Covid19 and Online Schooling: A confluence of School, Home, technology and YOU

I could be anyone around you, but let me specify, I have been a student and now I am a teacher (for adult learners) myself. I have been a son explaining to my parents what I did in school and now I am a parent, trying to understand what my daughter does in school. I am also a researcher who has spent over 2 and a half decades trying to understand (learn about) learning and my raison d’être has been to constantly learn and evolve my own understanding perpetually.

The current pandemic has thrown us all into the deep end with almost no time to anticipate or prepare for this eventuality. We are left with no option but to adapt rapidly to survive. While businesses ramped up their ongoing efforts of work-from-anywhere (WFA) to enable work-from-home (WFH). We feel the impact of the forced migration most strikingly in education. Bound to our homes, we were made to set up the infrastructure for or kids learn-from-home (LFH) journey. Just as our family has experienced the way we conduct our business, we have been forced to experience closely our kids’ schooling (both of which was well hidden) in full view. Some uncomfortable questions will soon emerge from all quarters, with some hasty guidelines being issued both for schools and offices. The topic of personal conduct for parents to be the paragon of behavior, discipline and ethics (the Gen Z/Gen α learn more perceptually than by following instructions) is worthy of another note. I will concentrate on the LFH aspects on this one.

While we are committed to give our children the best education, stretching all our resources, we tend to assume the approach and quality to be the school’s responsibility. LFH has invaded our bedrooms, study rooms or living rooms, we are getting a ring-side view of the black box. I too have been a forced observer to the online classes my kid is attending. Without a doubt, the schools, teachers, support staff, parents (and the students) deserve fitting accolades to ensure continuity in this adversity. A huge round of applause to you all!

I have some observations, drawing on what I witnessed (so far) and my earlier work in this area. Here is my simple online class checklist:

For the Schools/teachers

1. Ensure that the hardware and software meet minimum standard in terms of specifications, compatibility, comfort and ease of usage. For e.g. using USB interfaces are more stable and robust than wireless/3.5 MM jack interfaces, using wired network connection as against wireless, having UPS back-ups for modem etc.

2. Mindfully plan your class to the possible shortest time duration possible.

  • Break your class into smaller chunks of 5-7 minutes
  • Have contingency plans for regrouping or recovering any challenges
  • Keep time to summarize your progress and expectation before and after each session

3. Be (extra) cognizant of the diversity of capability, readiness and motivation of each student and ensure that you have a basis to engage them all.

This happened more naturally in face-to-face (f2f) scenario. There were multiple touch-points, sources and ease of access to gauge the gaps. Now, we need to:

  • Keep a look out for drop in participation or lagging assignment submissions or distracted behavior. Always keep a list of students handy to make side notes as you observe them and share feedback to them (both +ve and -ve)
  • Allocate short time in each class to have a student (or a group) handle some topic. Share this in advance
  • Encourage questions that go beyond – “can you say that again teacher”

4. Keep the class “live” and exciting by using

  • Illustrations, animations and imagination
  • Collect interesting activities that you can use in the session to re-energise and engage the students (http://www.csun.edu/~hcedu013/onlineactivities.html)
  • Use wit and humor liberally
  • Identifying unique aspects of each student and connect with them individually at least once a week through email or seeking their thoughts after/before the class (when you are waiting for other to join/leave)
  • Keep the chat channel active (only) between you and the class

5. Understand, appreciate and accommodate physical limitations that each student might have in terms of interference free zones, sound/camera/network quality etc

6. Stay energized, hydrated and fit; be regular in your stretches and physical activities

7. Enjoy the experience and share your positivity with your peers and in online forums. See this as an opportunity to gain some critical experience of leveraging technology.

For Parents and guardians

  1. Keep your interference limited (preferably nil) specially when the classes are live
  2. Make the child as comfortable (in terms of lighting, seating, noise etc) and give as much physical space as possible
  3. Comply with the requests made by the school/teachers and clarify (if needed) directly
  4. Encourage your ward to have discussions on phone with their classmates on topic related to the subjects
  5. Conduct mock sessions (if you can) over the weekends to help the students appreciate the difference between online and f2f sessions (topics can be of mutual interest)
  6. Keep a tab on device (screen time) usage beyond the classes and be sensitive to any complaints by the ward about eye irritation, headache, body aches or sleep issues
  7. Stay positive and reinforce the experience for your child and other parents rather than complaining or reminiscing about the old approach. This is a good opportunity to be digitally savvy and catch up on the digital divide between you and your ward.

