, N. Zimmermann

Holistic Learning

Second Handbook for Facilitators: Read more