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Transcript of Collaborative Learning. Teachers Learning Trough Relationships and Conversations
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Collaborative Learning:
Teachers Learning through Relationships and Conversations
Harlene Anderson and Sylvia London1
Our collaborative approach to education is based in a patchwork of practical
philosophical assumptions (Anderson, 1997; 2007). This patchwork includes pieces of the
fabrics of postmodern and contemporary hermeneutic philosophies and social construction, and
dialogue theories. These assumptions provide an alternative language that in turn provides a
particular orientation to educational practices in which students are actively and intimately
engaged in their learning and have a voice in determining and evaluating the what and how of it.
In earlier writings we referred to this orientation as collaborative learning and collaborative
learning communities (Anderson, 1998, 2000, in press; Anderson & Swim, 1993, 1994;
Fernandez, London & Rodriguez, 2006). We first discuss these assumptions and then illustrate
their transportation to education through a story about the development of a collaborative
learning community: a training project for teachers in which the teachers become conversational
partners with each other and with their students.In turn, students become conversational partners
with each other. Through this relationship and activitycollaborative learning--teachers and
students and students and students engage in creating new kinds and qualities of connections
with each othercollaborative learning community--that enhance relationships, citizenship and
of course learning. These collaborative partners through their dynamic exchanges generate
knowledgei and other newness far more creative and abundant and specific to their local context
and needs than any member of the partnership could accomplish alone.
1An earlier version of this article was published in Danis: Anderson, H. & London, S. (2011) "Undervisning som
kollaborativ lring - Lrere, der lrer gennem relationer og samtaler". Kognition og pedagogik nr. 81,AKT og
inklusion. Dansk Psykologisk Forlag. arn
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Features of Collaborative Learning Communities
Collaborative learning entails a learning environment and activity in which the wisdom,
knowledge and customs of the members of a local educational context (e.g., a classroom of
students or a group of teachers) are acknowledged, accessed and utilized. This kind of learning
environment and activity requires particular educator values and attitudes regarding: a) the
transformative nature of dialogue and collaboration, b) trust and confidence in each members
expertise and judgment about, and what is critical to, their daily and future lives; c) the
knowledge and experiences that the learners bring is as valuable and necessary as what the
educators bring and d) self-reflection and openness to the educators perspectives being
examined, challenged and changed. Foremost, this requires that the educator, the one designated
as teacher, expresses these values and attitudes in their words, actions and attitudes.
Collaboration is the fertile means to creative ends. The emergence of the notion of
collaborative learning--variously referred to as collaborative, collective, cooperative, action,
peer, partner, group and team learning--has been documented for more than three decades
(Anderson, 1998, 2000; Anderson & Swim, 1993, 1994; Astin, 1985; Bonwell & Eison, 1991;
Bosworth & Hamilton, 1994; Bruffee, 1983; Freire, 1970; McNamee, 2007; Shotter, Golub,
1988; Goodsell, Maher, Tinto, Smith & MacGregor, 1992; Johnson & Holubec, 1990; John-
Steiner, 2000; Kuh, 1990; Mezirow, 1978; Mezirow & Associates, 2000; Peters & Armstrong,
1998; Sir Ken Robinson, ; Slavin, 1990; Weiner, 1986). Collaborative learning is defined here as
a relational and conversational approach to education in which each member of the learning
community, educators and students, contributes to the production of new learning (knowledge,
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skills, expertise) including its integration and application and they share responsibility for these.
It is based on the supposition that knowledge construction is a communal activity, created in
social exchange rather than instructive interaction and that the collective learning experience is
transformative. As well, what is being learned is itself transformed in the learning process.