For the students

I would rather not add any more things for them to read but if possible, share these good practices with them:

  1. Plan for the session in advance, ensure that you have all that you need for the class
  2. Stay hydrated, keep water and some energy boosters handy in case you get tired/sleepy
  3. Stretch and bend every 10 mins. Stand and attend the sessions where you do not need to take notes or do any activity that needs you to sit
  4. In the breaks go out in the sun, exercise your eyes
  5. Be attentive and do not indulge in any parallel activity

One of my cherished crusades has been to integrate use of digital technologies from simple AV content to more sophisticated AI ML systems (like MetaCog Innovations, that I have founded) into basic pedagogy. Please bear that an AI ML system can now “learn” and secure 95+ marks in (every class) school exam by training for 15 weeks (may be lesser) without any intervention from us. May this serve as a wake-up call for all of us and reflect on the efficacy of 15 years (of the most intellectually fertile life stage) that we dedicate in this pursuit.

I hope this (forced) adoption would act as a basis for everyone (including parents) to look deeper into the new education experience to help us realize the value of digital learning. The key is – We do not need to compete with Artificial Intelligence to secure our future but leverage it to ensure that it enriches the efficacy of learning for everyone in the future.

Digital Learning Design – You Sure You Have all the Pieces?

Digital learning is gaining momentum as technology continues to disrupt every facet of modern life. We hear of newer models, thinking, approaches, tools, platforms, devices and network based education offerings. The adult learners, who form the significant part of corporate learning and general continuing education initiative, have been at the center of many such offerings. It is very surprising that the two key parameters – interest of the learners and the impact of the interventions, do not report any major improvements. Since eLearning came to be a part of mainstream education offerings, there have been parallel reports of low completion rates, lower assessment scores and certification and lowest confidence of the academic community about its ability to deliver significant value by itself. That however, doesn’t stop the digital learning juggernaut to spew more disruptions like flipped learning, gaming and simulations and Nano-degrees. Success of digital learning platforms like TED, YouTube, Khan Academy and many more has been unprecedented, and more initiatives are coming up at an accelerated pace. In this note, I look at this dichotomy and explore possible sources of the same.

The relevance of digital learning certainly needs to be re-established at one fundamental level – can they be generalized across all learner profiles? For e.g. the cognitive stage of a learner can be looked at as an indicator of learners’ capability to learn. We know that adult learners demonstrate maturity, self-confidence, autonomy, independent decision-making, practicality, multi-tasking, sense of purpose, self-directed, experience, and less open-mindedness or receptivity to change. All these traits affect their ability and their motivations to learn.

Just as Malcolm Knowles’ (see Andragogy Core Learning Principles) thoughts on adult learning made a significant impact on the redesign of learning intervention for learners of different ages, it is prudent to create similar demarcation in the digital world too. It is not a common sight to see any digital content openly proclaiming the suitable learner age mentioned distinctly.

While we mull over the point above, let’s go further ahead and highlight the next level of distinction based on the maturity of the learner. Even though there is a clear and definitive point legally to be considered an adult, we see great number of variances in the manifestations of rights and privileges an individual enjoys as an adult (for e.g. Voting, Driving, Owning, Drinking, etc.). It is an accepted basis to think of an adult as someone who-accepts responsibility, makes independent decisions, and is financially independent. These are very overt and visible real life signals. While in the context of learning, as we established in the earlier section, one rarely gets any visible signals to take a call on the learner’s “adultness”. It therefore is valuable to consider the intermediate phase of a learner that psychologists call “emerging adulthood” or “extended adolescence”. The psychologists also posit that there is a phased transition that an individual goes through from adolescence to adulthood. It would be logical to see this as a continuum of phases of a learner and incorporate it into the digital learning design. The idea of self-efficacy (defined as personal judgments of one’s capabilities to organize and execute courses of action to attain designated goals – Bandura 1977) is possibly the closest approximation on the thought of this continuum. Self-efficacy is posited to be a key component in social cognitive theory leading to performance capabilities. Using it as a basis Rickbaugh proposed a Learning Independence Continuum (2012). The idea of “Independence continuum” fits well to elaborate “adultness” aspect of learner better.

