elearnspace. Connectivism: A Learning Theory for the Digital Age - 0 views
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how we communicate
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The organization and the individual are both learning organisms. Increased attention to knowledge management highlights the need for a theory that attempts to explain the link between individual and organizational learning.
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chaos states that the meaning exists – the learner's challenge is to recognize the patterns which appear to be hidden. Meaning-making and forming connections between specialized communities are important activities.
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Behaviorism and cognitivism view knowledge as external to the learner and the learning process as the act of internalizing knowledge
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“Experience has long been considered the best teacher of knowledge. Since we cannot experience everything, other people’s experiences, and hence other people, become the surrogate for knowledge.
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This analogy highlights a real challenge: “sensitive dependence on initial conditions” profoundly impacts what we learn and how we act based on our learning
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Learning, as a self-organizing process requires that the system (personal or organizational learning systems) “be informationally open, that is, for it to be able to classify its own interaction with an environment, it must be able to change its structure…” (p.4). Wiley and Edwards acknowledge the importance of self-organization as a learning process:
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Self-organization on a personal level is a micro-process of the larger self-organizing knowledge constructs created within corporate or institutional environments
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The capacity to form connections between sources of information, and thereby create useful information patterns, is required to learn in our knowledge economy.
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Connectivism is the integration of principles explored by chaos, network, and complexity and self-organization theories.
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Karen Stephenson’s “quantum theory of trust” which “explains not just how to recognize the collective cognitive capability of an organization, but how to cultivate and increase it”.
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This amplification of learning, knowledge and understanding through the extension of a personal network is the epitome of connectivism.
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When knowledge, however, is needed, but not known, the ability to plug into sources to meet the requirements becomes a vital skil