Category Archives: Change

Models of education

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In response to a posting on the UNESCO-UNEVOC e-Forum (a virtual community of Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) practitioners from around the world who share information and knowledge about different aspects of TVET) I have been reflecting on the inequities of our education systems. There are still so many educational environments that continue to advocate the use of a teacher/trainer focussed approach that promotes ‘instructional/transmission’ as opposed to ‘transformational’ learning.

As many of you know, I’ve recently completed my Masters thesis in Education, looking at autobiographical reflection and perspective transformation, using the lens of Jack Mezirow’s Transformative Learning Theory. Through Mezirow I also discovered Stephen Brookfield, Patricia Cranton, Edward Taylor, John Dirkx and a whole collective of inspirational and authentic educators. The research I have undertaken – and the work I do with my own VET (Vocational Education & Training) teachers and students – always brings me back to a transformative approach to learning.

Using this methodology encourages us to examine and contest the unattended assumptions that pervade our thinking, behaviours and practices, and allow us to slowly, thoughtfully, meaningfully shift our thinking and ways of seeing the world. In this model, the teacher/educator/VET practitioner and ‘learner’ share the journey of learning, bringing their very unique skills, knowledge and experience to the learning space. It is achieved through any method that promotes an open and equitable learning space where all are encouraged to think critically and engage in open dialogue and inquiry.

Paulo Freire, a well renowned, radical, Brazilian educator (later to work with Ira Shor) spoke scathingly of what he referred to as the ‘banking’ model of education, where students basically line up to receive the skills and knowledge identified as necessary by a ‘ruling other’ (a teacher, an industry, a governing body of some sort … someone who tells you “This is the way it is.”) This model is also known as ‘bucket education’ … “Line up, hold up your bucket, and I will shovel in the things you need to know … got it?” You are a passive recipient and have no part to play in critiquing the value or practical application of the information provided.

If we are striving to cultivate powerful learning environments where innovative and transforming outcomes are realised for the future of our global community, then it can only be achieved in a way that truly honours and speaks to the incredible strengths that lay within each individual. Carl Rogers and many other authentic educators speak of cultivating our learners so that they can grow in strength and stature like the plants we nurture. This cannot be realised through teacher focussed, ‘banking’ learning environments, only through open, authentic learning spaces where critical inquiry fosters the discovery of personal truths and meaning-making that ultimately lead to world-changing advances founded in the value and integrity of each individual.

Critical reflection and hands-on, experiential inquiry must always underpin the process of learning, or we will only ever create passive little ‘vegetables’ whose incredible strengths and intelligences might never be realised. The world will be so much poorer for this. For what it’s worth, I think teacher-focussed learning environments and their associated tests and exams are magnificently designed to maintain the status quo and hierarchy of the class system.

What do you think?

Follow the link to the interesting and beautiful representation of this transformative approach as  illustrated above: http://www.joanwink.com/cp3/3perspectives.php

If you’re interested in reading more on any of the ideas I’ve put forward here, my thesis can be found online at: http://monash.academia.edu/JenniMiles/Papers/866087/Restor_y_ing_lives_autobiographical_reflection_and_perspective_transformation_in_adults_returning_to_study

 

Cultivating peace across our world

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A thought on today’s Hungersite page

http://www.thehungersite.com/clickToGive/home.faces?siteId=1

Have you checked it out already?

Consider making it your homepage, and every time you open your computer, it takes less than a minute to click on all eight of the tabs – Hunger; Breast Cancer; Animals; Veterans; Autism; Child Health; Literacy; Rainforest. Each day you ‘Click to give’,  you will have taken another small step that contributes to a more equitable and peaceful world.

Gaslighting

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A friend has sent this link to Yashar Ali’s article ‘A message to women from a man:  you are not crazy. ‘ … gaslighting is a term often used by mental health professionals … to describe manipulative behavior used to confuse people into thinking their reactions are so far off base that they’re crazy.’ http://www.huffingtonpost.com/yashar-hedayat/a-message-to-women-from-a_1_b_958859.html

At first I thought “Yes, yes, yes, I know … it happens all the time …” and then as I continued to read, I began to realise how his words not only resonated with my own experience, but how deeply they effected my emotional state. I found myself back in so many situations in the past where my thoughts, suggestions and objections were trivialised and ridiculed by another. My face was burning with the same sense of shame and unrecognised injustice I felt in the face of such indignity.

I’m afraid I’ve probably been guilty of being a ‘gaslighter’ myself at various times, and over the last months and years I have been slowly implementing new strategies into my life to address this. My aim is to raise my consciousness … to develop a higher awareness of myself, and of how my words, actions and behaviours impact on others. And in dealing with the words, actions and behaviours of others, I am working to cultivate a conscious space where I can have a bit of leeway before I either melt into a trembling mess, or charge in with vitriolic comments in defence.

In the article, Yashar quotes Gloria Steinem, “The first problem for all of us, men and women, is not to learn, but to unlearn.” (interestingly, incorporated in my recent thesis) and I am drawn strongly to this notion. We need to become aware of what we have learned about ourselves … to recognize the truths that resonate for us … and to identify the author of these truths. Often the comments that come from others (whether conscious or not) are veiled attempts to oppress us – to control us in some way. My experience is that through taking time to reflect on the story of our lives – on the people and the circumstances that have influenced the construction of our identity – we are able to unlearn some of our conditioned responses to such situations, and to respond in a way that empowers all to grow in authentic strength and truth.

Take some time to read the article if it speaks to you, and see what response you have to Yashar’s thoughts