In the conventional world, the facilitator tries to use their judgment and ongoing feedback to adjust for the learner’s position on the continuum. However, in the digital world, this won’t happen unless the session is designed and delivered to a learner fully mapped for her level of learning independence. For certain, it would be difficult to objectively establish an accurate point on the continuum. Added to this, neither do we have well defined learning approach to configure learning interventions with such details, nor would it be viable to develop such customized program. Hence the idea is largely ignored possibly making the makes digital play fall short of being the panacea in the learning space as well. It is of value to dig deeper and elaborate the contributing factors to this divide and pave the way towards bridging it.

The learner continuum could form a good basis to design better offerings for the “range of adults” as they exist in the real world. I use the key traits of adult learners established well in the existing references and draw out the implications and imperatives for improved digital learning design.

Trait 1 – Increasing need to take responsibility and strong resentment if their privilege to choose is taken away. Without the control over their learning, they will resist learning and even disrupt the learning facilitation efforts.

Implication – The learners desire to take more control over their learning is both an indicator of the position on the continuum and the basis to get the learner involved.

Digital Design Imperatives

  • Overtly include the adult in the configuration of individual learning plan
  • Build self -assessment and evaluation to establish readiness for the outcomes
  • Build an equal relationship with the learner, rather than a hierarchical one.
  • Ensure that there is greater availability of instructions so that the learner at various points of the continuum can be in control of their learning

Trait 2 – A greater reservoir of life experiences. They need to link any new learning to their prior knowledge. The validity of new ideas and concepts needs to “fit” their existing view.

Implication – Based on their position in the continuum, the learner would bring their experiences and it can be used as a resource in their learning efforts

Digital Design Imperatives

  • Harvest all the experiences and prior learning of the learners in the area
  • Make it convenient to link them to the new ideas
  • Engage in active and mature idea sharing activities to find the fit with the prior experiences

Trait 3 – Their learning is voluntary and they exercise personal choices to learn professional or any specific skills. Their motivation to learn is a function of the perceived fit of the choice made.

Implication: Based on the position on the continuum the learner’s level of motivation for the learning would be established

Digital Design Imperatives

  • Put higher efforts and time on facilitating the areas that the learner is motivated to pursue
  • Ignore/minimize the efforts to justify the importance of an area to learn in any way other than linking them to their personal choices

Trait 4 – They evaluate the value of any learning immediately applicable to their situation and needs. They don’t give the same value/enthusiasm to “Abstractions” and “theory” of future relevance or learning unless they develop the generalizations themselves.

Implications – “Reality orientation” is an indicator of a learner position on the continuum. The practicality of the learning needs to be established upfront.

Digital Design Imperatives

  • Understand the desired outcomes of the learners
  • Let the application needs of the learners define the core body of the program
  • Integrate self-assessment and learning alignment to ensure stickiness
  • Start with the real-world view, allow the learner to theorize and close with compelling evidence of outcomes

Trait 5 – They let the learner role and not their self-identity fix the priority for the learning. They play multiple roles and these create conflicting and competing demands on the learner limited time and energy to read or study

Implications – The primacy of self-identity as a learner in the mind of the learner is a function of their position on the continuum

Digital Design Imperatives

  • Allow flexibility in the programs
  • Ensure clear expectation setting and alerts for reading or studying efforts from them
  • Ensure that there are intermediate and quick goals and ensure that they understand the need to move ahead to accomplish their final goal
  • Design multiple efforts to get better priority from the learner
  • Leverage learner’s other roles and responsibilities to achieve the outcomes

Trait 6 – They allocate lower priority for learning, as they allocate all the energy to primary roles and often compromise on the personal commitment made to learn

Implication – Use the position on the continuum to create more aligned basis for them to see sustained value and resist procrastination in learning

Digital Design Imperatives

  • Account for counseling to establish the value and priority outside of the learning design
  • Provide guidance to help learners to be realistic about the demands of learning
  • Provide initial and intermediate time management and learning efforts suggestions.

