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SEPTEMBER 2014 237 Facilitated networks of learning Jean Annan, Brian Annan, Mary Wootton and Rene Burton Centre for Strategic Education (CSE) is the business name for IARTV ABN 33 004 055 556 Mercer House 82 Jolimont Street East Melbourne Victoria 3002 Phone +61 3 9654 1200 Fax +61 3 9650 5396 Email [email protected] www.cse.edu.au 237 Facilitated networks of learning Jean Annan, Brian Annan, Mary Wootton and Rene Burton Introduction 3 An age of invention 4 Five concepts of interactive networking 6 The community of practice 17 Conclusion 19 © 2014 Centre for Strategic Education Seminar Series Paper No. 237, September 2014 ISSN 1838-8558 ISBN 978-1-921823-58-9 © 2014 Centre for Strategic Education, Victoria. The Centre for Strategic Education* welcomes usage of this publication within the restraints imposed by the Copyright Act. Where the material is to be sold for profit then written authority must be obtained first. Detailed requests for usage not specifically permitted by the Copyright Act should be submitted in writing to: The Centre for Strategic Education Mercer House, 82 Jolimont Street, East Melbourne VIC 3002. (*The Centre for Strategic Education (CSE) is the business name adopted in 2006 for the Incorporated Association of Registered Teachers of Victoria (IARTV). Therefore, publications which were previously published in the name of IARTV are now published in the name of CSE.) Produced in Australia by Centre for Strategic Education Mercer House, 82 Jolimont Street, East Melbourne VIC 3002 Editorial Team: Tony Mackay, Keith Redman, Murray Cropley, Andrew Miller Facilitated networks of learning 3 Introduction Leaders of education systems in many naturally, particularly for those who have countries across the globe are responding to a multiple social connections and ready access to transforming world, contemplating the nature the deluge of information flowing through the of future-focused learning environments. This Internet. For others, these opportunities must deliberation and movement is not generated be manufactured. The rate of change is rapid; solely from the top end of education systems. those students cannot wait. The creation of It operates within a growth dynamic in which innovative learning environments will require some participants, often with no positional innovative facilitation if all children are to authority, take a lead role in creating new visions become connected in the future world. and opportunities. Other participants may How can systems leaders work with this growth work to preserve valued traditional practices, dynamic to encourage the development of perhaps tentatively playing with new ideas but relevant and engaging practices? Although hesitant to cut ties fully with established notions it is possible that leaders’ perspectives will of learning. Within these two extremes there is themselves encompass a changing mix of a large group of participants who choose to go futurist, moderate and traditional views about with the flow and make changes as and when learning environments, it seems unlikely that new practices emerge. Those taking a lead role any nation can rely on top-end systems alone might express frustration at what they view in to effect the timely transformation required others’ actions as reluctance to change, and for students who are entering the schooling those who are most invested in conserving system now. The process of developing learning traditional practices may be annoyed by environments for current and future education invitational or mandated calls for change. Each must be shared broadly across all people who of these actions represents a vital component influence students’ learning and development of the response to a call to align education and and who hold views about what they should the contemporary world. learn and how they learn best, including The ensuing dialogue among participants the students. In this article, we suggest that creates a climate that supports growth, all facilitation of multiple networks of schools, participants contributing to the creation of students, families and community can perform new learning environments. For some students, this role. the transformation of learning will emerge 4 Centre for Strategic Education Seminar Series Paper No. 237, September 2014 An age of invention the multiple variables and complexity that most strongly influence learning and living. Over the past century, notions of learning These tools must be accompanied by practices and teaching have moved substantially from that invite individuals and communities to traditional exposition of knowledge through participate and prosper in current and future to collaborative student inquiry and, now, environments. As Dumont, Istance and reciprocal, ubiquitous interaction. This Benavides (2010) observed, we are ‘living in progression is depicted here as a three-phase an era of incredible invention and growth in transition (CISCO, 2008). During the first information and communication technologies’ phase, traditional teacher-directed education, (p 8) that requires new sets of knowledge and responding to an industrialised society, called skill. This reskilling is no longer negotiable or, for educators to disseminate knowledge as Hannon (2010) has said, is not just ‘nice- deemed suitable for students at that time. to-have’. Students were, in the main, passive in receiving Images of phase three future-focused learning knowledge through instruction. Relationships environments portray students as no longer between teachers and students were strictly attempting to pursue a tightly prescribed hierarchical and curricula were structured to curriculum, but one to which they actively avoid ambiguity and surprise. contribute and that supports them to ‘learn how The second phase began as society entered to learn’, and to discover how and where to the knowledge age. At this point, the roles of access the particular information they require. teachers and students moved so that students Emphasis on teachers expounding specific were supported to make interpretations of information has lessened, the profession and information and to construct meanings for new players now taking an expanded role in the collaborative inquiries and shared observations. development of frames and tools that activate Curricula were more flexible, allowing for a agency in students to access further information. degree of managed uncertainty. However, this