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Going forward, and as best I can, Iโ€™ll use the term โ€˜Connected Learningโ€™ to describe a knowledge ecosystem made up of formal, informal and social learning behaviours and modalities. Itโ€™s about time I (and perhaps you as well) retire the term Learning 2.0. There are a few reasons for this:
  • Learning will forever be part formal, part informal and part social (see this CLO Magazine article I wrote for more details)
  • Learning 2.0 implies there may be Learning 3.0 coming; learning canโ€™t be thought of or positioned as a series of iPhone versions (ie. iPhone 3, iPhone 4, etc.)
  • Learning is defined by both the behaviour and act of learning (how we approach it) as well as the modalities that shape it (where we learn)
    • The behaviour of learning will always start with a connection, be it with a person, a group of people or connecting with a topic, a thread, an idea or even a modality itself
    • Modalities involve a connection of sorts too, be it connecting with a classroom or a conference (formal), with a mentor, a book, a website (informal) or with a blog, a tweet or a discussion forum (social).
  • Learning (both the act and the various modalities) is truly symbolized by the theory and practice of connectivism. (see George Siemensโ€™ work entitled โ€œWhat is the unique idea in Connectivism?โ€, Eyal Sivan describing โ€œConnectivism as Learning Theoryโ€ and Stephen Downesโ€™ piece entitled โ€œLearning Networks and Connective Knowledgeโ€)
    • The problem for many in the corporate sector (and perhaps other sectors) is the term โ€˜connectivismโ€™ needs too much explaining (similar to Learning 2.0) but paying homage to the term by denoting it as โ€˜connected learningโ€™ may be more sensible let alone simpler. In summary, Connectivism = Connected Learning.
Therefore, I present to you โ€˜Connected Learningโ€™ โ€ฆ at least from a modality perspective:

If โ€˜Connected Learningโ€™ is part formal, part informal and part social, there will always be the act of โ€˜connectingโ€™ oneโ€™s self to people, content, systems, networks, etc. during the learning process itself โ€ฆ and it may occur through several mediums.

Formal: a self-contained & scheduled learning event, typically but not always tracked, providing a comprehensive and at times logical or sequential approach to a topic.

Informal: an opportunity without conventionalism, atypical to formal learning, providing guidance, expertise or acumen on the go.

Social: an exchange of ideas, knowledge or information typically characterized by friendly interaction through online services that provides supplemental understanding often via personal & professional networks.

โ€˜Connected Learningโ€™ leans heavily on Socratic Learning as well:
Socratic learning is based on the idea that human beings have faculties that can be awakened through questioning, exploration, collaboration and self or cross examination.
Based on our learning requirements (individual, team, organizational, etc.) we continuously โ€˜connectโ€™ the need that has to be filled to the learning modality, be it formal, informal or social. We have to question and explore which modality provides the appropriate amount of depth juxtaposed with the time in which we need the information or new knowledge. We might ditch one connected learning act or modality with another due to a recognized lack of depth or a timeline that has become too long to fulfill. We have to connect with others (collaborate) to decide how those learning needs can be filled and we are constantly self-examining our decision to correct if necessary. In summary, Learning 2.0 is a term Iโ€™m going to refrain from using going forward. Whatever we need to learn, it will always start with a connection. How we fill the need may be one singular modality, or it may be a combination of formal, informal and social means. The aforementioned modalities are also and ultimately connected to each other too. And those modalities? They are sure to expand over time as well.
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