Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Experiential Learning

It is my direct experience throughout my lifetime that the most important things you will ever learn are all through experiential learning. So, to facilitate useful learning that will help you survive as a human and as a soul I looked it up at Wikipedia. Here it is:

Experiential learning - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experiential_learning
Experiential learning is the process of making meaning from direct experience, i.e., "learning from experience". The experience can be staged or left open.

Experiential learning

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Experiential learning is the process of making meaning from direct experience, i.e., "learning from experience".[1]
The experience can be staged or left open. Aristotle once said, "For the things we have to learn before we can do them, we learn by doing them".[2] David A. Kolb helped to popularize the idea of experiential learning drawing heavily on the work of John Dewey, Kurt Lewin, and Jean Piaget. His work on experiential learning has contributed greatly to expanding the philosophy of experiential education.

Contents

Overview

Experiential learning is learning through reflection on doing, which is often contrasted with rote or didactic learning. Experiential learning is related to, but not synonymous with, experiential education, action learning, adventure learning, free choice learning, cooperative learning, and service learning. While there are relationships and connections between all these theories of education, importantly they are also separate terms with separate meanings.[1]
Experiential learning focuses on the learning process for the individual. It is often used synonymously with the phrase experiential education, however, while experiential learning considers the individual learning process, experiential education should be considered a broader philosophy of education. As such, it is concerned with issues such as the relationship of teacher and student, as well as broader issues of educational structure and objectives.[1] An example of experiential learning is going to the zoo and learning through observation and interaction with the zoo environment, as opposed to reading about animals from a book. Thus, one makes discoveries and experiments with knowledge firsthand, instead of hearing or reading about others' experiences. In business school, internship, and job-shadowing opportunities in a student’s field of interest are elevated as examples of valuable experiential learning which contribute significantly to the student’s overall understanding of the real-time environment.[3]
A third example of experiential learning is learning how to ride a bike,[4] a process which can illustrate the widely known four-step experiential learning model (ELM) as purported by Kolb[5] and outlined in Figure 1 below. Following this example, in the "concrete experience" stage, the learner physically experiences the bike in the "here-and-now".[6] This experience forms "the basis for observation and reflection" and he or she has the opportunity to consider what is working or failing (reflective observation), and think about ways to improve on the next attempt made at riding it (abstract conceptualization). Every new attempt to ride is informed by a cyclical pattern of previous experience, thought and reflection (active experimentation).[6]
Figure 1 – David Kolb’s Experiential Learning Model (ELM) [7]

Concrete Experience
Active Experimentation


Reflective Observation

Abstract Conceptualization
Experiential learning can exist without a teacher and relates solely to the meaning making process of the individual's direct experience. However, though the gaining of knowledge is an inherent process that occurs naturally, for a genuine learning experience to occur, there must exist certain elements.[1] According to David A. Kolb, an American educational theorist, knowledge is continuously gained through both personal and environmental experiences.[8] He states that in order to gain genuine knowledge from an experience, certain abilities are required:
  • The learner must be willing to be actively involved in the experience;
  • The learner must be able to reflect on the experience;
  • The learner must possess and use analytical skills to conceptualize the experience; and
  • The learner must possess decision making and problem solving skills in order to use the new ideas gained from the experience.