Students can now seek multiple sites in which change was incremental, involving supplements information is shared and grown through to traditional education. The second phase saw diverse social connections. Sites of learning the introduction of a raft of generic programs, extend from the local community through, for implemented in response to mounting calls example, clubs, street conversations, schools, on governments for accountability. Education homes, and shopping centres to the global continued to be viewed primarily as the business community, through television, the Internet of the school and relationships among teachers and travel. In this third phase, students access and students, and groups of students, remained information that is contextually relevant and unidirectional. Increasing recognition and educators welcome the pace, uncertainty and valuing of diversity, technological advancement excitement associated with major change. These and a shifting global economy have sparked images are not widespread realities in practice. desires for new and innovative learning Rather, they are being talked into existence environments that align with the new world. as questions and anxieties are replaced with Those desires have pressed, or drawn, education confidence in knowing how young people prefer into a third phase that is characterised by to learn in the modern-day world. innovation and transformation. In some places, the new world of omnipresent The scale of change in the nature of employment, learning opportunity is beginning to move diversity of relationships, available resources beyond rhetoric to become a reality, more so and access to information has generated around the instructional core than learning urgency for new tools that help us understand beyond the school gates. There are examples Facilitated networks of learning 5 of students and educators enthusiastically independently. Similarly, education would not engaging in new learning collaborations. Fullan be considered a matter of aimlessly ‘following and Langworthy (2014) have observed that one’s passion’ but one of building on interest some students and teachers are ‘unleashing and familiarity and surmounting the challenges students’ and teachers’ energy and excitement that presented. As Newport (2012) suggested, in new learning partnerships’ (p i). Those adults who are satisfied in their work and observations and other research findings, such their learning tend to be those who engage in as the Woolf Fisher Research Centre findings tasks that are interesting and challenging, who from Manaiakalani (Jesson, McNaughton and apply considerable effort to become skilled and Wilson, 2013), suggest that transformational who are then able to use these skills in future work around the instructional core in schools endeavours. is a critically important development for future- In this paper we discuss the knowledge focused learning environments.1 foundation of Interactive Networks, described Networks can make powerful contributions as interactive because of the learner-active/ to the growth of future-focused learning environment-active perspective on learning environments although their deliberate growth implied in this structure. We present and discuss has been sporadic in schooling systems. Where a set of five linked ideas that underpin the networks have been established, many have interactive network as a vehicle for creating involved teachers exchanging knowledge future-focused learning environments: (eg, Earl and Katz, 2007; Spillane and Kim, ■ innovation; 2012). Others, particularly on-line networks, ■ interactive participation; have included students and parents (eg, Manaiakalani) recognising the significant role ■ culture and identity; that families and communities play in students’ ■ appreciation; and success. It is timely to build on the networking ■ lateral learning connections. developments that have emerged and activate broader, ecological learning environments These five ideas represent the fields in which within which instruction is just one of several facilitators of interactive networks require levers for learning. in-depth knowledge and implementation skill. The design of interactive networks has Ecological networks extend through the various grown as the authors became immersed in layers of students’ broad environments, locating challenges and practices within the interaction among participants at multiple levels. The Networks can make powerful contributions establishment of ecological networks does to the growth of future-focused learning not assume a full swing away from useful environments although their deliberate growth elements of current school structures and has been sporadic in schooling systems. practices. Those that support future education are woven into new practices. For example, practice-based developments in education and safety, wellbeing and achievement of young psychology in Australia and New Zealand. children must remain paramount. Recognition These practice-based developments have of broad, networked learning environments involved active participation of students, involves knowing where to stand in particular teachers and families in their schools and circumstances along a structure-to-freedom communities, resulting in shifts of facilitation continuum. That is, adults knowing when to from that of ‘consultation with external support instruct young people, co-construct knowledge and challenge’ to ‘authentic, negotiated external- or support them to learn interdependently and 6 Centre for Strategic Education Seminar Series Paper No. 237, September 2014 Figure 1. The ecology of an interactive learning environments. This framework utilises learning environment participants’ familiar sense-making processes and tailors change to students’ particular social spheres. In the next section of this paper Interactive Learning Environment we elaborate on the five ideas underpinning interactive networking. n o ConnectionitapicitraP Innovation Finivteer caoctnicveep ntest owfo rking Innovation n o ati We consider that innovative future-focused eci learning environments are those within which r pp graduates grow knowledge and skills for A life in current and future worlds. They are Culture flexible, ubiquitous, interactive and constantly and Identity transforming, encouraging active participation, curiosity and creativity. They recognise and reflect students’ identities and the multiple internal collaboration’. cultural