Likewise, the learning or knowledge-making process is transformed in its making and the
persons involved in the learning process are transformed. Transformative or transforming refers
to the generative process in which people engage with each other and with themselves in the
sharing and inquiring into the subject matter and their experiences, critically considering and
reflecting on familiar and new reference frames and assumptions. Transformative learning is not
informational or instructive learning. As Chilean biologist-philosopher Humberto Maturana
(1978) maintains, there is no thing as instructive interaction. You cannot put knowledge into the
head of another person. In other words, you cannot have control over what you hope and think
the other is learning. Each person brings their unique history and so forth to the educational
encounter. This among other things influences how each person (e.g. student) will hear, read
or experience the educational material and therefore each will have their own interpretation or
translation of these. From this perspective, learning is an active and generative process in which
what is learned is particular to a learner. As Harvard University educator and psychologist
Robert Kegan suggests, . . . genuinely transformational learning is always to some extent an
epistemological change rather than merely a change in behavioral repertoire or an increase in the
quantity or fund of knowledge (2000, p. 48). Similar to Kegans notion of epistemological
change, educator Jack Mezirow (2000) suggests that it is a change in habits of mind that lead to a
change of reference or perspective. Transformational learning has implications beyond the
educational context itself. It is an opportunity to think differently about ourselves and others and
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to live differently in our educational and personal worlds and to propagate the seeds of
opportunity for changing our world for the better. Importantly, collaborative learning is a culture
of learning based in the belief and value of the goodness and positive motives of teachers and
students regarding learning.
The Development of the Collaborative Learning Approach
Our interest in collaboration in the education of children and adults evolved through our
experiences of focusing on collaboration in our practices as psychotherapists, consultants and
trainers in various clinical, university and post-graduate training contexts (Anderson, 1997;
Anderson & Gehart, 2007; Anderson & Goolishian, 1988; Anderson & Swim, 1993; Fernndez,
London & Rodriguez, 2006). Our philosophy of education is based in a patchwork of abstract
assumptions that form a world view of understanding human beings as unique, active, engaged
participants in the construction of knowledge that has local relevance and fluidity and which
support the notion of collaboration in education. Maintaining congruence between our
philosophy of psychotherapy and our philosophy of education and being able to perform
consistently with these has been of primary importance to us. This requires being what learning
systems theorist Donald Schn (1983, 1987) describes as a reflective practitioner or reflecting-
in-action: reflecting, pausing and inquiring into both theory and practice to understand ones
theoretical underpinnings and to describe ones practice as one does it. In doing so, theory and
practice reciprocally influence each other as the practitioner makes new sense of each and thus
becomes more thoughtful and accountable regarding their work. In turn, the theory and the
practice continue to develop. Based on his research about how professionals learn, Schn
suggests that incorporating reflective practice in education leads to learning that is more
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profound. He further suggests that such self-discovered, self-appropriated learning or learning
that belongs to the learner is the only learning that significantly influences behavior. 2
The above philosophical assumptions and the challenges that flow from them contribute
to a different way of thinking about our world and our experiences of it and therefore how we
conceptualize and organize our education practices. They inform a philosophy of education and
an educators philosophical stance: a way of being, referring to a way oforienting withhow we
approach--the people and circumstances we meet in our educational practices and the doing with
of our practices. This includes a way of thinking with, being in relationship with, talking with,
acting with and responding with. With emphasizes a shared engagement that puts a teacher and a
student in a conversational partnership in which members connect, collaborative and create with
each other. The notion of with is similar to Hoffman (2007) and Shotters (200 ), influenced by
the Russian critical theorist Mikhail Bakhtin, focus on the notion of withness. The
philosophical stance and the notion of with or withness suggests a partnership, a conversational
partnership. Education is one kind of conversational partnership.Features of the philosophical
stance include: engaging in mutual/shared inquiry, the relational creation of
expertise/knowledge, not-knowing, being public, trusting uncertainly, mutually transforming,
and therapy/education as similar to everyday life. (See Anderson, H. (2007) for a discussion of
the features.).central to this philosophical stance is the notion of collaborative relationship and
generative conversation that involve dynamic two-way exchanges, sharing, criss-crossing and
weaving of ideas, thoughts, opinions and feelings through which newness emerges. An
educators way of being, for instance, sets the stage for and invites these kinds of relationship
and conversations.
2Although we say self we keep in mind that the person is a relational being (Gergen, not an encapsuled self.
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Collaborative Relationship. St. George and Wulff (2011) at the University of Calgary
suggest that collaborating entails
a way of interacting with others such that everyone contributes in his/her preferred
way(s) and a new understanding, idea, or process is developed that would be unlikely by
any individual actor. This dialogue is threaded, meaning that comments/actions are
connected to the other comments/actions. The beauty of collaborating is that there are no
set roles; there is a flexibility and fluidity that allows for leading and following to be in
motion. In collaborating, all participants appreciate the variety of ideas and strive to be
inclusive. (St. George and Wulff, 2011)
For collaboration to occur there must be room for each person and their voice; each
person must be welcomed and allowed to be unconditionally present and to fully participate.
