I think that this month was much more successful than last month. We have been able to communicate better as a group and have finally worked out the kinks as far as e-mail goes. My goal for us next month will be to be better at planning out our tasks before the last minute. We were better with preparation for the Program design and it was submitted on time, but I would like for us to have time to all look over a final product before it is submitted. I hope that we continue to improve in putting together final papers. Working with a group obviously makes it more difficult to put together a cohesive paper since we all have different writing styles.
As far as the project content is concerned, I am very pleased with our design. We started with the idea for a program for college freshmen and morphed it into a useful program for adults returning to education. My favorite part of working with students is helping them with the transition from one step to the next. I know that my transition from high school to college was very smooth thanks to the support that I got from BSU, but I did not have that same feeling for the transition back to college. I cannot imagine what it would have been like if I had waited longer or had a family as well. I think that our program would be an excellent one to implement at Ball State and, who knows, we may be able to do that after we graduate!
I think the program evaluation should be interesting. I have a couple professors in mind that I would like to have take a look. I want to know what we left out. It is easy to think that the program is perfect when no one else has looked at it, but there is probably some glaring blank that we never even thought to fill in. I was surprised with how difficult it was to develop a syllabus that comprehensively explains what is expected of students. That may be something that we continue to adjust as the project moves on.
This upcoming month will (hopefully) be a lot easier for us. I will finally be off the road and able to spend more time focusing on my assignments in a timely manner. It is hard to complete the work when you are in the car 9+ hours a day and exhausted when you finally get home.
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Casey Schultz - Literature Review
Narrative
Learning: A Literature Review
Casey
M. Schultz
Ball
State University
EDAC
634
September
23, 2013
Abstract
This paper aims
to examine literature related to the subject of narrative learning in adult
education. There will be a summary of the topic of narrative learning as well
as an examination of what the author considers to be the central themes within
this theory. Research by various theorists within the field of narrative
learning will be used to demonstrate the themes presented. The implications of
themes on the field of adult education will also be examined.
Narrative
Learning: A Literature Review
Introduction
“After nourishment, shelter, and companionship,
stories are the thing we need most in the world.” – Phillip Pullman
Narrative learning at the core is
storytelling. Authors like Clark(2010) have even decided that the terms
“narrative” and “story” are actually interchangeable. Research by Hopkins
suggested that learning through stories has been incorporated into many fields
over the years, including education (as cited in Merriam, Caffarella, &
Baumgartner, 2007). Clark (2010) suggests that we are able to make sense of
what we have experienced in life by turning that experience into a story. Once
these narratives have been developed, they can be used for several different
purposes. Riessman (2008) gives examples of different ways that narratives are used
including, arguing a point, persuading an audience, bringing the audience into
the experience that the storyteller is sharing, entertainment, misleading the
audience, and as a catalyst for social change. Clark (2010) believes that
experience exists as a separate entity from language. When we are trying to
reflect upon this experience to find the meaning and what we should learn from
it, we must find a way to communicate it by finally giving it a language, or
narrating it.
Themes
I believe that the common theme of
narrative learning is that there are different levels at which we learn from
narratives. Clark (2010) gives three different ways that students can learn
through stories:
1. “We
learn from hearing stories” (Clark, 2010, p. 5). We can use the experiences of
others to help us better understand the topics being presented or to help gain
a different perspective on events that have occurred.
2. “We
learn from telling stories” (Clark, 2010, p.6). When we are the storyteller, we
must find a way to put our experience into words. Narrating these stories can
help us find out why the experience is important to us.
3. “We
learn from stories by recognizing the narratives in which we are positioned”
(Clark, 2010, p.6).Once we realize that we are in a narrative, we can then
reflect critically on our actions and decide how we should react and what we
may be teaching others through our actions.
Clark
and Rossiter (2008) believe that one of the most common ways that students
learn by hearing stories is through case studies. They state that a case has
“the usual elements of story: characters, setting, and plot” (Clark &
Rossiter, 2008, p. 68). The plot will typically contain a problem that requires
a solution. Students reading the case studies do not have to develop the
solution to the problem, but are encouraged to instead decide which steps
should be taken. The authors believe that case studies allow students to
include themselves in the narratives as both the audience and the author to the
possible endings. Case studies help learners to put their theoretical learning
to use as they attempt to create a solution to the problem presented much like
they would if they were a professional practitioner.
Michelson
(2011) provides an interesting perspective on the theme of telling stories, or using
autobiographical narratives in adult education. She hypothesizes that the
autobiographical narratives that are used within classrooms could be considered
fiction as opposed to a free way to express feelings and experience. Michelson
argues that the constraints placed on the ways stories must be presented in the
classroom can take away from the uniqueness of the stories being told. She
suggests that stories told within the classroom will typically have a plot and
will lead into a resolution of this plot that culminates in some kind of
personal growth. However, allowing only this type of autobiographical narrative
may eliminate important narratives that do not always have a positive outcome.
