Table of Contents - Field Manual for a Learning Historian

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS vii

1. INTRODUCTION TO LEARNING HISTORY THEORY AND PRACTICE 1 - 1

WHAT IS A LEARNING HISTORY? 1

THE VALUE OF A LEARNING HISTORY 5

ANATOMY OF A LEARNING HISTORY PROJECT 9

CREATING "REFLECTIONABLE KNOWLEDGE" 12

BASIC PRINCIPLES OF LEARNING HISTORY WORK 13

WHAT IS, AND IS NOT, A LEARNING HISTORY 17

DOES A LEARNING HISTORY QUALIFY AS ASSESSMENT? MEASUREMENT? AND/OR EVALUATION? 22

INFLUENCES ON LEARNING HISTORY WORK 25

THE BACKGROUND OF THIS FIELD MANUAL 26

2. THE NATURE OF ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING: CONTEXT FOR LEARNING HISTORIES 2 - 1

AN INFRASTRUCTURE FOR LEARNING 1

AN OVERVIEW OF ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING THEORY 2

LEARNING IMPLICATIONS FOR THE PILOT PROJECT UNDER EVALUATION 4

LEARNING HISTORIES FOR "ON-LEARNING" EPISODES 7

OPERATING AS ACTION RESEARCHERS 9

3. CREATIVE IMPERATIVES FOR LEARNING HISTORY WORK 3 - 1

THE RESEARCH IMPERATIVE: RIGOR AND INTEGRITY 2

THE MYTHIC IMPERATIVE: GETTING THE PURE ÏSTORYÓ 4

THE PRAGMATIC IMPERATIVE: GIVING THE AUDIENCE WHAT THEY NEED TO

MOVE FORWARD 7

BALANCING THE "MYTHIC," "RESEARCH," AND "PRAGMATIC" IMPERATIVES 8

4. THE JOINTLY-TOLD TALE 4 - 1

IMPLICATIONS OF THE "JOINTLY-TOLD TALE" 1

FORMATS FOR A LEARNING HISTORY: THE TWO-COLUMN FORMAT 3

A NOTE FOR ACADEMIC RESEARCHERS: 5

ANATOMY OF A TWO-COLUMN FORMAT STRUCTURE. 6

EXAMPLE OF THE TWO-COLUMN FORMAT: "THE LEARNING LAB ATTACK" 8

PROS AND CONS OF THE TWO-COLUMN FORMAT 10

IMPERATIVES OF THE TWO-COLUMN FORMAT. (WHAT IT REQUIRES YOU TO DO.) 11

AN ALTERNATIVE TO TWO COLUMNS: THE STAGGERED FORMAT 12

MULTIPLE PERSPECTIVES 13

THE LEARNING HISTORIAN'S POINT OF VIEW 16

5. PROJECT DESIGN AND PLANNING 5 - 1

THE INITIAL CONTACT: ENGAGING WITH THE CHAMPION 1

INITIAL MEETINGS WITH THE CHAMPION 2

ESTABLISHING A LEARNING HISTORY TEAM 3

SETTING UP THE LEARNING HISTORY PROCESS 6

EXAMPLE OF A SINGLE-LEARNING HISTORIAN ROLE DEFINITION: 6

A SAMPLE LARGE-SCALE LEARNING HISTORY AGREEMENT AND BUDGET. 11

6. AUDIENCES FOR A LEARNING HISTORY 6 - 1

AUDIENCE A: MEMBERS OF THE PILOT TEAM 1

AUDIENCE B: NEWCOMERS TO THE PILOT GROUP 2

AUDIENCE C: THE ORGANIZATION (THE "ENTITY") AS A WHOLE 3

AUDIENCE D: THE OUTSIDE WORLD. 6

WHAT MAKES FOR A GOOD ORGANIZATION WITH WHICH TO DO A LEARNING HISTORY? 7

DIFFERENT PIECES FOR DIFFERENT PURPOSES 8

BALANCING THE PILOT TEAM'S VIEW WITH THE LARGER SYSTEM VIEW 9

7. NOTICEABLE RESULTS 7 - 1

WHY NOTICEABLE RESULTS? 2

THE LANGUAGES OF NOTICEABLE RESULTS. 3

CHARACTERISTICS OF "NOTICEABLE RESULTS" 4