Implementation

Experiential activities are among the most powerful teaching and learning tools available.[9] Experiential learning requires self-initiative, an "intention to learn" and an "active phase of learning".[10] Kolb's cycle of experiential learning can be used as a framework for considering the different stages involved.[11] Jennifer A. Moon has elaborated on this cycle to argue that experiential learning is most effective when it involves: 1) a "reflective learning phase" 2) a phase of learning resulting from the actions inherent to experiential learning, and 3) "a further phase of learning from feedback".[10] This process of learning can result in "changes in judgment, feeling or skills" for the individual[12] and can provide direction for the "making of judgments as a guide to choice and action".[13]
Most educators understand the important role experience plays in the learning process. The role of emotion and feelings in learning from experience has been recognised as an important part of experiential learning.[10] While those factors may improve the likelihood of experiential learning occurring, it can occur without them. Rather, what is vital in experiential learning is that the individual is encouraged to directly involve themselves in the experience, and then to reflect on their experiences using analytic skills, in order that they gain a better understanding of the new knowledge and retain the information for a longer time.
Reflection is a crucial part of the experiential learning process, and like experiential learning itself, it can be facilitated or independent. Dewey wrote that "successive portions of reflective thought grow out of one another and support one another", creating a scaffold for further learning, and allowing for further experiences and reflection.[14] This reinforces the fact that experiential learning and reflective learning are iterative processes, and the learning builds and develops with further reflection and experience. Facilitation of experiential learning and reflection is challenging, but "a skilled facilitator, asking the right questions and guiding reflective conversation before, during, and after an experience, can help open a gateway to powerful new thinking and learning".[15] Jacobson and Ruddy, building on Kolb's four-stage Experiential Learning Model[6] and Pfeiffer and Jones's five stage Experiential Learning Cycle,[16] took these theoretical frameworks and created a simple, practical questioning model for facilitators to use in promoting critical reflection in experiential learning. Their "5 Questions" model is as follows:[15]
  • Did you notice...?
  • Why did that happen?
  • Does that happen in life?
  • Why does that happen?
  • How can you use that?
These questions are posed by the facilitator after an experience, and gradually lead the group towards a critical reflection on their experience, and an understanding of how they can apply the learning to their own life.[15] Although the questions are simple, they allow a relatively inexperienced facilitator to apply the theories of Kolb, Pfeiffer, and Jones, and deepen the learning of the group.
While it is the learner's experience that is most important to the learning process, it is also important not to forget the wealth of experience a good facilitator also brings to the situation. However, while a "facilitator", traditionally called a "teacher", may improve the likelihood of experiential learning occurring, a "facilitator" is not essential to experiential learning. Rather, the mechanism of experiential learning is the learner's reflection on experiences using analytic skills. This can occur without the presence of a facilitator, meaning that experiential learning is not defined by the presence of a facilitator. Yet, by considering experiential learning in developing course or program content, it provides an opportunity to develop a framework for adapting varying teaching/learning techniques into the classroom.[17]

Experiential learning in schools

  • Think Global School is a four-year traveling high school that holds classes in a new country each term. Students engage in experiential learning through activities such as workshops, cultural exchanges, museum tours, and nature expeditions.
  • The Dawson School in Boulder, Colorado, devotes two weeks of each school year to experiential learning, with students visiting surrounding states to engage in community service, visit museums and scientific institutions, and engage in activities such as mountain biking, backpacking, and canoeing.

Experiential learning in business education

As higher education continues to adapt to new expectations from students, experiential learning in business and accounting programs has become more important. For example, Clark & White (2010) point out that "a quality university business education program must include an experiential learning component".[18] With reference to this study, employers note that graduating students need to build skills in “professionalism” – which can be taught via experiential learning. Students also value this learning as much as industry.
Learning styles also impact business education in the classroom. Kolb transposes four learning styles, Diverger, Assimilator, Accommodator and Converger, atop the Experiential Learning Model, using the four experiential learning stages to carve out "four quadrants", one for each learning style. An individual’s dominant learning style can be identified by taking Kolb’s Learning Style Inventory (LSI). Robert Loo (2002) undertook a meta-analysis of 8 studies which revealed that Kolb’s learning styles were not equally distributed among business majors in the sample.[19] More specifically, results indicated that there appears to be a high proportion of assimilators and a lower proportion of accommodators than expected for business majors. Not surprisingly, within the accounting sub-sample there was a higher proportion of convergers and a lower proportion of accommodators. Similarly, in the finance sub-sample, a higher proportion of assimilators and lower proportion of divergers was apparent. Within the marketing sub-sample there was an equal distribution of styles. This would provide some evidence to suggest that while it is useful for educators to be aware of common learning styles within business and accounting programs, they should be encouraging students to use all four learning styles appropriately and students should use a wide range of learning methods.[19]

