[NIFL-LD:4566] Learning in 2004

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Date: Tue Jan 04 2005 - 15:05:31 EST


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Hello all,
 
As I wish you all a healthy and happy New Year, I want to share a post  
entitled Learning in 2004 from Jackie Taylor, Moderator of the NIFL-AALPD  
Discussion List .  Thanks to Jackie for allowing me to reprint and share  this with 
you.  In turn, we will welcome any thoughts you may have on  "things you've 
learned in 2004."
 
Thank you,
 
 
Rochelle Kenyon
Moderator, NIFL-Learning Disabilities Discussion  List
_RKenyon721@AOL.com_ (mailto:RKenyon721@AOL.com) 
 
 
 
 
I thought I'd share a few of the favorite things I've learned from you  about 
making meaning online when we lose the advantages of in-person  conversation. 
(I've included some quotes from one of my favorite authors,  Margaret 
Wheatley.)  What are some of the things you've learned in  2004?
 
======================================================
1.  Widen  the Circle of Participation
- New voices revive our energy, help us discover  solutions that may at first 
seem disparate.  They help surface our  assumptions.  If we want to enrich 
the 
dialogue, we should bring in  additional voices to the current.  As a list 
subscriber, I encourage  you to continue inviting others to participate that 
you believe have  something to contribute to the discussions at hand.
 
2.  Ask Questions
- "If we're willing to ask the questions, we can  begin to change things." 
This 
is always *your* place to ask the questions at  *any time* and make change in 
professional development.  What questions  do you have?
 
3.  Claim Time
- "Nobody will give you time to think about what you  want to change...You 
will 
have to claim it for yourself.  Noone will  give it to you because thinking 
is 
dangerous to the status quo.  Those  benefiting from the present system have 
no 
interest in new ideas." As the  world speeds up, don't sacrifice our 
wonderful, 
human capacity for  conversation.  Claim the time to contribute to the 
dialogue 
in our  field.
 
4.  Share Experiences
- "Conversation is the natural way humans  think together...Begin 
conversations 
about things that are important to you  and those near you." Use the list to 
discuss things important to you in  professional development. By sharing your 
rich experiences, you will likely  help someone in a similar situation.
 
5.  Listen and Listen Again
- "Listening creates relationship...Not  listening creates fragmentation, and 
fragmentation always causes more  suffering." How might we listen better to 
one 
another?
 
6.  Seek Clarification
"It's not differences that divide us.   It's our judgments about each other 
that do."  Did you ask what someone  else meant by what they wrote? If it's 
not 
clear to you, it may not be clear  to someone else either.
 
7.  Tolerate a little chaos
- "Messiness has its place...Meaningful  conversations depend on our 
willingness to forget about neat thoughts, clear  categories, narrow 
roles...Eventually, we will be surprised by how much we  share in common.  
The 
deeper order that unifies our experience will  show itself, but only if we 
allow chaos early on."  Expect list  dialogues to be a bit messy at times.
 
8.  Accept Challenge
- "Be willing to have your beliefs and ideas  challenged by what others 
think."
Respectful unearthing of assumptions can  help us grow as individuals and as 
a 
community.
 
9.  Make Change
- "We create what we want rather than just accept  what is." What do we want 
for the field of professional development and  adult literacy, and how can we 
better use this list to create that?
 
10.  Work Together
- "Conversation is the way we discover how to  transform our world, together."
Thank you to all who have raised thoughtful  questions, and for sharing from 
your practical experiences.  I think  the most important thing I've learned 
from you is that through discussion,  we can discover what we want to do 
about 
the things that matter most. I look  forward to what the coming year has to 
offer.
 
Best wishes for 2005,
 
Jackie
 
Jackie Taylor
List Moderator
NIFL-AALPD
_jataylor@utk.edu_ (mailto:jataylor@utk.edu) 



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