Self-Directed Learning: Individualizing Instruction – We Still Do It Wrong! Roger Hiemstra

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Self-Directed Learning: Individualizing Instruction – We Still Do It Wrong! Roger Hiemstra Professor Emeritus Syracuse University ([email protected]) (www-distance.syr.edu)

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Self-Directed Learning: Individualizing Instruction – We Still Do It Wrong! Roger Hiemstra Professor Emeritus Syracuse University ( [email protected] ) ( www-distance.syr.edu ). I First Presented on This Topic in 1986 at the First SDL Symposium. I was younger Had more hair - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Self-Directed Learning: Individualizing Instruction – We Still Do It Wrong! Roger Hiemstra

Page 1: Self-Directed Learning:  Individualizing Instruction –  We Still Do It Wrong! Roger Hiemstra

Self-Directed Learning: Individualizing Instruction –

We Still Do It Wrong!

Roger HiemstraProfessor EmeritusSyracuse University

([email protected])(www-distance.syr.edu)

Page 2: Self-Directed Learning:  Individualizing Instruction –  We Still Do It Wrong! Roger Hiemstra

I First Presented on This Topic in 1986 at the First SDL Symposium

• I was younger

• Had more hair

• Tried to appeal

with my charm

• Fell on deaf ears?

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I Try Once Again Today!

Learners can be helped to take increasing responsibility for their own learning!!

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So Why 25 Symposia Later Am I Once Again Making This Plea?

• My observation that many instructors still use teacher directed techniques

• There has been much SDL research in the past three decades but are we applying it well with learners?

• To suggest that we must and can do a better job of applying what we know about SDL in our work as teachers

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What I Hope to Accomplish with This Presentation

• Describe how I developed my views on helping adults take increasing responsibility for their own learning

• Mention some of my and others’ related research for your later review

• Make suggestions on where we go from here and seek your feedback

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Started in Ice Age as Extension Agent Working w/ Farmers & Youth

That’s Me in the Middle

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Two Adult Educ. Graduate Degrees - Iowa State Univ. and

the Univ. of Michigan

Fate Intervened – I met Howard McClusky – an early leader in adult education and a masterful professor – he became my mentor and quickly convinced me to pursue the professoriate

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My Professorial Career Began in 1970, the University of Nebraska

Fate Stepped In Again – In 1972 I met Allen Tough and Malcolm Knowles – their work convinced me to change my teaching approaches and begin my own research in self-directed learning

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My Teaching Evolves

I began using learning contracts and giving more responsibility back to the learners, developing what I came to call individualizing the instructional process.

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My 1986 Presentation – The Individualized T-L Process

• Learners make many of their own decisions

• Use of learning contracts

• Focus on individual learner needs

• Learners taking on increasing responsibility for their own learning and corresponding evaluation

_________________

Hiemstra (1988); followed up with Hiemstra (1992)

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Some Instructional Roles

• Providing content resources

• Locating needed learning resources

• Helping maintain/enhance learner focus and motivation

• Providing encouragement, feedback, and positive critiques

• Stimulating critical thinking

• Stimulating self-evaluation

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What Did This Lead to For Me?

• Three related books (Hiemstra & Sisco, 1990; Brockett &

Hiemstra, 1991; Hiemstra & Brockett, 1994)

• Several related book chapters and journal articles

• Long term involvement with the SDL symposia and IJSDL

• Advisor for 30+ SDL dissertations

• Solidification of my Individualized Instructional teaching f2f and online

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Have We Progressed Much in 25 Years?

– Supportive research by such scholars as Boyer, Bulik, Coe, Guglielmino, Long, Maher, and several others

– However, my observation still is that “most” teachers of adults simply fall back on previous modeling and use teacher-directed techniques

– Am I just a voice in the wilderness crying “wolf?”

– I want you to challenge me and dialogue with me

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Where Do We Go From Here?

– Encourage more research on teaching in relation to SDL

– Encourage all teachers of adults to develop a personal statement of philosophy

– Encourage authors and presenters at this and future symposia to include teaching implications emanating from their SDL research

– Work with adult education professors to utilize individualizing instructional components

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What You Can Do!By Author Alan Kay:

“The best way to predict the future is to invent it!”

Let’s work together to help future learners take more responsibility for learning

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IT IS YOUR TURN!

Let’s dialogue about your ideas about my presentation and your experiences in instructing adults – we will start with my reactor and then I will appreciate your thoughts now and later!

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ReferencesBrockett, R. G., & Hiemstra, R. (1991). Self-direction in adult learning. New York:

Routledge. Retrieved January 31, 2011, from http://www-distance.syr.edu/ sdlindex.html.

Hiemstra, R. (1988). Self-directed learning: Individualizing instruction (pp. 99-124). In H. B. Long & Associates, Self-directed learning: Application & theory. Athens, GA: Department of Adult Education, University of Georgia.

Hiemstra, R. (1992). Individualizing the instructional process: What we have learned from two decades of research on self-direction in learning. In H. B. Long & Associates, Self-directed learning: Application and research (pp. 323-344). Norman, OK: Oklahoma Research Center for Continuing Professional and Higher Education, University of Oklahoma.

Hiemstra, R., & Brockett, R. G. (Eds.). (1994). Overcoming resistance to self-direction in adult learning, No. 64), San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Retrieved January 31, 2011, from http://www-distance.syr.edu/ndacesdindex.html.

Hiemstra, R. & Sisco, B. (1990). Individualizing instruction. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Retrieved January 31, 2011, from http://www-distance.syr.edu/ iiindex.html.