|
|
Teaching ‘Credo’
I am very exited about experiential learning and believe I practise experiential teaching whenever I teach. I am convinced that cognitive learning, which is what is still practised in most educational institutions in the world, is highly inefficient, if the outcome of the teaching is to have learners with active knowledge (i.e. knowledge that can be applied, as opposed to passive knowledge, understood as knowledge that may be ‘there’, but is not readily available for practical, creative application). Instead of teaching cognitively, teachers need to support the learners in going through a social process of discovery, where the learners through interaction actively experience the application and the implications of the learnings, and/or a through process of active reflection on the topics (as opposed to passive ‘reception’ of information). Teaching should furthermore be akin to modelling, where intellectual skills, behaviours, beliefs and values are transferred from teacher to learner in a variety of ways, which help ensure that more than conscious, verbal information is transferred. There is so much to learn (and to teach) in this world, and I believe most of it has not been put into words (perhaps it cannot, and even if it could, it would not ensure learning). I am here referring to things such as “green fingers”, where usually the person, who has “green fingers”, is not capable of explaining what his/her skills consist of, but they are there and I believe they can be transferred through a (partly unconscious) modelling process. This way of teaching puts a lot of requirements on the teacher:
The ultimate purpose of education is, in my opinion, to increase well-being and happiness on this planet (not just for human beings, by the way) and I believe the following values are essential for achieving this: honesty, integrity, curiosity, open-mindedness, generosity and fun; above all, teaching and learning should be fun, otherwise I can see little reason for engaging in it. Kurt Andersen 2003 |
|
|
Copyright © 2002
Human Communications Centre
|