I don't really think there's any new way of learning, but we may need to experiment with its delivery.At first I nodded my head, but then I started to wonder...
Is there really no new way of learning?
This is similar to the question raised in Brain 2.0 and I'm not really sure where we landed in that discussion. At the time, I said:
I'm not claiming that the brain itself has changed, but instead what's changing is:And I still feel we are vastly underestimating what is happening around all of this.
- metacognition
- metamemory
- access to information
- access to other people
- access to smart systems
- Our Better Memory changes what we remember, how we remember, how we find and filter information (Information Radar), how we process information (Processing Link Pages).
- The Social Grid and Network Learning have changed when and how we Search which is actually quite a change from how many of us learned to acquire information when we were in college.
So, back to the original question - new way of learning?
Part of the answer of whether there are new ways of learning is how we interpret the "way of learning." What is learning? Some definitions:
- the cognitive process of acquiring skill or knowledge
- refers to the acquisition, and transfer to long-term memory, of experience, Information, and Knowledge, which may subsequently be used for solving problems, making decisions, and creating new knowledge
If I look at the result of learning which according to the above definitions:
- skill or knowledge
- subsequently be used for solving problems, making decisions, and creating new knowledge
- what we learn
- how we choose what needs to be committed to long term memory vs. electronic memory
- what we need from a future look up standpoint
- how we solve problems and make decisions
I believe the way I learn today is very different than the way I learned 10 years ago. And dramatically differently than I the way I learned 25 years ago.
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