SOME EXAMPLES OF NOTICEABLE RESULTS 5

THE DILEMMA OF RESEARCH CREDIBILITY 7

CONSIDERING THE CAUSES OF NOTICEABLE RESULTS 9

8. RESEARCH CONSIDERATIONS 8 - 1

BALANCING INDUCTIVE WITH DEDUCTIVE REASONING 1

CONSIDERING "RESEARCH" IN FOUR PHASES 4

BUILDING ON THE RESEARCH OF PREVIOUS LEARNING HISTORY AND CASE STUDY EFFORTS. 10

9. THE INTERVIEWING PROCESS 9 - 1

BEFORE THE INTERVIEW 3

SAMPLE LETTER OF INTRODUCTION BEFORE INTERVIEWS 4

BEGINNING THE INTERVIEW 6

SAMPLE INTERVIEW GROUND RULES 9

THE INTERVIEW PROTOCOL 9

CONDUCTING THE INTERVIEW 11

SUGGESTED INTERVIEW QUESTIONS 13

CLOSING THE INTERVIEW: 17

PRESENCE OF MIND: AN EXAMPLE OF A REAL INTERVIEW 18

AFTER THE INTERVIEW 22

WRITING INTERVIEW FIELD NOTES 22

TAPE RECORDERS AND TRANSCRIPTIONS 23

TELEPHONE INTERVIEWS 23

OVER THE COURSE OF MULTIPLE INTERVIEWS: 24

INTERVIEWING RELUCTANT PEOPLE 25

CONDUCTING REAL-TIME OBSERVATIONS 26

10. DISTILLATION 10 - 1

THE RESEARCH IMPERATIVE IN DISTILLATION: 3

THE MYTHIC IMPERATIVE IN DISTILLATION: 4

THE PRAGMATIC IMPERATIVE IN DISTILLATION: 4

THE OVERALL DISTILLATION PROCESS: 4

FIRST RESEARCH PASS: DRAWING FORTH CONCEPTS (ÏOPEN CODINGÓ BY INDIVIDUALS) 5

SECOND RESEARCH PASS: JOINING OUR CONCEPTS TOGETHER. 11

FIRST MYTHIC PASS: WRITING THE STORY 18

THE FIRST PRAGMATIC PASS: 19

A FINAL THREE PASSES. 20

SORTING 21

11. WRITING THE LEARNING HISTORY 11 - 1

COMPONENTS OF THE WRITING PROCESS 1

THE WRITER'S SORT: FROM "STUFF" TO A PRELIMINARY OUTLINE 2

THE COMPONENTS OF A LEARNING HISTORY 3

LINKING ATTRIBUTION, INTERPRETATION AND GENERALIZATION TO REAL LIFE 7

WRITING AND EDITING 7

12. VALIDATION 12 - 1

QUOTE-CHECKING 2

CONFIDENTIALITY: BALANCING PROTECTION OF SOURCES AGAINST GENERIC UNDERSTANDING. 5

VALIDATION WORKSHOP 7

13. DISSEMINATION 13 - 1

THE THEORY BEHIND DISSEMINATION WORKSHOPS 2

DISTRIBUTION 3

DILEMMAS IN LEARNING FROM EXPERIENCE 5

PREPARING FOR THE DISSEMINATION WORKSHOP 11

LEARNING HISTORY DISSEMINATION WORKSHOP 16

Reflection on Field Experiences 18

14. PUBLICATION AND OUTREACH 14 - 1

PROPOSAL: THE LEARNING HISTORY LIBRARY 5

WHAT IS A "LEARNING HISTORY?" 5

LEARNING HISTORIES AT THE PRESENT MOMENT 6

INTELLECTUAL ROOTS OF THE LEARNING HISTORY 8

THE MIT LEARNING HISTORY EFFORT 9

AUDIENCE 10

HOW A LEARNING HISTORY IS CREATED 11

APPENDIX A: THREE ANTHROPOLOGICAL MODELS Appendix - 1

APPENDIX B: LEARNING HISTORY ARTICLES 5

EXAMPLES OF LEARNING HISTORY LIKE MATERIALS: 5

BIBLIOGRAPHY: 6

APPENDIX C: SUPPLEMENTAL READINGS 9

APPENDIX D: THE LEARNING HISTORY CRITIQUE SESSIONS 13

APPENDIX E: RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS 14