What each contributes must be equally acknowledged, appreciated and valued. Having a full
sense of being valued leads to a sense of belonging (e.g., to the educational community). A sense
of belonging to the community leads to a sense of participation which in turn leads to contributing
to the learning product and thus a sense of ownership and shared responsibility. All combine to
promote sustainable learning. Just a note: sustainable does not mean that what is newly learned
stands still, rather the process of the learning is sustained and therefore the new learning continues
to develop and further new learning can occur. This focus on participation and acknowledgment is
viewed as particularly critical to the development of childrenbeginning with newborns--in
social, knowledge and skill learning (See Trevarthen, 2005 for an encouraging discussion).
Dialogic Conversation. Dialogue or dialogic conversation refers to a dynamic form of
talk in which participants engage with each other (out loud) and with)with or without words--
in a mutual or shared inquiryjointly examining, questioning, wondering, reflecting and so forth
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about the subject or task (e.g., a discourse, subject content, opinions). What is put forth in
dialogue is interacted with and interpreted, entailing two-way exchanges and crisscrossing of
ideas, thoughts, opinions and feelings. Participants are engaged in a shared inquiry in which they
try to understand each other, try to learn the uniqueness ofeach others language, their meanings
whether expressed in words or without words. In other words, participants do not assume they
know what the other intends, they do not try to fill in meaning gaps. Through these dialogic
exchanges, through the shared inquiry, participants engage in a process of trying to understand
each other, through which and in turn new meanings, viewpoints and perspectives (e.g. learning)
are created. Again, a teachers way of being sets the stage for, invites and continually supports
collaborative relationships and dialogic conversations.
In education, the goal of collaborative learning and generative conversation is
transformative learningiie.g., the development of new knowledge, expertise, skills, etc.--that
has relevancy and usefulness beyond the classroom. The process of achieving this goal has
several features. Foremost, the one designated as a teacher must believe in and trust the
collaborative-dialogic process and must believe in and trust their student. If so, they will
effortlessly act and talk consistent with the philosophy of collaborative learning. In other words,
they must live it, being genuinely and naturally collaborative. This includes respecting, inviting
and valuing each voice from the time they first meet and through the duration of the learning
program (e.g., course, workshop). This requires being flexible, responsive and creatively doing
what is necessary for any situation at any moment. Relationships and learning begin to be created
that are more horizontal iii rather than the hierarchical and dualistic teacher-student relationships
and learning processes that is usually more familiar to educators and students.
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Student and teacher and student and student develop connections in which what is
learnede.g., knowledge, expertise, skillsis jointly selected and created in contrast to a so-
called knower (e.g., a teacher) bestowing knowledge that is pre-determined (e.g., by a teacher,
learning institute or larger learning context) upon the one (e.g., student) who does not know. This
is in contrast to teaching and learning as instructive interaction (mentioned above) in which it is
assumed that one persons knowledge can be transferred to another person. It is important to note
here that the classroom learning always occurs within multiple contexts and stakeholders, and
each with their own agenda. These are respected but do not become straight-jackets of teacher and
student creativity.
A collaborative educator wants to create and facilitate learning relationships and
processes where participants can identify, access, elaborate and produce their own unique
competencies, cultivating seeds of newness in their personal and professional lives outside the
learning context. They want to talk and act to invite and encourage participants to take
responsibility for, and to be the architects of, their learning.
The following story illustrates. Sylvias xperience of being invited, and
subsequently providing a training program for teachers with the goal of improving relationships
among the teachers and between them and a university. She illustrates the importance of
preparing the stage for the possibility and encouragement of generative relationships and
collaborative processes in which the needs and desires of both the institutions and the learners
were acknowledged and responded to and in which the learning goals and learning design were
mutually constructed. (See London, St. George & Wulff, 2009for guidelines for collaboration)).
The story focuses on the training process and not its content.
