Learning strategy

  • Workshop culture

    We live in a “workshop culture”. On the one hand, it is costly and exclusionary. Few can afford to travel, and the organization finds it more difficult to afford and justify the expense of moving bodies and materials to meet. Its outcomes are difficult to clearly identify, much less measure. They often contribute to communication…

    Empty Seats (Jon Candy/flickr.com)
  • Emergencies kill learning habits

    We recognize that large-scale, complex emergencies have a dramatic impact on many aspects of our work, including what and how we learn. Some may feel, based on experience, that emergencies kill learning habits. We put everything on hold – including the things we do to stay current – to focus on the emergency response. However, the disruptive…

    Rusting away along the river Congo (Julien Harneis/flickr.com)
  • Applicability

    Applicability is the brick wall of formal training approaches. Not only do we first have to stop work to attend a training, but once the training is completed, the challenge is then to figure out how to apply what we learned to daily work. It is estimated that, on the average, applicability of a well-designed workshop…

    Nails (Adam Rosenberg/flickr.com)
  • Formal learning of the past

    Formal learning in the past includes formal education and qualifications obtained. They serve as credentials of value to establish that we know – part of building relationships of trust – and provide frameworks of reference (“shelves”) to make sense of new knowledge. From the past, we also draw on personal experience, attitudes, and values acquired or developed in…

    The Longest Carpet Fringe (Theen Moy/flickr.com)
  • Faster

    We need to learn faster, to deliver results faster. We find ways to accelerate knowledge development. And yet, although we acknowledge the need to focus on task completion, we accept that our shared learning takes time to build trust and deepen understanding before it can be turned into action. In many cases, we know that the most powerful…

    Jello in mid-air while running (Tony Cyphert/flickr.com)
  • Trust

    The strategies we use to anchor and filter rely on building trust in our working relationships. Learning together is grounded in a shared culture of openness and trust. For example, we trust each other to keep communication to the point. We mobilize different networks of trust, internal and external, based on need. This mutual trust…

    Ahu Tongariki, Easter Island, the Navel of the World (Yulin Lu/flickr.com)
  • Focus

    “Our challenge lies in focusing our insights. Distraction from what is important is a continual obstacle.” George Siemens (2006:136) How do we stay focused? How do we extract important knowledge? Anchoring is the act of staying focused on important tasks while undergoing a deluge of distractions. We anchor to pay attention even when we are overwhelmed…

    'Tis the Season for Colourful out of Focus Subjects (Billy Wilson/flickr.com)
  • Currency

    Knowledge skills are increasingly important due to the pace of change in knowledge. We know that staying current cannot rely solely on formal training. This is both because we seldom have the time and resources to stop our work in order to learn and because the pace of change is faster than our ability to…

    Ebb and Flow (Alistair Nicol/flickr.com)
  • Anchoring

     “Hitting a stationary target requires different skills of a marksman than hitting a target in motion.” – George Siemens (2006:93) We are all knowledge workers who struggle with knowledge abundance – too much information.   Our ability to learn is heavily dependent on our ability to connect with others. How well are we able to collect, process, and…

    Old rusted anchor chains at Falmouth Harbour (StooMathiesen/flickr.com)
  • Dinosaur

    “You’ll become a dinosaur if you don’t learn.” People in the organization recognize the need for change, see its value, see their own roles in the process, are willing to adopt new approaches, and possess the competence to move forward with change: At the individual level, we strive to consider each task, however mundane, as…

    Triceratops fossil, Galerie de Paléontologie du Jardin des plantes (Paris) (personal collection)