[NIFL-4EFF:1677] Re: "Terry Kinzel" <horsecp@televar.com>: RE: How is EFF being used in adult literacy?

From: Bonnie Fortini (bfortini@acad.umm.maine.edu)
Date: Tue Jun 12 2001 - 11:42:42 EDT


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From: Bonnie Fortini <bfortini@acad.umm.maine.edu>
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Subject: [NIFL-4EFF:1677] Re: "Terry Kinzel" <horsecp@televar.com>: RE: How is EFF being used in adult literacy?
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I keep getting the sense that people see EFF as a pro forma tool that is
to be implemented upon students by teachers and upon teachers by workshop
facilitators.  That's an understandable conclusion if a person's
introduction to EFF is from such a concentrated experience.  The piece
that might be of help in all of this is the history of the EFF process
which is summarized in the blue book but not included in any detail in
workshops where time is precious.  If there was a way to impart the sense
of discovery that the process involved it might help explain EFF and make
it less intimidating and more pertinent.

EFF has been called an iterative process which doesn't truly communicate
the amount of information that was gathered, sifted, and sent back to the
field.  What is also significant to note is that there were few, if any,
preconceptions as to what "answers" would come out of it all.  For many of
us it was the first time we were given the opportunity to truly research
an issue which implies that there might be a failure factor involved.  We
knew that we could learn from any failures so were able to forge ahead.
For those who are familiar with the current thinking on Chaos theory, that
given enough random events, patterns will emerge, that closely describes
the beginning of EFF.  Out of the whirlwind of discussions and the
torrents of information, we began to see bits and pieces crystallize.
Much care was taken to not force or prejudge anything.  Eventually things
fell into places where they made sense.  For example, those generative
skills were the ones that we found we were using in the process of
uncovering the generative skills.  So not only do they pertain to the role
maps, the adult students, the instructors, administrators, and programs,
but they pertain to the EFF process as well.  

Perhaps the thing to keep in mind is that the skills, the activities, the
framework, the role maps, the components of the standards, all of it, was
uncovered, discovered, distilled, identified, or validated from existing
examples, methodologies, exemplars, standards, and so on.  In the buzzword
of the day we "crosswalked" with everything that could be found.  

So, in a manner of speaking, EFF is a common thread to life in general,
and in that respect is hard to avoid, even without consciously trying to
connect to it.  The skills are things that people do anyway, and the
better they are at them the more chance they have for successfully
reaching their goals.

I have no idea if this rambling will be a help or a hinderance in the
discussion that has been going on.  I still encourage people to
"recognize" EFF in their own lives rather than attempt to "learn" EFF. If
I can help with the discussion further, I would be glad to do so, on or
off the listserve.

Good luck,
Bonnie

B. Fortini
Machais A&CE/CWCABEC
RR#1, Box 12-A
Machias, ME 04654



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