Trait 7 – They hold negative perceptions such as eroded study skills, meager grasp, assessment apprehension, or sometimes devise more novel barriers to learn

Implications – The self-confidence in their learning skills is a function of their position on the continuum. There is a need to reassure them of their ability to learn what they find useful.

Digital Design Imperatives

  • Design approaches that reinforces confidence in the learners
  • Start by initiating the learner on some basic study skills and ways of improving comprehension
  • Use collaborative learning approaches to address anxiety
  • Continuously reassure them of the progress
  • Keep a look out to identify and address any learning breakdown or gaps

Trait 8 – They tend to be resistant to changes and feel learning is not making them any better and find the outcomes unpredictable

Implications – Position on the continuum is an indicator of the expected resistance to learning from the change perspective. Idealistic and far reaching changes are often discarded.

Digital Design Imperatives

  • Concentrate on the “why” questions in the beginning of the program
  • Do not abandon or discount their current learning to emphasise the need to change
  • Build new concepts based on older, understood, and accepted concepts
  • Design for sustained, demonstrable incremental changes through their efforts
  • Encourage exploration, self-pursued concept build up and basis to reject status quo
  • Involve the learner in designing the “how” of the changes by themselves

Trait 9 – They over compensate all the learning limitations by leveraging the learning curve and what they learn is learned at a deeper and more integrative level

Implication – Their position on the continuum is also an indicator of their ability to leverage the learning curve to make the learning efficient and engaged

Digital Design Imperatives

  • Ensure easier pace of learning in the early part of the program
  • Leverage the learning curve as the learner moves ahead in the program
  • Ensure that all the relevant background and dependencies are overtly included in the learning design
  • Use intuitive pre-session content to trigger current knowledge connections

It is established that adult learners (in contrast to younger aged learners) need a different approach but if we see closely at the traits demonstrated by them, there is an equal diversity that exists between them too. eLearning blindly followed the “one size fits all” policy of conventional learning. This will not work if we are looking to leverage the power of digital innovations in the learning space. As the technology becomes more intelligent and intuitive, the design and use of technology needs to follow the suit. There have been many innovative products and services that have made significant impact on learning, but it might not be wrong to say that we are still scratching the surface. At the most fundamental level, we still follow linear and organic growth models. While technology will maintain the exponential development pace independent of the endorsements by the users, it would need efforts to concentrate on cultural change, learner focus, and factual analysis if the value of digital innovation is to be realized by learners. As we breach the frontiers of our understanding of the universe, learning remains the prime mover at the apex of all human endeavor.

The critical question to ask is – would we keep the progress linear or do we have the conviction to opt for exponential digital disruption?

Digital Disruption of Learning and Foundational Economics

The incidences of digital disruption are continuous and expanding. Before the last one is played out, the next disruption comes faster, creates bigger effect and strengthens the VUCA factors. While the whys of digital disruption is a critical question to ask, I am concentrating on the what of digital disruption – specially the factors that enable it. If one observes the progressive disruption of classical commerce to the current digital commerce state, a look back into the economic theories, particularly, transaction cost economics (“TCE”) and principal-agent (“PA”), offer valuable basis to appreciate it.

TCE, which forms the basis for classical commerce, is built on the assumptions of inefficient markets like – anonymous actors, atomistic actors, rational actors, perfect information, homogeneous goods, no transaction costs, and the absence of liquidity constraints etc. As the digital world emerged, it drove the first wave of transition by highlighting the need to challenge these assumptions enabled by/enabling digitization. This has resulted in making individualized transactions more advantageous to classical commercial transactions. For example, Blockchain – the technology behind Bitcoins, is fast replacing trusted third parties. Digital networks of trust have begun proving its worth and are seen worthy of emulation beyond commerce into security, health, governance, and ownership etc. To see “packets of learning” holding transaction value is fairly established. However the application of diminishing TCE assumptions needs a push. This would enable similar digital transfer of knowledge break the constraints of classical learning interfaces and enable digital learning.