Comparisons

Experiential learning is most easily compared with academic learning, the process of acquiring information through the study of a subject without the necessity for direct experience. While the dimensions of experiential learning are analysis, initiative, and immersion, the dimensions of academic learning are constructive learning and reproductive learning.[20] Though both methods aim at instilling new knowledge in the learner, academic learning does so through more abstract, classroom-based techniques, whereas experiential learning actively involves the learner in a concrete experience.

See also

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References

  1. ^ a b c d Itin, C. M. (1999). Reasserting the Philosophy of Experiential Education as a Vehicle for Change in the 21st Century. The Journal of Experiential Education 22(2), 91-98.
  2. ^ Bynum, W. F. and Porter, R. (eds) (2005) Oxford Dictionary of Scientific Quotations. Oxford University Press. 21:9.
  3. ^ McCarthy, P. R., & McCarthy, H. M. (2006). When Case Studies Are Not Enough: Integrating Experiential Learning Into Business Curricula. Journal Of Education For Business, 81(4), 201-204.
  4. ^ Kraft, R. G. (1994).Bike riding and the art of learning.In L. B. Barnes, C. Roland Christensen, & A. J. Hansen (Eds.), Teaching and the case method.Boston: Harvard Business School Press.
  5. ^ Loo, R. (2002). A Meta-Analytic Examination of Kolb's Learning Style Preferences Among Business Majors. Journal of Education for Business, 77:5, 252-256
  6. ^ a b c Kolb, D. (1984). Experiential Learning: experience as the source of learning and development. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. p. 21
  7. ^ http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/gradschool/training/resources/teaching/theories/kolb Retrieved October 28, 2012.
  8. ^ Merriam, S. B., Caffarella, R. S., & Baumgartner, L. M. (2007). Learning in adulthood: a comprehensive guide. San Francisco: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
  9. ^ McCarthy, P. R., & McCarthy, H. M. (2006). When Case Studies Are Not Enough: Integrating Experiential Learning Into Business Curricula. Journal Of Education For Business, 81(4), 201-204.
  10. ^ a b c Moon, J. (2004). A Handbook of Reflective and Experiential Learning:Theory and Practice. London: Routledge Falmer. p. 126.
  11. ^ Kolb, D (1984). Experiential Learning as the Science of Learning and Development. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
  12. ^ Chickering, A (1977). Experience and Learning. New York: Change Magazine Press. p. 63.
  13. ^ Hutton, M. (1980). Learning from action: a conceptual framework, in S. Warner Weil and M. McGill (eds) Making Sense of Experiential Learning. Milton Keynes: SRHE/Open University Press. pp. 50–9, p.51.
  14. ^ Kompf, M., & Bond, R. (2001). Critical reflection in adult education. In T. Barer-Stein & M. Kompf (Eds.), The craft of teaching adults (p. 55). Toronto, ON: Irwin.
  15. ^ a b c Jacobson, M. & Ruddy, M. (2004) Open to outcome (p. 2). Oklahoma City, OK: Wood 'N' Barnes.
  16. ^ Pfeiffer, W. & Jones, J. E. (1975). A Handbook of Structured Experiences for Human Relations Training. La Jolla, California: University Associates.
  17. ^ Rodrigues, C. A. (2004). The importance level of ten teaching/learning techniques as rated by university business students and instructors. Journal Of Management Development, 23(2), 169-182.
  18. ^ Clark, J., & White, G. (2010). "Experiential Learning: A Definitive Edge In The Job Market". American Journal Of Business Education, 3(2), 115-118.
  19. ^ a b Loo, R. (2002). "A Meta-Analytic Examination of Kolb's Learning Style Preferences Among Business Majors". Journal of Education for Business, 77:5, 252-256
  20. ^ Stavenga de Jong, J. A., Wierstra, R. F. A. and Hermanussen, J. (2006) "An exploration of the relationship between academic and experiential learning approaches in vocational education", British Journal of Educational Psychology. 76;1. pp. 155-169.
This page was last modified on 28 February 2013 at 05:27.
end quote from:
Wikipedia under the heading "Experiential Learning".

