Connectivism: a learning theory or a theory of how to learn?

I’m a big fan of connectivism (small ‘c’) in part because it is not a coherent theory of learning. Much more usefully, it is a situated set of principles, observations, perspectives and suggestions about how to learn, given the conditions that are made possible through the read-write web. It’s thus a theory (using the term a little loosely but, I think, accurately) of how to learn, given a particular set of conditions, not a theory of learning.  This is an important distinction that is most visibly explicit in its constructionist values – you have to create and share stuff, not just because that’s actually a good way to learn but, at least as importantly, because a learning network can have no value or content unless people actually share and create. It’s how you do it, not what it is. Similarly for the cultivation of your network – it’s a way of going about it, not a theory of learning. This is about how to use the network for learning, not learning itself.

Connectivism, as George Siemens formulated it, provides principles, models and techniques that, if applied, can help us to learn in a large-network context. George gave us a way of thinking about a related set of ideas that are relevant to structuring the learning process in a networked age. The process of learning in a connectivist account cannot be seen simply as something done in isolation nor just as something done through intentional group processes, but as a process of navigating and sense-making in a distributed complex adaptive system, in which that system, including its emergent as well as its designed properties, plays a first-class role in supporting, enabling and reifying learning (and the converse – mobs can be stupid as much as crowds can be wise). It is a context where more is different. George gave voice, shape and a name to a paradigm shift that was occurring and had been occurring for a decade or more before he started writing about it, including such things as communities of practicedistributed cognitionuses of complexity theoryheutagogyconstructionismknowledge reificationknowledge gardening and much much more. My own PhD, started in 1997, was about very much this kind of thing and I was a very long way from being the first in the field (in fact I was quite peeved when George came up with such a good name for what we were doing because I had played with a lot of ‘connect-‘ words in search of a broad defining term, finding all to be unoriginal, without hitting on ‘connectivism’. Darn your brilliance, George!). Such notions were, in their turn, based on earlier visionary thinking from people like Bateson, Hofstadter and Illich, who lacked the adjacent possible of the Internet to make their ideas a reality. These ideas were in the air.

The Landing: Connectivism: a learning theory or a theory of how to learn?.

How To Create SRT and WebVTT Closed Caption Files for Your Educational Videos

Caption files such as SRT and VTT provide a simple set of instructions, telling the video player to display text at a set timecode, for a specified duration. While it’s possible to create these files using a plain text editor, there are also several apps available that make the process easier.

How To Create SRT and WebVTT Closed Caption Files for Your Educational Videos — MediaCore.

Moving a Face-to-Face Course Online without Losing Student Engagement | Faculty Focus

The rapid growth and popularity of online learning is necessitating the creation of online courses that actively engage learners. Research has shown that effective integration of multimedia that is content relevant and pedagogically sound can be a valuable teaching tool for facilitating student learning Mandernach, 2009.

In the Master of Finance program at Penn State World Campus, one of the faculty who teaches a very successful, popular foundational course was tasked with authoring an online course. As instructional designers, we worked with the faculty and our design team, including our in-house multimedia staff, to replicate the course for an online adult student audience. The use of multimedia was a necessary component in re-creating the dynamic aspects of the course that made it such a successful face-to-face class.

via Moving a Face-to-Face Course Online without Losing Student Engagement | Faculty Focus.