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Advice to graduates: cultivate your network learning abilities

June 6, 2006 By Chris Corrigan Learning, Unschooling 2 Comments

It’s around this time of year when people all over North America are graduating from school and starting their new lives. If I were to offer one piece of advice it would come straight from this post about learning in networks.

We are still about control, not sharing. We are still about distribution, not aggregation. We are still about closed content rather than open. We are static, not fluid. The idea that each of our students can play a relevant, meaningful, important role in the context of these networks is still so foreign to the people who run schools. And yet, more and more, they are creating their own networks, sharing, aggregating, evolving to the disdain of the traditional model of schooling that is becoming more and more irrelevant.

The biggest problem is how few of our educators still cannot relate to this description. They are neither networks unto themselves or nodes of a larger system, and they understand little about what it means to be either in a world that is more globally interconnected. And our students are not only left without models of what it means to be networked, they also get relatively little content that is contextualized through the network. So network literacy, the functions of working in a distributed, collaborative environment…is an important aspect of learning and education that precious few of our students get a chance to practice. And it is only by practicing these skills, whether teachers or students, that they can truly be learned.

My advice would go something like this: forget everything school has taught you about what it means to learn. From now on you will grow and learn and acquire new skills and knowledge from the most unlikely places. Don’t look at the people at the front of the room for the answers, look at the four people sitting around you and engage them in a deep conversation. The answer lies there. Or if not the answer, the next question, and it is finding the next question that is going to keep you going for the next 70 years.

And never forget those four people. You will see them again. This is because contrary to what school tells you about questions and answers, the truth is that the world is an oracle waiting to be consulted. You must take time to frame the good questions and then pose them to the world and then you must wait to see what result you have made with those questions.

And for those of you who are starting to think about sending your kids to school, I have two pieces of advice. First, if you can help it, don’t. Unschool them instead. Second, if you can’t do that, ban homework from your house and give your kids opportunities to use that free time to learn in networks, pursuing whatever interests them in what ever way they can and don’t, I repeat, DON’T mark them on it. That is the literacy – channelling their passions into finding the teachers that can bring richness and purpose to their lives with no one worried about performance measures or how good they are. They will need this skill set and they aren’t going to get it anywhere else.

[tags]unschooling[/tags]

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Mapping dialogue

June 3, 2006 By Chris Corrigan Appreciative Inquiry, Art of Hosting, Collaboration, Conversation, Facilitation, Open Space, Practice, World Cafe

Many of the circles I travel in instersect in many intimate ways. People I meet here on the west coast of Canada months apart turn out to be co-authors of papers and books. Folks I hear about from others turn out to be partners in crome later on.

The Art of Hosting world is a little like that, touching as it does on many many different networks. And through these serendipitous connections, it turns out that I am personally acquainted with two of the three authors of a great little free e-book called Mapping Dialogue. I met Zaid Hassan last year as he was travelling through BC on business with Generon. Marianne Knuth, I haven’t met yet, but she is an amazing woman, a close friend of my friend Toke Moeller and we are hoping to have her join us for the Art of Hosting here in September.

So while I am relishing these connections, I want to put a strong plug in for this book on dialogue. It essentially suammarizes what we know and do with the Art of Hosting and is a great primer to using these processes and approaching this work no matter what context you find yourself in.

[tags]mapping dialogue, Toke Moeller, Zaid Hassan, Marianne Knuth, Art of Hosting[/tags]

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Refilling my prepaid fido account…not!

June 1, 2006 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized One Comment

I’m fond of saying that I’m the last consultant in the world without a cell phone.   While that is true for business, my partner and I have one that we use for personal purposes.   And because we use it so infrequently (mostly for emergencies or urban logistics when we’re in the big city) we have it hooked on to a prepaid plan from fido.

Now fido offers you a couple of ways to handle prepayment.   You can either buy vouchers or use a credit card.   A credit card is preferable for us.   So because we are running low on our initial minutes, we called the handy prepayment number to refill our prepaid account …or not.

