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Thursday, March 31, 2011

When passion drives you

When passion drives me it is so easy to get things done. Energy flows, and I feel light and inspired.

I find that if my motivation has been inspired by a book or webinar or program I can hardly wait for the end of the inspirational event before I want to start on whatever it is that inspired me. I forget that I have actually been involved in a learning event. It isn’t learning – it’s doing. Or is it?

Surely learning should lead to:

  • A tangible result
  • An intangible change in the thinking of a person or group?
  • New knowledge that generates action?

So how come I don’t view my passion and inspiration as a learning path?

When I think about it seriously, I have stuck in my mind a belief that learning has to be serious stuff. It has to involve some sacrifice, some putting off passion until I’ve earned it. It also has to imposed from above by people who know better.

But isn’t that flying in the face of what’s happening in the world right now – the integration of social networking into learning? Of course it is. My thinking is stuck in last century’s learning models. Nowadays when I want to learn something I go online and research it. I look for just enough information to answer my current questions. I might note a few interesting things to research later, but mostly I follow the Japanese JIT (Just In Time) principle – information I need just in time for when I need it. That kind of learning doesn’t fit into the 3-4 years studying topics deemed suitable for a named degree.

Unfortunately, formal learning is often a passion killer unless you know that it is leading into a career that inspires you. The very notion that the extent of your learning can only be measured by tests or assignments, in which you support other people’s past comments, doesn’t fit the requirements of our twitch speed future. How will it inspire us to move beyond the ‘now’? How can passion be merged into learning?

Formal learning organisations are facing an insecure future:

  • Less money for research (where passion and inspiration leads)
  • The increasing pace with which information becomes obsolete (and libraries must be restocked)
  • A huge challenge in verifying the validity and currency of online information
  • An increasing push for specialisation requiring a wider range of experienced tutors
  • Increasing cost for housing students in a location and less government money to cover it

Staff and tutors at formal learning organisations are surely constantly running to catch-up, never mind get ahead of the knowledge tsunami. That young students might feel a bit disenchanted or disenfranchised in such a world is not surprising. They are already engaged in learning in the social networks they belong to. They just don’t see it as learning because it hasn’t been legitimised by the system. And their learning is indistinguishable from the social chitchat that accompanies the sharing of information.

Yet out in the real world, where passion can be a driving force, businesses are finding their knowledge and commercial improvements come from a free-exchange within a ‘what’s new and what does it do?’ culture. They are also finding that the interaction of staff along with the sharing helps to build bonds that will ultimately create a cohesive team.

Somehow over the next few decades the processes of learning and following your passion are going to have to merge.

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