Leigh,
Indeed, “this IS a good learning experience.” It is also an interesting “facilitating” path (for me, at least) you have taken. Would you share with us whether you were consciously facilitating when you wrote that post? Or were you simply participating as a member of the community?
I was reflecting on our earlier discussion of the differences there may be in playing the roles of a ‘facilitator,’ a ‘teacher,’ and a ‘moderator.’ I suspect that there will be finer variations depending on which platform is being used, but when it comes to Discussion Groups/Forums, I think some differences can be found in the following:
Facilitator – makes it easy (through appropriate set-up, summary, integration of threads or even challenging questions/comments) for members to continue sharing their ideas, feelings, experiences and the like.
Moderator – monitors the way the members are sharing, exchanging and discussing issues – ready to step in when some members go out of bounds (in some cases may even exercise the task of deleting or editing posts that are not consistent with the goal of the group) and making appropriate comments to refocus the community towards its goals.
Teacher – implants learning points, highlights learning opportunities, presents relevant information to encourage members to pick up their own insights about what is being discussed as well as the process that the group is using in discussing them.
Yet, when I re-read your last post, I see all three being there. I also see all three components even in Nellie’s single-line post which states: “I think it may be more pleasant to review some netiquette guidelines when responding.“
I am now wondering whether we can truly differentiate facilitating from moderating and teaching. I quickly reviewed what the blogs had about this and I kinda like Kay Lewis’ conclusion: “I suggest the skills of a teacher, moderator and facilitator need not be mutually exclusive but overlap, at varying degrees, depending on the level, purpose of the lesson, the power of the questions you pose, the information you need ...”
Still learning…
Greg: Would you share with us whether you were consciously facilitating when you wrote that post?
Nellie: I find that a teacher may be a facilitator and moderator, but a facilitator and moderator do not act as teachers.
Nellie,
I am currently reading “Loving Kindness” by Sharon Salzberg and she tells of a story when once in certain city a drunken man tried to ‘attack’ them and how shaken and upset she was about the incident. After relating the incident to her meditation teacher, the latter told her: “Oh, Sharon, with all the lovingkindness in your hear, you should have taken your umbrella and hit that man over the head with it!” She continues, “sometimes we think that to develop an open heart, to be truly loving and compassionate, means that we need to be passive, to allow others to abuse us, to smile and let anyone do what they want with us. Yet this is not what is meant by compassion. Quite the contrary. Compassion is not at all weak. It is the strength that arises out of seeing the true nature of suffering in the world. Compassion allows us to bear witness to that suffering, whether it is in ourselves or others, without fear; it allows us to name injustice without hesitation, and to act strongly, with all the skill at our disposal.”
What powerful insight! I am also still trying to learn that.
Peace,
Greg B.
When we speak of language it's most interesting to note that the
pleasantries shared in one culture don't translate clearly into
another particularly across the web.
As Nancy White told me once, my Aussie colloquialisms are often lost
and seen as some only to aggravate others....that my humour and
sardonism generated out of frustration nothing more than a veiled
tantrum translated into some form of less-than-prosaic prose.
I think these related discussions are quite interesting. It is very difficult to tolerate differences in worldview or educational perspective (among other things), and I think that courses that promote giving voice to alternative perspectives can in turn open learners to a world beyond their own comfort levels. This is one of the features that attracts me to Mezirow’s Transformative Learning.
I do wonder, though, at what point does a discussion sink to a level where facts (though not their meanings) begin to get clouded. Perhaps I am musing myself into a new blog post about this . . .
-----
Jeffrey Keefer
jef...@silenceandvoice.com
Blog: http://silenceandvoice.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/JeffreyKeefer
Website: http://www.jeffreykeefer.com
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffreykeefer
From:
facilitating-on...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:facilitating-on...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Leigh
Blackall
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2008 6:49 PM
To: facilitating-on...@googlegroups.com
Subject: ::{{FOC}}:: Re: Course blog updated: I'm falling behind Week 7
Blog networks
In defense of Artie (or in defense of all that happens here), the controversy and drama being brought on through Artie's posts could be a catalyst for social bonding and a sense of community. I hope that we can all observe this as it unfolds - not change or restrain any of our postings and reactions, keep being who you are, but also observe. This IS a good learning experience in terms of facilitating online learning communities. Artie DOES bring valuable perspective and cultural difference to us, as does Alex and everyone else. Of course there is value in diversity - but observing and appreciating what that value REALLY is is the challenge I think...
Jeffery: I do wonder, though, at what point does a discussion sink to a level where facts (though not their meanings) begin to get clouded. Perhaps I am musing myself into a new blog post about this
As a qualitative methodology, we have to go into a deeper level. That’s when and where we start experiencing and making different meanings differently.
I just posted a blog post about all this . . .
I just posted something about this (before having read this, Leigh):
http://silenceandvoice.com/archives/2008/09/15/foc08-and-transformative-learning/
Mezirow was a tough read, as at first it seemed harmless and then I really got a dose of how disorienting and challenging learning can be.
--
Barbara Dieu
http://dekita.org
http://beespace.net