By Susan Smith Nash, Ph.D.One of the most effective strategies
for achieving the desired outcomes in an online course, particularly
for adult and non-traditional students, involves what has come to be
known as "situated learning," which makes connections between
experience(s) and incorporates the use of an effective community of
practice.
What this means in concrete terms to the eLearner is that
a)
Learners establish "communities" in which they interact. These
communities are often found in the discussion board area, but can also
be established via blogs, instant messaging, podcasts, and list-serves.
b)
Students learn by and through interaction. What they learn is a
matter of how they are guided along various topics.
c) Shared goals and interests create "membership" in the community.
d)
When the community members make connections between the course content
and their background, interest, and experience, they are making a place
for discussion, and thus "situating" the learning. Thus,
"situated learning" means that there is a connection to a concrete
concept, task, or objective which relates to past experience,
interests, or knowledge. Individuals bring their perspectives to
the learning space and share.
Lave and Wenger (1991) discuss how
individuals learn from each other and from the "experts" in the context
of day-to-day lives. In their influential work, Situated
Learning, Lave and Wenger discuss how communities of practice made the
learning occur through a process of engagement.
What this means
to the eLearner is that there are certain types of assignments that
can tap into the energy of situated learning. Here are a few:
a) Writing assignments that allow you to connect your experience and interests to the course topics;
b) Discussion board threads that encourage you to share your experience(s) with other people;
c) Activities that encourage you to engage in social participation, via blog, podcast, or other route.
Learning
depends on relationships between people. Thus, it is very
important to let yourself become involved in discussions. If you feel
hesitancy, it is useful to step back a moment and determine precisely
why and where you are feeling a barrier. The discussion board
interaction will have definitely pay off if the topics relate to your
experience and interest. This relates to past experiences as well
as recent ones.
If you are thinking that this concept echoes the
basic notion of apprenticeship, you are completely correct. Lave
and Wenger also refer to the effectiveness of apprenticeship in
learning. They point out that apprenticeship has tended to be
neglected in formal, text-based learning that follows traditional
methods (Lave & Wenger, 1991, p. 29). For Lave and Wenger,
learning is most effective when the individuals are active participants
and they have choices in the following ways: a) the persons they
associate with; b) how they apply experience to learning activities.
Anna
Douglas (2000) discusses her experiences in developing effective
teaching practices in a course she taught on politics. She had an
opportunity to develop teaching materials as well as to structure
student activities. As she reflects on her own experiences as a
student and ponders the course in Marxism that made a huge impact on
her life, she wonders what the magic ingredients were. What made
the experience such a positive one? Drawing on the theories of L.
Vygotsky, she decides that one of the most effective approaches is to
incorporate "everyday concepts" (Vygotsky, 1987, p. 219). In
other words, the activities, ideas, and social interactions of one's
daily life or lived experience are vital, and that cognition is
internalized when she engages in activities that have a bearing or
relation to both the course concepts and one's activities (Douglas,
2000, p. 156).
Others have also observed how informal learning
communities emerge in the workplace and in school. For example,
Fuller and Fuller (2005) describe how older, experienced learners in
setting ranging from steel mills to metal finishing responded to
incentives to retrain and diversify. They found that the older
workers perceived that they had learned their jobs originally by an
apprenticeship model, and "on the job." However, they found that
in retraining, the apprenticeship model was not practical or even
viable. So, training and education took place off-site in
organized training sessions. Interestingly, Fuller and Fuller
determine that the main conditions of learning involved group work and
active discussions between team members about how the new procedures
related to old ones. In essence, this created what could be
considered to be "active scaffolding" (Nash's own term).
What
are the implications for eLearning? The clear finding is that
discussions and interactions with others in a productive, goal-centered
way are vital. They should encourage sharing and comparison of
past experience and should resonate with current issues.
Most importantly, the success that this approach engenders is very
motivating and meaningful to one's life.
References
Douglas,
A. (2000). Learning as participation in social practices:
Interpreting student perspectives on learning. Changing English.
7(2): 153-165.
Fuller, A. & Fuller, L. (2005).
Older and wiser?: Workplace learning from the perspective of
experienced employees. International Journal of Lifelong
Education. 24(1): 21-30.
Lave, J. & Wenger, E. (1991). Situated Learning. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Vygotsky,
L. (1987). The Collected Works of L. S. Vygostky:
Problems of General Psychology. ed. and trans. by R. W. Rieber
and S. Carton. NY: Plenum Press.