Rachel Burnham writes: Learning is more than consuming content; more than
consuming information. In our
information rich world, where there is an abundance of information and content wherever
we turn, it is easy to focus on consumption. It is easy to give the impression
that more is better.
It is easy to feel
that if only I read more books; kept on top of all my social media feeds; read
those journal articles and listened to just one more podcast – then I would be
up-to-date, then I would be meeting my own development needs, then I would be
role-modelling effective CPD for my colleagues. A counsel of perfection! Sometimes people share their challenging book
reading targets for the year (I’ve written about this before – ‘Read and Relish’)
or how they pack in listening to podcasts or audible books in every available
space in their lives. I am not going to
pretend to be immune to this. It can
feel like being on a information hamster wheel at times. Perhaps it is the equivalent for informal
learning of the content-dumping sometimes found and decried in formal learning?
But learning is more
than consuming yet more and more information.
How do we digest this information, critique it, contrast it with other
information, put it into our many contexts, integrate with our current
understanding and skills, challenge our thinking and behaviours – how do we
sense-make? With all our talk about the abundance of information, ease of
access and dangers of feeling overwhelmed, I wonder if we are under-valuing and
under-practising sense-making?
I spent some time
last year interviewing a number of professionals,
primarily from the fields of L&D and HR, about how they manage the
information they need to stay up-to-date in their work. One of the areas we discussed was this area
of sense-making. Here are some of the
approaches they used, plus some of my thinking based on my reading and doing in
this area:
A) Bricolage
& Curation
Bricolage is a very
evocative term that refers to the practice constructing or creating something
from a diverse range of other things. When
applied to sense-making, it emphasises linking information from different
sources together and looking at the relationships between these different
pieces to identify trends, patterns or create new insights and approaches. It
is something that Andrew Jacobs has written about on many occasions.
When curating
information or resources, we can use a range of different strategies to do
this, such as:
· Selecting
the very best or most relevant pieces and by doing this reducing the noise and
adding value for ourselves and others;
· Grouping information or resources to show the broader picture or pattern;
· Contrasting information – often there is more than one view on a topic, acknowledging this can deepen our understanding and enable us to be more nuanced in our thinking;
· Identifying sequences in information eg use of timelines of thought or sequences of activities.
· Grouping information or resources to show the broader picture or pattern;
· Contrasting information – often there is more than one view on a topic, acknowledging this can deepen our understanding and enable us to be more nuanced in our thinking;
· Identifying sequences in information eg use of timelines of thought or sequences of activities.
Each of these can
help us with sense-making.
B) Mapping
& drawing
Many people, even
those with very effective digital skills, find it helpful to map out ideas
using pen, pencil and paper. I, of
course, very often use Sketchnoting to do this.
A number of the
people I interviewed talked about using paper and pen to draw out ideas and the
relationships between them when thinking things through. Often it can be quicker to rough something
out on paper and it can be easy to play with different ways of visualising,
testing out approaches, adjusting, rubbing out and trying again. Diagrams can
be simple – lots of arrows and basic shapes or more complex.
Whilst the use of pen
and paper, doesn’t require drawing skills and pictures, these can allow for the
use of metaphors, which can bring in another dimension and stimulate further
thinking.
C) Blogging
& writing
Amongst my group of
interviewees, probably the key tool in sense-making that they identified was
writing. One commented that ‘To
know what I think, I need to write.
’ Writing can take many forms:
from handwritten notes, created to capture key information and aid recall;
through to writing for reflection, still for personal use; through to writing
for sharing either as a blog or for publication in an article or book.
Once you start writing to share publically, this
forces you to clarify your thinking and tests your commitment to what you
think. Clive Thompson in his book ‘Smarter
Than You Think’ writes:
‘Audiences clarify the mind even more. Bloggers frequently
tell me that they will get an idea for a blog post and sit down at the keyboard
in a state of excitement, ready to pour their words forth. But pretty soon they think about the fact
that someone is going to read this as
soon as it’s posted. And suddenly all
the weak points in their argument, their clichés and lazy, auto-fill thinking,
become painfully obvious.’ (Pg 52)
This is known the ‘audience effect’ and it means that
when you are setting out to communicate with someone else, you are forced to
think more precisely and with greater clarity.
So this has the advantage of encouraging more effective sense-making.
D) Conversation
Another effective aid to sense-making is conversation,
whether that is in person or on-line.
It could be as simple as talking through your ideas one to one over a
cup of tea, which can help you to clarify what it is you think, but also expose
you to other perspectives.
Online conversations can also help with this. One of the challenges though is that light
and shade can be harder to hold onto in an online conversation – trust and
listening are just as important as in a face to face conversation, but are
often harder to achieve. Some of these online conversations happen in real time
such as a Twitter Chat, but they can also take place asynchronously, which can
allow for a more reflective approach.
It is also possible to share online, particularly with
Twitter, snippets of insight and practice, which can test out your thinking and
gather feedback from others. This is
often referred to as the practice of ‘Working Out Loud’.
A variant on writing and conversation is to sharing
your thinking via a short video, which is also known as ‘vlogging’. It would be interesting to know whether the ‘audience
effect’ also impacts on the quality of thinking when using a video format.
E) Testing
out & Playing
For practical skills,
you can’t beat actually having a go at using those skills. Playing with, testing out, experimenting and
then reflecting on this, are all vital aspects of sense-making. Documenting your experiments is such a
valuable contribution to the collective understanding and effectiveness of our
profession, but like writing publicly, it can feel like a scary and exposing
thing to do.
Each of these 5 approaches involves reflection. And underpinning all of that, time and space
is essential for sense-making.
When planning this blog, I searched for a simile or
metaphor to capture the importance of this time and space for
sense-making. At first I was drawn to
the idea of pools of time for reflection.
But I have settled on the idea of woodland glades. In a forest, with
many, many trees close packed together, the dense canopy of leaves can mean
that little sunlight reaches the ground and under the trees is a rather sterile
environment. But if a space is cleared
and a woodland glade created, where the sunlight can reach through, then all
sorts of seeds will germinate and plants grow up and flourish. A much more diverse and richer environment is
created. This is what sense-making
needs.
Let’s make some woodland glades and let the learning
flourish.
Rachel Burnham
10 February 2019
Burnham L & D works
with individuals and organisations to help them learn and work more
effectively. As part of this I help
L&D professionals to be even more effective through updating their skills
and know-how. I have a particular
interest in curation and the use of digital technologies in learning. I frequently Sketchnote at events and offer
workshops in Sketchnoting.