The Conditions Under Which We Best Learn
Sunday, July 29, 2007
Roland Barth presented the final session of our Leadership Institute and I thought he managed to tie up many threads in his inspired presentation.
In the course of a three hour session he managed to elicit responses from the audience which enabled him to identify the most positive conditions under which we learn. I’ll try to post later about the variety of presentation styles used in the course of the last ten days but Roland’s was a masterful display of someone who knows his business and knows how to engage an audience.
He started off by asking us to think of a time in our lives when we learned best.
The overwhelming features of our collective experiences were that we learn best:
- when we take a risk; and
- when there is a safety strap
Barth suggest that schools don’t take this approach - they play SAFE!!!
He argued that schools are information rich - but - experience poor.
He contrasted this with John Dewey’s assertion that:
We learn from our experience —if we reflect on our experience.
By collating all of the audiences reflctions upon situations when they learned best he separated them into idiosyncratic and generic conditions for learning.
The generic conditions for learning identified from the 150 people on our course were:
- Learn from mistakes
- Risk taking
- Urgency
- Self-reflction
- New experiences
- Emotional investment
- Support
- Fun/humour
- Curiosity
- Challenge
- Feeling respected
- Going into the unknown
- Given a reason for learning
He then asked us to think about how many of these conditions we meet in our schools - the answer was predictably few.
He summarised this by suggesting that learning in school can be:
Informative - (information)
or
Tranformative (changes you for ever)
He encouraged us to go for the GOLD standard which was -of course - the Transformative.
He slipped one little nugget in which I really liked but wonder how well it might go down in Scotland:
One district in the USA issued cards to all teachers and pupils which he described as a Permission to Learn card.
The card read as follows:
On one side : - this card entitles the holder to take one risk in their own learning
On the other side: - Today I took a risk - it didn’t go as well as I had planned but I learned that …………….?
The card does not give the holder the permission to place themselves or others at risk or danger.
Would it work in Scotland?????