repeat quote from above:
An example of experiential learning is going to the zoo and learning through observation and interaction with the zoo environment, as opposed to reading about animals from a book. Thus, one makes discoveries and experiments with knowledge firsthand, instead of hearing or reading about others' experiences. In business school, internship, and job-shadowing opportunities in a student’s field of interest are elevated as examples of valuable experiential learning which contribute significantly to the student’s overall understanding of the real-time environment.[3]
A third example of experiential learning is learning how to ride a bike,[4] a process which can illustrate the widely known four-step experiential learning model (ELM) as purported by Kolb[5] and outlined in Figure 1 below. Following this example, in the "concrete experience" stage, the learner physically experiences the bike in the "here-and-now".[6] This experience forms "the basis for observation and reflection" and he or she has the opportunity to consider what is working or failing (reflective observation), and think about ways to improve on the next attempt made at riding it (abstract conceptualization). Every new attempt to ride is informed by a cyclical pattern of previous experience, thought and reflection (active experimentation).[6]
end repeat quote from above.

I really like the example of learning to ride a bike. In my own life riding a bike at age 5 introduced me to a world (to me) of almost complete freedom. In 1953 it was relatively safe to let me ride my 24 inch bike through suburbia in El Cajon, California. I needed a block of wood to get on the bike but I was also big for my age and succeeded. I rode and followed my friend Danny Barsocks who was also 5 years old around the Suburb of El Cajon. One day I followed him over a 3 foot high mini-cliff of dirt and crashed in the street and skinned off all my right eyebrow and eyelashes on the pavement. Luckily, they both grew back without a scar. Later I was given a jackknife by my father and tried to see how sharp it was on my right thumb. I still have the scar across my right thumbprint. But, in some ways I became a little man on my bicycle and with my bicycle that I could always ride away from any parental baloney and into my own world of freedom whenever I wanted to after kindergarten with my friend on his bike. We also watched Superman on his black and white TV because my family didn't buy one until 1954. It was still 1953 in El Cajon then. But riding a bike early and even cutting my thumbprint and watching my mother put a butterfly bandage on my thumb to close the wound so it could heal made me feel free and alive and a man and in control of my life on my bicycle traveling around and seeing the world. By the time I was 8 I was riding with my friends up to 5 miles or more away in Glendale to movies at the Glendale Theater, The Alex Theater and I think it was the California Theater there on Brand Blvd. in Glendale, California. So, for me personal independence and experiential learning started in earnest for me at age 5 in El Cajon.

Later in rereading some of this I found the following repeat quote quite helpful:
Begin partial repeat quote:
Figure 1 – David Kolb’s Experiential Learning Model (ELM) [7]


Concrete Experience
Active Experimentation


Reflective Observation

Abstract Conceptualization
Experiential learning can exist without a teacher and relates solely to the meaning making process of the individual's direct experience. However, though the gaining of knowledge is an inherent process that occurs naturally, for a genuine learning experience to occur, there must exist certain elements.[1] According to David A. Kolb, an American educational theorist, knowledge is continuously gained through both personal and environmental experiences.[8] He states that in order to gain genuine knowledge from an experience, certain abilities are required:
  • The learner must be willing to be actively involved in the experience;
  • The learner must be able to reflect on the experience;
  • The learner must possess and use analytical skills to conceptualize the experience; and
  • The learner must possess decision making and problem solving skills in order to use the new ideas gained from the experience.

  end repeat quote from wikipedia.

  
  

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