The Kolb Model: The relationship between learning and experience
David Kolb presents a model of experiential learning containing four components:
concrete experience, reflective observation, abstract conceptualization, and active
experimentation.
Concrete Experience
The first stage of Kolb’s Model starts with the individual’s concrete experience: an
event that triggers the learning cycle. While this is usually a specific experience, it
can also include reading, consulting with others or personal research.
When writing about concrete experiences that led to learning, it is helpful to ask
yourself the following questions:
• What did I do? Where? When? For how long? Why?
• What was my role (as opposed to the others involved) ?
• How deeply was I involved?
• What techniques, methods, procedures did I employ? Why did I choose the
ones I used?
• What were my goals and objectives? How did they influence my choices?
• What resources did I use?
• Can I get documentation to verify my experience?
Summarize what occurred rather than giving a narrative account of what
happened. In the second stage of writing about experiential learning, you step back from the
experience to observe and reflect upon it. This might involve noticing similarities or
differences, patterns or results of certain actions.
Ask yourself:
• What were the reasons behind my behavior? What was I thinking at the time?
• What trends and patterns are evident?
• What were the significant and unique components of the experience?
• What worked for me and what didn’t?
• How has my behavior changed as the result of what I learned from the
experience?
• What conclusions can I reach as the result of my reflection?
Abstract Conceptualization
Based on your observations and reflections about your experience, begin to
generalize and form abstract concepts about it. Ask:
• What are the underlying principles for each of my 3 key concepts?
• What existing rules, laws, theories, and/or concepts from other sources support
my understanding of my 3 key concepts?
• Can I articulate depth and breadth of understanding around each of my 3 key
concepts?
• What examples from my concrete experience demonstrate this understanding?
Active Experimentation
In the fourth stage of the model, you will apply your newly discovered principles,
testing the implications of the concepts in new situations.
Ask yourself:
• How does my knowledge apply to other situations?
• How will I implement (have I implemented) my new knowledge?
• Have I tested my ideas or those of others? If not, what might I predict will
happen? Why?
• Can I give specific examples of how I am using or would use the learning
around each of my 3 key concepts in a new setting?
The testing or experimentation in the fourth stage leads to another concrete
experience. You then make new observations and reflections and, based on them,
formulate or refine the principle and apply it to see if it holds true. Therefore, Kolb’s
Model might be better pictured as a spiral: the cycle repeats itself, becoming more
refined and sophisticated with each “turn.”
Coleman’s differences between classroom and experiential learning
Traditional Classroom Learning by doing
Steps:
Steps:
1. receiving information
2. understanding the general principles
3. identifying potential applications of the general principles
4. taking action in specific experiences
Approach :
Deductive arriving at a practical application from the general principle
Experiential Learning Information Assimilation Learning
1. taking action in specific experiences
2. analyzing the consequences of actions
3. understanding the general principle
4. applying the general principle in new
situations
Approach : Inductive developing a general concept from specific experiences
There are significant differences in how people learn in the traditional, information
assimilation mode and how they learn via experiences. One of the differences
concerns the individual’s grasp of the knowledge base of the field. The traditionally
educated have a greater breadth of the knowledge base and are familiar with many
concepts/theories of the area; however, their depth of application of these concepts
in “real life” is relatively shallow. The experientially educated, on the other hand,
have a deep understanding of how a particular concept is applied, but rarely do they
have a grasp on the other concepts of the field
Thursday, July 13, 2017
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
Unit 4.3 - Future Timeline
The findings of the studies suggest that there is less learning activity (in terms of education, training or self‐development activities) being undertaken by these participants than may be expected. While participants generally believe that they should take charge of their own learning and career development, they are less sure what actions to take. Signals from the organization are still an important prompt for learning for those in employment; for those outside the lack of support and specific reasons to learn leads to a lack of formal or structured learning activity and a tendency to rely on previously learned skills.
There is evidence from a variety of sources that employees often do not feel comfortable speaking to their bosses about organizational problems or issues that concern them. We show that on the types of issues that employees are reluctant to raise, and identify why employees sometimes decide to remain silent rather than voice their concerns. We interviewed 40 employees and found that most had been in situations where they were concerned about an issue but did not raise it to a supervisor. Silence spanned a range of organizational issues, with several of our respondents indicating that they did not feel comfortable speaking to those above them about any issues or concerns. The most frequently mentioned reason for remaining silent was the fear of being viewed or labeled negatively, and as a consequence, damaging valued relationships. From our data, we develop a model of how the perceived consequences of voice contribute to silence, and a model of how the social and relational implications of speaking up can take away employees’ ability to have influence within an organizational setting.
The nature of your previous formal learning.
According to contemporary learning theories, the discrepancy, or error, between the actual and predicted reward determines whether learning occurs when a stimulus is paired with a reward. The role of prediction errors is directly demonstrated by the observation that learning is blocked when the stimulus is paired with a fully predicted reward. By using this blocking procedure, we show that the responses of dopamine neurons to conditioned stimuli was governed differentially by the occurrence of reward prediction errors rather than stimulus–reward associations alone, as was the learning of behavioural reactions. Both behavioural and neuronal learning occurred predominantly when dopamine neurons registered a reward prediction error at the time of the reward. Our data indicate that the use of analytical tests derived from formal behavioural learning theory provides a powerful approach for studying the role of single neurons in learning.
Tuesday, July 4, 2017
Unit 2.3 - Value Equation
Unit 2.3 - Value Equation
Ability
knowledge
skils
talents
behavior
effort
time
Saturday, July 1, 2017
Blog Submission
My name is Valentin Gabriel
Cristea. I am a mathematics teacher at a High School of Targoviste . I am from
Romania. I am interested in participatory art to improve my knowledge about
poetry.
Sky
The sky is the place
where the words
become clouds
Participatory art is a term
that describes a form of art that directly engages the audience in the creative
process so that they become participants in the event. In
this respect, the artist is seen as a collaborator and a co-producer of the
situation (with the audience), and these situations can often have an unclear
beginning or end.
Participatory art has its origins in
the futurist and dada performances
of the early twentieth century, which were designed to provoke, scandalise and
agitate the public. In the late 1950s the artist Allan Kaprow devised
performances called happenings, in which he would coerce the audience into
participating in the experience. The French film-maker and writer Guy Debord,
founder of situationism,
also promoted a form of participatory art in that he wished to eliminate the
spectator’s position by devising industrial paintings: paintings created en
masse. The contemporary artist Marvin-Gaye
Chetwynd relies entirely on willing participants to create her
performances, as does the activist artist Tania Bruguera. In her
work Surplus Value,
participants were asked to wait in line and then randomly selected into those
who could enter the work and others who were submitted to lie detector tests,
in order to highlight the problems of immigration. Happenings were the forerunners
of performance art and
in turn emerged from the theatrical elements of dada and surrealism.
The name was first used by the American artist Allan Kaprow in the title of his
1959 work 18 Happenings
in 6 Parts which took place on six days, 4–10 October 1959 at
the Reuben Gallery, New York.
Happenings typically took place in an
environment or installation created
within the gallery and involved light, sound, slide projections and an element
of spectator participation. They proliferated through the 1960s but gave way to
performance art in which the focus was increasingly on the actions of the
artist. A detailed account of early happenings can be found in Michael Kirby’s 1965
book, Happenings.
Other notable creators of happenings
were Claes Oldenburg, Jim Dine, Red Grooms and
Robert Whitman. Jim Dine’s 1960 suite of prints The Crash relates to
the drawings that were props for his 1960 happening, The Car Crash.
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