beliefs and values students bring This situated activity has shed light on some to the learning environment. Students in pivotal understandings about student learning. future-focused learning environments develop These insights have emerged through a interdependent relationships and have authentic preparedness to innovate; that is, to take audiences for organically generated work. They calculated and theoretically supported journeys use the latest technology of the time, connecting into the unknown and to push current with one another in borderless networks. These boundaries. We find ourselves at a point students seek opportunities to explore in new, where we have observed the parameters of unknown areas of knowledge and entertain a these developments, have begun to understand judicious degree of uncertainty. about innovation for future-focused learning As noted earlier, these learning environments environments and have identified some specific do not represent common practice. Rather, aspects of learning systems for research. they are what we have observed to feature In brief, the facilitation of networks in the visioning of future education. Idea formed to create future-focused learning improvement, viewed by Scardamalia and environments involves activation of multiple Bereiter (2010, p 12) as the ‘hallmark of a group relationships within networks that progressive society’, has moved from an elitist collaboratively and systematically examine and activity restricted to formal schooling to one grow students’ broad learning environments. in which everyone can engage. Innovations Students are the primary participants and may capable of transforming systems of education be accompanied by groups of teachers, parents must surpass the improvement, reinvention and school, community and iwi (indigenous and supplementary approaches that have tribe) leaders. dominated the past three decades of school The activity of the networks may be guided reform and cannot rely on simply mirroring by structures such as the Situational Analysis high-performing schools (see Hannon, 2014; (Annan, J, 2005), an open framework that Innovation Unit for Global Education Leaders allows collaborators to develop innovative Programme, 2013). Traditional, incremental and contextualised understandings of students’ approaches to improve education systems have Facilitated networks of learning 7 aided various reform agendas but are unlikely Within an interactive conceptualisation of to produce the level of innovation required to learning, ongoing adjustments to school keep pace with rapid societal change. Fullan programs and teaching are vital ingredients (2013) has gone as far as to say that we are fast of innovative learning environments. Not approaching the time when we can no longer surprisingly, discussions about innovation ‘squeeze a good education’ from traditional to transform education systems frequently systems. focus solely on the role of the school rather than the roles of all involved in the students’ Future-focused learning environments extend learning. This is possibly because the school through and beyond the instructional core of is seen as the most likely vehicle to create schooling and formal education, with students, change. As it stands, governments continue teachers and communities taking an active role. to invest in schools as primary learning Together, all participants share in orchestrating hubs and parents generally trust schools as applicable learning opportunities. Those safe places for children to reside during the students who are able to keep up with social workday. Innovative schools, however, are change and digital technology and who can characterised by collaboration; they actively appreciate diverse cultural understandings will involve all stakeholders in the development of prosper. Their familiarity with the artefacts and curricula, target professional learning in the practices of the new world will support them light of student–parent–teacher interaction and to connect and communicate with others, to establish supportive and challenging learning create new technical knowledge and approach connections through linking with other schools. learning as a life-long activity. Innovative schools also involve well-considered Many other educators are also contemplating infrastructure, procedures and practices. the development of relevant, constructive new Hannon (2010), making reference to a school learning environments. For example, Dumont, network project from the Innovation Unit in the Istance and Benavides, (2010) have suggested UK, reminded us that changes in school systems that innovative learning environments be affect children’s life chances for better or worse explored in ways that reflect the social nature of learning and be shaped through home–school partnerships, the use of up-to-date technology changes in school systems affect children’s life in learning activities, formative assessment chances for better or worse and, therefore, the and inquiry-based approaches within which school is not the place for ‘random or unfocused students are at the centre. Similarly, Hampson, experimentation’ Patton and Shanks (2012) have offered a set of key ideas for those wishing to advance future education. They encourage the extension of and, therefore, the school is not the place for lessons in terms of time, place or structure. This ‘random or unfocused experimentation’ (p 26). means thinking of social connection outside This comment did not imply that education be the classroom, considering students’ individual locked in a time warp, repeating practices from perspectives and experience and building on the other places and times. Effective changes would digital expertise students bring to their learning. be those that were systematic and built on the Students engage in real projects with authentic supportive structures and practices ‘in situ’. audiences for their work. Teachers expect to Hannon notes that schools working with the help students be teachers and teachers to be Innovation Unit (UK) network project pursued students, and to measure what matters. The a considered sequence of reflection, analysis and authors’ view is that educational relationships creative design keeping students at the centre include families as active participants in the of the inquiry. construction of learning pathways. 