Flexible Learning
From Learning and training wiki
FLEXIBLE LEARNING |
According to Lundin, flexible learning is an idealized state where there is a mixture of educational philosophy, pedagogical strategies, delivery modalities and administrative structures which allows students to choose according to their learning needs, styles and circumstances. In principle, flexible learning approaches may be applied to any subject; however, an accurate analysis of the demands of the learner and of the viability of this approach is highly recommended.
The term “flexible learning” is itself flexible and encloses several aspects; however, there seems to be a consensus in at least the following points: • Flexible learning implies that processes of teaching and learning can be liberated from the constraints of time and place. • Flexible learning provides learners with a choice about how, where and when the learning process will take place. Furthermore, the term stands in opposition to linear learning (also called traditional learning ) and it is often related to student-centeredness in educational practices (or learner-controlled learning environments ). Although it is mainly used to encompass distance learning and open learning, especially in the context of higher education, its scope may be much wider, once it may also be found in face to face contexts and different age groups. In addition you may consult these two useful tables by various authors, which compile further characteristics of flexible learning:
The five myths Moreover, the term flexible learning is loaded with a series of myths regarding its popular understanding. Five of them can be identified:
Challenges of flexible learning Many are the challenges faced by flexible learning approaches. Below are the most relevant ones:
“By contrast, any failure to increase flexibility is invested with perspectives on the self-interestedness of professionals and their lack of accountability. Discourses of flexibility establish flexibility as central to their regime of truth.” Benjamin Granger has conducted an interesting study on challenges of flexible learning. Below are some of the most interesting points of his research, which in turn endorses the statement above. Supported by the Cognitive Load Theory (CLT) , which calls attention to the level of cognitive load in the learning process, the focus of Granger’s argumentation lays on the divergence of outcomes regarding learner-controlled (flexible learning) scenarios in both modalities of flexible learning, face to face and distance learning. One of the scenarios encompasses relatively simple content, whereas the other refers to complex content. As one may see on the chart below, learner-controlled scenarios (flexible learning) seems to be effective while dealing with simple content, with slightly superior results in opposition to ‘program control’ (linear learning). In the other hand, when embedded in a complex scenario, the flexible approach looses approximately fifty percent of its effectiveness. This experiment demostrates that flexible learning scenarios are in principle a weak approach when dealing with complex contents.
“(…) all flexibilities come with provisos, pre-conditions and commitments (or inflexibilities)” - Chen 2003 In the context of distance learning or e-learning, flexibility for learners, educators, or institutions may translate into inflexibility for others. As such, the experience of flexible learning in such contexts comes with hidden restrictions or inflexibilities that are not made visible, for instance those related to accessibility problems. As Chen states, flexibility is not a given. Apart from the individual affinity with flexible learning environments, as discussed above, there are still other factors like accessibility and time-zones, which may constrain rather than provide flexibility to learners. The flexibility regarding time and place, for example, may become rather an obstacle than a facilitator in some cases. The expressions ‘whenever and wherever’ are highly dependent on the purchase power of the learner, on where he/she is placed, and on the infrastructure of this locality. Power problems, blackouts, pick time and slow internet connection may impede the learner to access the online content ‘when he/she wants to’. Moreover, the lack of a mobile device or internet connection, will avoid him/her to do it ‘where he/she wants to’. Furthermore, empirical evidence suggests that asynchronous, e-learning environments foster less or more difficult communication among training participants . In other words, the time difference around the globe may hamper the contact of the learners with other peers, which would eventually lead to disunity among participants. Within this disunity, the learner does not feel like belonging to the‘community of the course’, diminishing his/her motivation toward the course and increasing the rates of discontinuity of the involvement in training prior to mastery. The conceptions of social learning theory (or community learning theory) and communities of practice may help one understand the relevance of interaction among participants.
According to Granger, individual mindsets may be influenced and even shaped in order to optimize student’s use of learner-control (in flexible learning environments). The Learner Goal Orientation may be naturally high in some individuals, but as Granger suggests, may also can be induced or stimulated by external actors (trainers, instructional designers, supervisors, etc.) through error encouragement for example; thus making it an individual difference that can be influenced prior to and during training. Blended learning approaches regarding the application of both linear and flexible learning sets, in which the learner is provided with partial control of learning activities, may be also considered as an alternative to overcome individual differences and cognitive overload.