The other aspect that digital developments have challenged is the PA or “Agency Theory” – a relationship that necessitates one or more individuals (principals) to need others (called agents) to effectively conduct commerce. The three key pillars (real world inefficiencies) supporting the agency relationships – adverse selection (incomplete information), moral hazard (conflict of interest) and bounded rationality (incomplete processing) are also fast disappearing in the digital world. This is enabling the next generation of disruptions going beyond the use of digital media to creation of digital ecosystems. Learning has possibly run the digitization marathon – using digital medium for the content access, management, and its retention by the learners, long enough. It is about time to see the next surge in the transition by attempting to drop the dependencies on agents (and the related PA inefficiencies) and build a digital learning ecosystem that connects learners to the learning directly.

Both these changes need a rediscovery of the fundamental learning constructs. It entails identification of a set of metrics that could enable learning to be transacted in a truly digital manner. This has implications for learning needs definition, design, delivery, assessment and continuous development. It is important to ask if learning can be transacted without any exchange costs and can learning be freed from human cognitive limitations (for e.g. learning paradox), coupled with other direct and indirect inefficiencies? Can the basic assumptions associated with true realized value and its limited appeal to every adult learner (unless an agent facilitates this process) be challenged? The typical view of education is of a black box process where the end value is either not established or is made contingent to the learner’s contribution. While there is a dependency on learner efforts, it is important to understand that the “contract” in question does not often shielded by an incomplete view of the design side or agent side inefficiencies. There is a need to offer the learner a menu with more than just the offerings name, place or origin or the name of the chef. There is a need to engineer shifts not only in who learners interact with for learning, but also how and when they interact, to expand the interaction beyond the current non-smart eLearning platforms.

For the digital learning to truly work and be attributed the crown of “value enhancing disruptor”, a few critical elements need to be irrefutably established:

  1. Deconstructed real value of learning for each interaction in terms of the whetted outcomes that a learner seeks
  2. Objective connection to the relevance of the learning outcomes to the end goals for learning, backed by evidence gathered using the digital footprints of learning interactions
  3. Smart learning assistants (digital twins) that facilitate the refinement of overall learning needs, goals for each learning interactions and intelligently enable active engagement on the lines of conversational systems like Chatbots
  4. Complete and clear value of the minimum guaranteed outcome being offered as formative and summative learning done using analytics
  5. Cumulative offerings of complementary or supplementary type that the learners could seamlessly add to reach multiple learning goals as in the modular stack design in digital world
  6. A “smart contract” between the learner and the learning providers as in the Blockchain, offering multiple levels of outcomes depending on the chosen transaction path
  7. A learning support path that assures the learners of meeting the outcome though alternate methods in case they missed the outcome by one method
  8. Continuing access and support to renew and refresh the learning to keep their knowledge relevant and valuable
  9. Clearly defined outcomes as learning value units that translate into a secure freely exchangeable asset like the Bitcoins in the digital world

It is a matter of time that the smart juggernaut of digital world propelled by – Decision intelligence (Analytics), Network Intelligence (Blockchains) and Interaction Intelligence (ChatBots), will challenge the boundaries of the conventional arenas. It is up to us to align the rules of engagement in a way to harness the value of this juggernaut in learning.

Learning as a Facilitator

Learning is a very delicate idea and helping someone else to learn adds a few new dimensions of challenges to it. To start with, we all assume that we know how to learn. It might be possible for us to pick some of the simple intuitive actions and ideas by just aping our environment, but we need a through grounding to learn with explicit progress. A true adult learner should have three simple capability – to come up with an original idea, connect it with reality and see through its implications.

Let’s test the three aspects with the idea of learning. Can you come up with an original view of the same? Let’s say you do, that would itself place you in an elite group. Connecting it to reality might seem simple as in all likeliness, you reached this idea by processing the “real world facts” you hold. But herein lies a small catch – you might be working on perceptions, alternative facts, or even plain hoax. Much far away from fact – a piece of information “presented” as having objective reality. Finally, looking at implications, we are now treading in the realm of fiction, speculation, conjectures, and comparatives. Future rarely follows the mandated outcomes of the present and past premises. This would possibly get you thinking how challenging the process of facilitation, i.e. helping others to learn, could be.