Michelson proposes that adult educators be more open to experiences that may
not fit into the particular mold of narrative that is used within courses. It
is important to allow students to speak of experiences that did not resolve in
a positive way or that may not have yet ended in a resolution at all. Michelson
believes that allowing all types of narratives will lessen the prevalence of
fiction within autobiography in the classroom.
Clark
and Rossiter (2008) suggest that situational awareness within narratives is
much more abstract topic. The example given by the authors refers to an
American who finds his or herself in a country outside of Western society. Once
the American distinguishes that he or she is in a different cultural narrative,
he or she will be able to assess the situation in a much different way. The
American learner will then be able to critique the distribution of power in
this new narrative, for instance identifying the people whose needs are met as
well as identifying those parties who are treated poorly or exploited. In this
particular example, because the learner becomes aware of the situation within
the narrative, the learner is able to create an entirely new, more critical
narrative on a different perspective than if he or she had never identified the
different culture in the first place.
Rossiter
(1999) came up with four points regarding the implication of narrative learning
in adult development. The first point points expresses that no one will know
more about the development of adults than the learners themselves. It is
important for adult educators to provide theories and perspectives for
students, but it is equally as important for the learners to develop the
remainder of their understanding for themselves. The second point Rossiter
makes is that narratives help learners cope with change. Each adult learner
will be at a different place in his or her life, and the topics presented by
educators may require different levels of adjustment in the ongoing narratives
of each individual learner. The third is that learners may need to share their
narratives with others in order for development to occur. Rossiter writes that,
“telling one’s story externalizes it so that one becomes more aware of the
themes and topics that dominate one’s life” (1999, p.83). The fourth and final
point is that it may be necessary for student to re-story their lives as they
are working through transformative learning. The act of re-storying can
describe the process of a shift in perspective that can occur during
transformational learning.
Implications
Within
the adult education classroom, it is important to be sure that educators are
addressing all three of the levels of narrative learning. It is important for
adult learners to hear stories. Listening to the experiences of others can lead
to better understanding of the topics that are being presented by educators.
Trying to master the many different theories and perspectives that accompany
adult education can be a much simpler process if learners have an experience or
case study to which they can relate the theory. Additionally, it is important
for educators to allow students to tell their stories. Not all narratives are
going to have a happy ending or an ending at all. Just because a narrative may
not fit into the traditional model of a story, that does not make it any less
important to the development of the learner. If educators have students adhere
to a specific model of storytelling, they run the risk of eliminating
narratives that played a very important part in the development of the learner.
Finally, it is important for educators to encourage students to be more aware
of their situational position within their own narratives. When the student is
able to identify that he or she is in a cultural situation different from his
or her own, it can lead to a shift in perspective that may have otherwise gone
ignored.
|
Themes
in Narrative Learning
|
Implications
in practice
|
|
1. We
learn from hearing stories.
|
It is important for educators to
include narratives to accompany the theories and perspectives presented
within the classroom to foster a deeper understanding of the information for
learners.
|
|
2. We
learn from telling stories.
|
Educators
need to allow opportunities for learners to share their own narratives related
to topics presented. Even if these narratives do not fit the common layout of
a story or do not have a happy ending.
|
|
3.
We learn from stories by recognizing the
narratives in which we are positioned
|
It
is important for educators to encourage learners to examine their
surroundings in the narratives that they develop. By doing so, it can allow
learners to identify that the situation they were in dealt with very
different cultural perspectives from those to which they are accustomed. This
leads to a broadening of the narrative as well as the perspective of the
learner.
|
References
Clark, M.C. (2010).
Narrative learning: Its contours and its possibilities. New Directions for Adult
and Continuing Education, 126, 3-11. doi: 10.1002/ace.367
Clark, M.C., & Rossiter,
M. (2008). Narrative learning in adulthood. New
Directions for Adult and Continuing
Education, 119, 61-70. doi: 10.1002/ace
Merriam, S.B.,
Caffarella, R.S., & Baumgartner, L.M. (2007). Learning in adulthood: A comprehensive
guide (3rd ed.). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-B ass.
Michelson, E. (2011).
Autobiography and selfhood in the practice of adult learning. Adult Education
Quarterly, 61(1), 3-21. doi: 10.1177/0741713609358447
Rossiter, M.
(1999). Understanding adult development as narrative. New Directions for Adult and
Continuing Education, 84, 70-85.
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