Technical challenges: in this context, another facet of Blended Learning, which regards the combination of online and offline activities, such as printing material and face to face events or encounters, serves as alternative to contour the inflexibilities related to distance learning. Community belonging issue: in order to provide the learner with a deeper feeling of community belonging in an online environment (where learners will hardly meet personally) and thereby enhance his/her learning experience, two paths are recommended, the first concerning the learning process and the second concerning the after learning process: 1. Stimulating discussions through online forums is a well known way to prompt engagement among peer learners. In adittion, the level of engagement (frequency and quality of participation) of the learner in forums could be used as a form of assessment for the course, increasing even more the number and quality of the discussions. 2. To keep learners engaged after a course and bring them together as community of learners with similar interests, it is higly recommended to create an alumni group page (e.g., a Facebook page), where they may keep in touch, exchange and eventually collaborate with each other’s learning experience and projects.
The right technology to support flexible learning - working flow technology. Flexible learning: issues on space, time, knowledge and power.
Intrinsic Learning Behavior It is characterized by the natural neural cognitive activities responsible for learning processes performed in the sub-conscious level; it is the ‘brain behavior’. Examples from intrinsic learning behaviors are: • information processing and association with prior knowledge – memory;[1] • learning from mistakes and failure;[2] • innate curiosity;[3] Each of this operations, are performed by the brain within various learning styles sets, depending on the individual’s personal inclination. See also: cognitivism
Employed in parallel with the above-mentioned activities, the active learning behavior refers to the actions performed by the individual in the conscious level aiming the mastery of the task to be learned. The latter is the most frequently addressed in the literature on learning behavior and encompasses the following practices: • self-discipline (through self-conditioning); • self-organizing, establishing a strategy; • self-studying, self-reflection; • self-motivation[4]; • engagement; • concentration, focus, mindfulness; • transformative learning/collaborative learning (widening one’s perspective): exchange of ideas, seeking feedback, sharing information, seeking for help, talking about errors, collaboration, argumentation, discussion; • learn by doing: to put the knowledge in practice, problem solving; • creating a proper environment for learning activities, learn in a proper environment; • provide oneself with proper sleep;
An alternative approach refers to the outer stimulus ‘pro-learning’. It consists in the way the mentor (eg. the boss, supervisor, trainer, instructor, etc.) acts in favour of the learning performance of his pupil. For example, challenging the learner’s previous knowledge and conditioning his behavior by making use of either negative reinforcement (punishment), or positive reinforcement (reward, compliment), the latter enhancing motivation. See also: behaviorism |
Web Resources |
Below you have a list of resources that provide additional information on different aspects of Learning Behavior. |
Link | Content |
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Learning from mistakes is harder than we think | Annie Murphy Paul tells us about different ways of learning from our mistakes. |
Learning from brilliant mistakes | An interesting article that will teach how to worship your mistakes. |
Why do some people learn faster? | A new study unveils the complexity of brain's learning behavior. |
How to stimulate curiosy | Three ways to stimulates your curiosity. |
Can ‘Mindfulness’ Really Help You Focus? | A study assessing the performance of the participants with or without a session of meditation before the application of the test. |
Additional Materials |
Document | Content |
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MindMap Learning Behavior | Visualize "Learning Behavior". PS: the hyperlinks are not available on the image, but all the sources can be found in 'Web Resources' and 'References'. |
References
- ↑ Okano, H., Hirano, T., & Balaban, E. (2000). From the Academy Learning and memory, 97(23), 12403–12404. PDF
- ↑ http://scienceblogs.com/cortex/2009/10/22/learning-from-mistakes/
- ↑ Loewenstein, G. (1994). The Psychology of Curiosity: A Review and Reinterpretation. Psychological Bulletin, 116(1), 75–98. PDF
- ↑ http://www.education.com/reference/article/motivation-affects-learning-behavior/