Why should I be using a less used term like “facilitation” as against the more popular one like teaching? I intend to kick start our own learning process though this. Teaching as a word has a few inherent challenges. Probably more because it is associated with the idea of responsibility, authority, expertise, unidirectionality and to some extent unquestionability (more because of first two points) which undermines the idea of learning. Some of the other words like lecturing, training, professing, and many words associated with the education profession follow the same trend. Facilitation instantly orients the act more effectively with the learner’s interest, capability, ownership, and goals. However, there is a need to elaborate the idea of facilitation and the role a facilitator plays. But before we debate teaching versus facilitation, let’s look at the complexities around the act of learning itself.

Learning as a Facilitator Thought Point 1: Understand that Learning is a counter-intuitive

Let’s start at a seemingly counter-intuitive aspect of learning. Is learning logical? I have seen most natural response to be – of course. But if we look at the idea a bit deeper, you might begin to doubt your intuition. Learning is a paradox. The famous Meno’s paradox given by Plato explains this beautifully. Simply put it says “you can’t learn anything that you don’t already know”. If this is true, then is the idea of facilitation futile? On the contrary the sooner a learning facilitator recognises this anomaly, more effective are her efforts to help learners. Why so? Because you now have a necessary precondition – start from what is known, to be able to deliver the intended outcomes.

The learning paradox is not the only illogical aspect of learning. It’s an accepted fact that to be the fittest and survive, one needs to evolve, i.e., learn and change continuously. If learning is a continuous process, what motivations can one really hold to learn? Not everyone would get excited like Socrates with an idea like “The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing”. If one needs to run just to stay at a place, why get on the treadmill at all? Right from the Greek philosophers’ dialogs to modern thinkers like Eckhart Tolle, many have delved into this question. We all know multiple answers to this question; but as a facilitator be ready to face this challenge. Offering the act of learning as a “progressively futile exercise” is not an easy sale.

Action Implications: When you acknowledge, the logical dilemma associated with the learning you are trying to facilitate you would:

  1. Appreciate the illogical thoughts and actions of the learner
  2. The resistance and disinterest you might face from the learner
  3. Look deeper than just transferring the thought or idea
  4. Keep the focus on learning process as much as the learning outcomes
  5. Reaffirm the transient nature of learning

Learning as a Facilitator Thought Point 2: Recognize that Learning is to change

If that made sense, we are ready to move to an abstract level. Have you thought of a metaphor for learning? Some of the common ones include a light bulb, a flame or even a flash of light. They usually represent the visibility associated with the knowledge that learning gives. Another way to understand learning is to think of learning as a metaphor. Why so? because, here we look at learning as an outcome itself rather than it being an intermediary leading to another (possibly more important) outcome. As a learning facilitator, your role is limited to delivering the first outcome. It’s important to realise our own scope of control and the true promise we can make to a learner. So, if we look at learning as a metaphor, what do you think this metaphor represents? There could be multiple answers to this question and some I can offer are evolution, destruction, progress and possibly the simplest one – change. Change is the most fundamental and necessary precursor to learning and hence a powerful idea that learning could be a metaphor for.

One of the biggest proponent of learning being change is – Dr. Michael Merzenich, professor emeritus of neuroscience, of University of California, San Francisco. He says “To learn is to change how you think”. He is an authority on brain study and its ability to actively re-wire itself. Before him many philosophers and thinkers have associated learning to change. As a facilitator, it is important to understand and embrace this idea for two critical preconditions – a basis to help a learner assess if learning happened and more importantly to acknowledge that you are working against a belief that needs to change.

