What is the Scope of our Responsibility as Learning Professionals?
This question comes from several recent experiences. One was a Chief Learning Officer panel discussion where it seemed that supporting informal learning or communities of practice was not something they were considering. There was also discussion on my blog around the fact that in corporations there is a limit to what we can do as a training organization (see Corporate Learning Long Tail and Attention Crisis and Long Tail Learning - Size and Shape). All of this makes me wonder:
Karl and I feel this is an important question for all of us to think about and as a community to begin to address.
- Do educational institutions and corporate learning & development departments have responsibility for supporting Long Tail Learning? Do they have responsibility for learning beyond what can be delivered through instruction? If so, what is their responsibility? Where is the edge of responsibility?
- Similarly, does the instructor have a responsibility to help students make sense of or deal with content he or she did not teach the students? In other words, if a student finds information on the Internet or some other place, how much time and attention should the instructor allow for the discussion of such content? Should it be discussed at all if it is non-conventional or generally thought of as not credible or contradicts the instructor? Who determines credible research? Is all non-referred research questionable?
How to Respond:
Option 1 - Simply put your thoughts in a comment
Option 2 -
Step 1 - Post in your blog (please link to this post).
Step 2 - Put a comment in this blog with an HTML ready link that I can simply copy and paste (an HTML anchor tag). I will only copy and past, thus, I would also recommend you include your NAME immediately before your link. So, it should look like:
Tony Karrer - Safety Training Design
or you could also include your blog name with something like:
Tony Karrer - Safety Training Design : eLearning Technology
Posts So Far:
- Karyn Romeis (Karyn's erratic learning journey) - The Big Question for March: Scope of Learning Responsibility
- Clive Shepherd - The big question: What is the scope of our respons...
- Note: Both Karyn and Clive have helped crystallize aspects of the key questions and issues, but my guess is that there is going to be some disagreement with nuances of what they are putting forward. For example, I somewhat take issue with Clive's bottom line:
The learning professional can never be 'responsible' for anyone's learning, but they help to create an environment in which learning takes place in every context.
- Learnlets - Scope of Responsibility.
- Bill Brantley - Design of Knowledge: How Responsible Are We For Learning
- Jacob McNulty - Scope it Out
- Learning Revolution: Responsible learning
- Taruna Goel : The Role and Responsibilities of Learning Professionals
- Ignatia - Scope of Learning Responsibility: not my concern!
- Tony Karrer - Learning Responsibility
- Bill Brantley - More Thoughts on the Long Tail of Learning
- Jay Cross - When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.
- Stephen Lahanas - The Learning Enterprise is Everyone's Responsbility
- Karl Kapp - Kapp Notes: Who's Responsible for This?
- Mick Leyden - Professional Responsibility???
- Tony Karrer - Learning Objectives, Performance Objectives and Business Needs
- Maria Hlas - Who's Job is it Anyway?
- Nicola - quick thoughts
- Catherine Lombardozzi - The Learning Leader's Responsibility at
- Tony O'Driscoll
- Priya Thiagarajan, Chicken Soup for the Mind
- Geetha Krishnan Scope . . . Responsibility . . . Learning Professionals
- Michael Hanley. Learning Professionals: the Economists of Knowledge
- Limits of Responsibility : Caddickisms
Stephen Downes was nice enough to link to this post. His comments may be important to the discussion, but I honestly am not sure I understand them fully.
ReplyDeleteIn his post, he said:
Scope of Learning Responsibility The March 'Big Question' is, "What is the scope of our responsibility as learning professionals?" One day I need to write at greater length on the subject of 'responsibilities'. Because many people suppose that they can impose 'responsibilities' on other people by virtue of their citizenship or their profession or whatever. I don't agree with this. These things that are imposed ought more properly to be called 'duties' - and the logic of duties is narrow and closely defined. One might read Kant or Ross on duties, for example. Otherwise, the only 'responsibilities' we can be held to account for are those that we freely enter into. I don't accept the dialogue of 'responsibility' - it is a substitution of obedience for freedom, without the ground of reflection or reason. Tony Karrer, The Learning Circuits Blog, March 3, 2008.
----
I responded with:
I'm not sure I get your comments here. I think I understand your demarcation between responsibility (freely enter into) and duty (put upon us). In this case, learning responsibility is what we choose to engage with? Do we have responsibility (do we engage) with things that fall outside the narrow stuff we can handle in our current publisher model? Or should we enter into how we can handle stuff outside of that scope?
I'm not sure that there is a duty here? Maybe there should be? But that's almost another level of question.
My rather scrambled 2p worth can be found here:
ReplyDeleteKaryn Romeis (Karyn's erratic learning journey) - The Big Question for March: Scope of Learning Responsibility
Clive Shepherd http://clive-shepherd.blogspot.com/2008/03/big-question-what-is-scope-of-our.html
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI've a response at my Learnlets - Scope of Responsibility.
ReplyDeleteBill Brantley - Design of Knowledge: How Responsible Are We For Learning - http://blog.designofknowledge.com/?p=143
ReplyDeleteJacob McNulty - Scope it Out
ReplyDeleteLearning Revolution: Responsible learning
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteTaruna Goel : My views and response here -
ReplyDeleteThe Role and Responsibilities of Learning Professionals
Ignatia - Scope of Learning Responsibility: not my concern!
ReplyDeletegreat Big Question, it started me thinking. Thanks.
Bill Brantley - More Thoughts on the Long Tail of Learning
ReplyDeleteStephen Lahanas - The Learning Enterprise is Everyone's Responsbility
ReplyDeleteKarl Kapp
ReplyDeleteKapp Notes: Who's Responsible for This?
Mick Leyden -
ReplyDeleteProfessional Responsibility???
Maria Hlas - Who's Job is it Anyway?
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeletesome quick thoughts
ReplyDeleteShaun - I can't seem to see your blog - something about requiring permission. We'll only put in blogs that are open to public consumption.
ReplyDeleteLet's try this again...
ReplyDeleteShaun Bala - irresponsible
Catherine Lombardozzi - The Learning Leader's Responsibility at http://learningjournal.wordpress.com/2008/03/16/learning-environment-design-the-learning-leaders-responsibility/
ReplyDeleteTony and Karl, thanks for this question. I got into a rant on it over on my blog you can read it here: http://wadatripp.wordpress.com/2008/03/17/thoughts-ok-rant-on-this-months-big-question/
ReplyDeleteI hear both Stephen and Clive on the notion of responsibility. But I did not get hung up in semantics. My own position is we have become too insular and if we focused on learners as clients as opposed to captives, we would help ourselves and our profession out a lot.
Here's a response from Priya Thiagarajan, one of our employees.
ReplyDeleteChicken Soup for the Mind.
My half-a-2-cent worth here.
ReplyDeleteScope . . . Responsibility . . . Learning Professionals
My response to the question is here:
ReplyDeletePriya Thiagarajan - http://blog.tatainteractive.com/2008/03/chicken-soup-fo.html#more
Michael Hanley. Learning Professionals: the Economists of Knowledge http://elearningcurve.blogspot.com/2008/03/lcbbq-long-tail-8020-rule-and-role-of.html
ReplyDeleteLimits of Responsibility : Caddickisms
ReplyDeleteWell, it rambles, but I'm too lazy to edit it... :)
Your post have put me into thinking mode.
ReplyDelete