This evening we have been stuck in voice mail jail trying to register to have our fido mobile phone account refilled by Visa.   It has taken quite a while and we still haven’t gotten any help.   Here’s what happens:

  1. Dial 611 (or *46 or any of the other numbers fido says to call…they all take you to the same robot.   She says her name is “Andrea.”   Nice.)
  2. Follow the robot’s directions patiently to register for instant prepayment, so that we can use our credit card to refill.   Optionally don’t be patient and just say “representative” into the phone.   It will take you to the same place anyway.
  3. One of two things will happen.   You might get an English speaking representative who will tell you politely that he can’t do this manually, and that you have to speak to the robot about it.   If this happens, the robot takes you through the same logic chain that delivers you into the lap of an English speaking representative, who will breezily deny that this reality even happened.   We had several very nice young people speak with us this evening, and we think we actually even witnessed a shift change down at the old call centre.
  4. Once in a while Andrea will not direct you to a friendly but useless English speaking representative, but instead will forward you to another robot who, in French, politely informs you that the French customer service office is now closed and will reopen at 8am.   She then terminates the call, leaving you flummoxed and with no recourse but to blog the whole experience.

So that’s it.   If anyone can help us figure out how to get credit card refilling authorized and then done, that would be nice.   If you fido guys are reading this, give us a call, but don’t mince your words, we only have two precious minutes remaining in our account!.   Your robot has the number.   Her name is Andrea.
In the meantime I guess we’re thinking about switching to Telus or something. The bottom line for fido: crap customer services trumps friendly robots.   The French twist on the whole thing was pretty funny though, so the evening’s entertainment was not a total loss.

[tags]fido, bad+customer+service, voice+mail, cell+phone, help![/tags]

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Art of Hosting Facilitator Training

June 1, 2006 By Chris Corrigan Appreciative Inquiry, Art of Hosting, Conversation, Facilitation, Leadership, Learning, Open Space, World Cafe

I have been working lately with friends and fellows Brenda Chaddock, Tennson Wolf and Teresa Posakony to co-create another Art of Hosting training. We will be gathering on Bowen Island here in British Columbia from September 24-28 in a practice retreat to deeply investigate these questions:

  • What could my leadership also be?
  • What if I would practice using collective intelligence and learning in my organisation and network?
  • What could strategic conversations also be if I host them with wisdom and courage?
  • How do I create authentic involvement that leads to real implementation?

The practice retreat is structured along the following principles:

  • Our learning will grow out of participant contributions and presence – we will support each other as co-learners
  • We will learn by observation, experience and practice, using interactive processes to build a safe and inspiring learning environment – we will explore Open Space Technology, Appreciative Inquiry, Circle Council, reflective practices, World Cafe, and other participatory methodologies
  • Taking a chance to explore – and experiment with – applying these tools to your own projects-in-progress will help you to apply your skills, as well as develop and continue a new practice that will last well beyond this training

And through a variety of processes and conversations, we will investigate:

  • Hosting conversations as a core leadership practice and competence for leading change
  • How the Art of Hosting is an organising pattern/culture that invites new ways of living and working
  • The conditions needed to create space for meaningful conversations
  • Specific interactive processes through which learning and creation can emerge
  • Sensing and shaping the conditions and timing for using particular methods and tools
  • How the practice of hosting can be applied to key strategic change projects in our lives and work

This is a powerful training, and we invite you to join us. For more information, or to register, visit the Art of Hosting page or contact me by email.

[tags]facilitation+training, art+of+hosting[/tags]

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Open Space and other facilitation resources

May 29, 2006 By Chris Corrigan Facilitation, Open Space

Having a weblog in addition to having a regular website means that there are two front doors to my online home.   There have been a lot of searches here lately for facilitation and Open Space resources, so I thought I would highlight the collections that I maintain through two pages here.

  • Open Space Technology resources
  • Facilitation resources

I hope you find these useful.   Let me know how they are for you.

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  • Art of Hosting November 12-14, 2025, with Caitlin Frost, Kelly Poirier and Kris Archie Vancouver, Canada
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