I pitched three topics to my thesis supervisor, and the winning one is certainly related to this goal:
“Using social software as a method of identifying and collaborating on learning goals. 43Things is the most obvious application of this idea, letting users define goals, many of which are goals requiring learning (‘I want to learn PHP and CSS’, ‘learn to cook great vegetarian meals’, ‘learn to record music on my laptop’, etc) and then connecting individuals to others who share that goal so they can collaborate on achieving the goal together - sharing resources, expert recommendations, online tutorials, links and comments to support each other. I think it’s a powerful model of self-directed, self-organizing collaborative learning.”
I’m just getting rolling on the process - I started by looking at some of the
top 100 goals tagged with “learning”, like “
Learn to play guitar”. Of the 2,000+ people who say they want to learn to play guitar, about 250 have written posts describing
what (and often
why) they want to learn,
reflecting on the process and
sharing helpful links. Of the 250 who have reported that they’ve already learned to play, 98% say it was worth doing and about 100 of them have written posts offering some combination of
advice,
support or
suggested resources to the ones who want to learn.
So
43Things can be viewed as a place where hundreds (thousands?) of asynchronous learning discussions are taking place without any clasrooms, tuition, administration, courses or instructors. Learners are guided only by their personal interests and motivation, forming informal learning communities that emerge out of shared goals. It also seems to function like a learning referral service, accessible to anyone on the web
- search for “Learn Ruby on Rails” on google, and the 43Things goal page comes up as the second result. Anyone can read the advice, follow links to resources, and “join” by adding the goal to their own list and contributing. It’s not a tutorial or advanced developer’s group, but seems to be a decent place to start the process of learning.
As far as methodology goes, I’m going to focus on content analysis. The artifacts of learning (and teaching, in the broadest sense) are just sitting here in public waiting to be analyzed, and I’m already seeing patterns in the ways people are using the site to learn. It shouldn’t be difficult to place the investigation within a framework of constructivist learning (or even emerging connectivism). My first task is to review related literature, which I’m finding more challenging than I had hoped. Any advice for articles, papers and resources (including people!) would be much appreciated - please
send me any suggestions related to informal learning communities, asynchronous learning discussion, and self-organizing groups online. Feel free to comment here or on
my blog as well.