Action Implications: When you acknowledge, the change associated with the learning outcome you are trying to facilitate you would:

  1. Recognise the current idea held by the learner that you need to change
  2. Build a logic for the learner to accept the change
  3. Design actions that learner needs to undertake for the learning (change) to happen
  4. Help the learner understand the learning outcome achieved
  5. Establish the transient nature of learning

Learning as a Facilitator Thought Point 3: Recognize that Learning is caused by and causes Questions

The preceding two thoughts aligns one to the idea of facilitation in contrast to teaching. If you are still wearing the teaching hat, you might want to ask yourself one simple question – Do I really have all the answers? Or, more importantly, is it enough to just have answers addressing the current needs? If we know the question, post fact we most certainly know the correct answers. However, if we start with an answer, how certain are we that we will know the question. If you remember Douglas Adams’s The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, you know 42 doesn’t reveal much. Now ask this question to yourself as a facilitator – To learn, is it more effective to help a learner ask right questions to unravel the future thus enabling each question to lead to a more powerful question digging deeper or just giving them a simple answer of how you see the future to be? This brings us to the next challenge a facilitator needs to overcome – Do I give the answers or build the capability to ask questions?

The idea of learning as a skill is greatly supported by the idea that questions help one learn. While an answer could be right or wrong, it carries the ego of the person giving the answer, it is contextual and laden with assumptions, and most critically it comes with an expiry date. Answers are not poor or unimportant or even marginal in value, just that questions help learners to learn better. As a facilitator, it is important that you make learners dig deep into their own realm of knowledge and understanding and ask questions. Noel Burch of Gordon Training International (GTI) gave us a very powerful framework to understand our learning process – four stages for learning any new skill as depicted in the figure. It is an important idea to recognise that facilitation is primarily a play between levels 2 and 3 – the idea that learning is triggered by getting conscious of an incompetence as a vulnerability. It is also an equally important realization that awareness precedes learning. Embedded in this realization is the fact that, awareness leads to questions.

Action Implications: When you acknowledge, the importance of questions in the process of learning you would:

  1. Encourage more questions from your learner
  2. Give the learner the confidence to be vulnerable and identify their triggers
  3. Free yourself from the burden of being the possessor of all answers
  4. Help a learner to dig deeper into their understanding to address their vulnerability
  5. Keep the focus on continuous evolution of learning outcomes for the learners

Learning as a Facilitator Thought Point 4: Recognize that when a facilitator doesn’t learn, no one else does

You are a learning facilitator and not an expert who is expected to know it all. You don’t help a learner to learn by giving precious pearls of wisdom from your all-encompassing knowledgebase. In the modern context, there are many sources right from google to AI assistants and so on which can act as the knowledge repository with more currency and ease. So, is the age of teaching dead? In the adult learning space, it has been dead for a while now. Our attempts to flog this dead horse has been giving us horrible results in terms of little or no relevancy of the graduates to the modern tasks, roles, and career paths. Unemployable graduates are a hard reality hitting the global job market for a long time now. Being a facilitator is possibly the new avatar every teacher need to transition into. The natural realization of this act would be that no one’s learning is ever complete.

As a facilitator one needs to continuously learn, more so, when they are facilitating others to learn. In my view if the facilitator is not learning, no one in the session is. A simple self-check to assess your own performance as a facilitator is to ask yourself – did I learn in the session today? A 20th century American physicist, Frank Oppenheimer was a true visionary to have recognised that “The best way to learn is to teach (to help others learn).” This way you have more people searching their understanding and asking questions that could trigger your own learning process. The facilitator also needs to keep her own interest and excitement with the context, content, and concepts in a learning session at the highest level, regardless of repetitions. This is possible only if the facilitator actively interacts with the happenings and learns along. The critical need is to pay attention to the questions being asked in the session – by you as well as by the learners. Be more attentive to the questions that make you vulnerable. Once you start experiencing the gaps in your own knowledge and understanding, the energy of your interaction would also rise. The excitement of learning is critical to propel learning and if the facilitator is not herself learning, maintaining the energy is a difficult act. This also gives a facilitator an exit from their worst nightmare – being asked a question in the class that they don’t know the answer of. Instead of trying to find a smart exit or just plead ignorance, celebrate your success in taking the learning of a class beyond themselves. More readily you realise that your key role is to help the learners to learn, the faster you are liberated from the burden of knowing it all and opening your mind to learning.