8 Centre for Strategic Education Seminar Series Paper No. 237, September 2014 Similarly, the Manaiakalani project that ■ connection – from assumptions of learning transformed education in an Auckland suburb as an isolated learner activity to viewing involved the creation of a strong structure and learning as a social process, involving clear procedures to support its students to be ‘at connections among students, teachers, home in a digital environment’. Aspects of the families and the wider community; learning environment that were given particular ■ collaboration – from competitive or consideration were cooperative learning relationships to those ■ the infrastructure to support the digital characterised by collaboration; medium; ■ interactive participation – from notions of ■ professional learning for teachers; learning and teaching that presume passive students and active adults to those that ■ device procurement; assume interactive groups of students and ■ cloud solution; adults; ■ operational system (eg, administration, ■ appreciation – from deficit perceptions of distribution of digital devices and students’ achievement to appreciative views administration); and of students’ achievement. ■ establishing strong, authentic and long- The conceptualisation of education as the term community connections (see Annan, domain of a wide population across multiple J, 2013). sites implies the valuing of social learning The Manaiakalani learning environment was connections, of collaboration and culturally constructed through a process of deliberate situated learning activity. Knowledge is social negotiation among students, families, interactively constructed by those who seek it, communities and schools, with varying and determined by its relevance for current and emphases being placed on certain elements future worlds. depending on the context. Interactive participation Perspectives and activity Interactive learning environments call for fresh Interactive learning environments call for ways of thinking about sites of learning, tools fresh ways of thinking about sites of learning, for learning, social interactions and learning tools for learning, social interactions and trajectories. learning trajectories. Over the last century we have been offered a range of theories of While there remain possibly more questions human development and learning, some giving than answers about future-focused learning precedence to the role of the environment in environments, some global trends have determining learning and others to the learner. emerged in thinking about movement toward Contemporary views about learning favour an future education. These comprise a series of interactionist view, that is, one that involves the simultaneous shifts in the conceptualisation of active learner within an active environment (see learning. Specifically, they relate to ecologies of Dumont, Istance and Benavides, 2010; Illeris, learning, connections with others, collaboration, 2009; Lee, 2008; Scardamalia, 2008). Interactive active participation and appreciation. These theories, including those advanced by Vygotsky, shifts are described in terms of Engeström, Lave and Bronfenbrenner, have placed the learner and environment alongside ■ ecologies – from notions of classrooms or one another in the co-construction of new schools as primary educational units to knowledge in dynamic, cultural contexts. appreciating dynamic, ecological structures as students’ core learning environments; Facilitated networks of learning 9 Understanding the perspectives that students, The active learner/active environment teachers, families and communities take on perspective corresponds with the contemporary, human development is critical to developing third phase of education and is represented innovative learning environments in which in the ‘Interactive’ quadrant at the top right- students can be, and choose to be, active hand corner of the matrix. In an interactive in their learning. Theoretical perspective environment, both learner and environment regulates what we see in events and how we are seen to play a part in creating the learning interpret and respond to them. Bowler, Annan context and the knowledge within it. New and Mentis (2007) noted that perspectives on solutions result from the dialogue among all human development and learning determine active participants. the location of problems and solutions, The active environment/passive learner placing them within the learner or within the quadrant represents a view that has dominated environment or within the interaction between throughout much of the last century and the learner and the environment. Bowler et al continues to do so. In this quadrant fall the illustrated the range of diverse perspectives on behavioural theories. From an environmental the relationship between the learner and the active/learner passive perspective, a learner’s environment in their Matrix of Perspectives actions are interpreted as a response to her/his (Figure 2). They presented a four-quadrant environment and would be addressed through matrix, formed by two intersecting continua environmental modification. This quadrant that spanned from passive to active. One corresponds to students being passive recipients continuum represents the learner, the other of knowledge in the environments that teachers, the environment. The matrix is populated with leaders, researchers and evaluators construct examples of theorists whose accounts of human for them. development fall in each of the quadrants. The active learner/passive environment The way in which we conceptualise a situation quadrant occupies the top left hand corner naturally influences the way in which we of the matrix. From this perspective, learning address it. Where we position problems and is seen to emanate from active learners as solutions determines the directions that we take they journey along developmental pathways. and the types of intervention we choose. This Support for learning in this quadrant involves relationship is discussed below. Figure 2. The Matrix of Perspectives (from Bowler, Annan and Mentis, 2007) Learner Active Interactive e v Piaget cti Vygotsky A Köhler er Bronfenbrenner Erikson arn Bandura e L Environment Passive Environment Active L e a Pavlov Gessell rn e Skinner Galton r P a Watson s Passive s iv Environment Active e

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skill. The design of interactive networks has grown as the authors became .. The Matrix of Perspectives (from Bowler, Annan and Mentis, 2007).
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