Action Implications: When you acknowledge the value of learning yourself as a precursor to your learners’ learning, you would:

  1. Recognise yourself as a learner before claiming your place on the learned pedestal
  2. Interact with and shape your ideas and thought as you share them in a session
  3. Have the confidence to challenge your own comfort zone and go beyond your conscious limits
  4. Free yourself from the burden of being the repository of knowledge
  5. Help a learner to be comfortable in exposing and challenging their vulnerability

Learning as a Facilitator Thought Point 5: Recognize that the eventual goal of facilitation is to enable a learner to facilitate

It is not just that our learning is transient, even our need to learn anything specific is. The only enduring aspect is our motivation to keep learning. For this to happen, it is important that we develop our own basis, synthesis, inferences, and the resulting conviction. YouTube has a piece of a pub scene from the 1997 Gus Van Sant movie “Good Will Hunting”. The dramatization of a poor unsuspecting undergraduate being taken to task by Will Hunting, an MIT janitor, is very entertaining. Will ridicules him for his lack of having original ideas and the victim accepts his limitation. Likely, any A+ ivy league student will have a developed sense of smartness to face such situations more deftly. However, as a facilitator, one needs to wonder whether we prepare the learner to answer such questions? Have we even ventured around making a learner reach such notions and outcomes of learning? This makes learning facilitation a more meaningful place to be.

The Frank Oppenheimer quote, from above, is a very apt way to look at your responsibility to the learner. Our aim is to help a learner to learn and the best way to learn is to help others learn. By logic, we should keep our end goal as enabling the learners to be facilitators themselves. This would be an apt way to not just appreciate the 5 thought points in this note, but to exemplify them in your facilitation style. Take the necessary steps to help a learner develop their own basis, synthesis, inferences, and the resulting conviction. Help them go beyond you and ensure that the learning doesn’t stop for anyone when the session, the course, or the program ends but endures and the learner learns the art of lifelong learning.

Action Implications: When you acknowledge, your role as an enabler who prepares a learner to facilitate you would:

  1. Help a learner go beyond the stated outcomes of a session
  2. Enable a learner to synthesise the session and develop their own original ideas
  3. Recognise a facilitator in every one around you
  4. Evaluate your own facilitation effectiveness and keep improving it
  5. Help a learner to be comfortable with the idea of lifelong learning

Take a closer look at the stages of the learning here, the facilitator essentially needs to bring some very basic thoughts to help you learn as a learner. This includes:

  1. Understand that Learning is a counter-intuitive à Going beyond obvious and looking at learning less intuitively
  2. Recognize that Learning is to change à Keeping an open mind to learning and accepting the change
  3. Recognize that Learning is caused by and causes Questions à Looking within your known space and searching for more questions while learning
  4. Recognize that when a facilitator doesn’t learn, no one else does à Accepting and enjoying “not knowing” or your vulnerabilities, and
  5. Recognize that the eventual goal of facilitation is to enable a learner to facilitate à Looking at learning as a lifelong process

Looking at the 5 Learning as a Facilitator Thought Points, you might have recognised a virtuous learning cycle that it creates. You start by recognising learning to be a counter-intuitive. You can only learn things you already know. And you do this by bringing a change, thus be open to giving up what you already know. This is learning to start with. Change is an outcome of recognising vulnerability and asking questions to address it. The more questions you ask the more you learn. When you learn, you can help others to learn. And the cycle repeats infinitely. I call this the “Spiral of learning as a facilitator.”

Taking the idea ahead, one could look at learning as a facilitator as a precursor to making learning a self-facilitated act. The modern era of digital learning rests heavily on the premise of self-learning – that is we can learn by ourselves as methodically as we learn by being taught by others. We see the reports on the promising potential of digital learning. There are parallel reports about its ineffectiveness and low completion rates. Is the failure of digital learning with the current limitations another point against the relevance of traditional regulated teaching, specifically for adults? As we proceed in the VUCA (Volatile, Uncertain, Complex and Ambiguous) world, limiting learning to such regulated and directed approach would be inadequate. Digital learning could ride the “spiral of learning as a facilitator” to find the next orbit of maturity more effectively. While we claim that we are moving at the speed of thought into “the age of learning”, we seem to be ignoring the idea of learning itself. Can we imagine an industrial age without understanding the idea of industrialization? Possibly we are guilty of doing this as the green activists keep pointing to the perils of industrialization. It is then prudent that we learn from such oversights in the past and ensure that when it comes to learning, we learn to learn before we begin to teach.