Preparing the Stage for Collaborative Relationships and Dialogical Conversations: Sylvias Story
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I was born in Mexico City and grew up within the Mexican-Jewish Community. I
attended schools within the Jewish Education Network , went to college in Mexico City,
completed graduate studies abroad, lived in the United States for eight years and then came back
to Mexico (20 years ago) to live and work. Currently I teach at public and private universities
and at a postgraduate training institute that I founded with colleagues. I provide consultation and
supervision to therapists and psychologists in schools including schools within the Jewish
Education Network. The Network has 10 schools, ranging from Montessori to religious. The
Network has a Board of Education composed of representatives from the board the principal of
each school. The Board sets policies and addresses issues regarding quality of education,
finances, scholarships, security, continuation of the Jewish tradition, relationships with Israel,
etc. The Board is a support network for the schools and offers access to resources to address the
needs of the schools and the community at large. The board does not have decision-making
authority; each school is independent.
An Invitation
I received a call from the president of the Hebraica University requesting a consultation.
She wanted to strengthen the relationship between the university and the schools within the
Network and thought that offering training for teachers could be a good way of doing it. The
Universitys mission is to train teachers to provide quality education within the Network schools.
The university offers baccalaureate and masters degrees in education and Jewish studies and
provides continuing education to teachers through a variety of externship and training in
different subjects.
I met with the president and learned that, in addition to what she stated in the phone call,
she wanted to provide a program for the Network schools to train teachers to become head
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teachers (called tutors in the Mexican national education system) to meet the requirements of a
new initiative by the Mexican Board of Education mandating that each school have head
teachers. The head teachers role should include monitoring the development of the children in
the school as well as addressing academic and social issues. The president saw this initiative as
part of the mission of the university: To improve the quality of education within the Network
by helping teachers develop better teaching and relational skills with each other and with their
students and to provide an opportunity for exchange of ideas among teachers in the different
schools. After learning more about her aims, I proposed a training program design that would
introduce the collaborative practices philosophy to the schools and that would help develop the
teachers conversational and relational skills inside and outside the classroom. We concluded the
meeting with the idea of a 10 week pilot project for middle school teachers that we would
present to the Network Board of Education for their consideration. We decided to tentatively call
the program Tutorial Skills for Teachers. This name allowed us to talk about tutorial skills, not
only for tutors, but for any teacher interested in improving their relational and conversational
skills. It was important to use the word tutor to make in congruent with the mandate from the
Mexican Board of Education.
We thought that the best age group to pilot the project was middle school because
middle school teachers seemed to have the greatest need to develop relational and conversational
skills given the age group they work with.
Relationships, Relationships and Relationships: Or, One Conversation Leads to Another and
In line with the collaborative philosophy, it would be important to present the project to
the board as a proposal for consideration and simultaneously to invite their input regarding their
defined needs and how to best address them. The university president thought that the next step
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should be to meet with the president of the board and talk to him about the project, get his input
and decide how best to present the project idea to the board and then to the school principals. I
knew the president well since we had grown up together and our children had attended the same
school. He was happy to meet with me and the university president and was enthused about the
project idea. We scheduled a meeting within the same week and I described the details of the
pilot project aimed to develop a friendly and dialogical atmosphere within the school system that
would address the question: How can professionals create the kind of conversations and
relationships that allow all participants to access their strength, resources and creativity to
develop possibilities where none seem to exist before (Anderson, 1997).
The Jewish community in Mexico City is close-knit. I have known the board president
through my community activities and through other consultation work within the various
schools. When we met with the board president he was quite welcoming and immediately
curious about the collaborative approach and wanted to know more details about it, my personal
history with the ideas and the ways I had worked with them in educational and other settings. We
spent some time exchanging ideas in a lively conversation, where I shared the philosophical
stance and my experience with the application of collaborative practices in therapy and
education. He asked many questions regarding the application of these ideas in the development
of relational and conversational skills for the school personnel and the changes I envisioned in
the quality of education, classroom environment and management. The proposal made sense to
him and he wanted to present the project as soon as possible to the Network Board of Education.
Our conversation was very collaborative with each person contributing to it from their
perspective and expertise base. My role in the conversation was to present the content of the
program, including the methodology and the philosophical stance. In turn, they offered the
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knowledge, language and internal culture to translate the ideas into a project suitable for their
organizations. I was curious and my responses were offered to learn more about them and their
situations. In response they further articulated and expanded on what they were telling me.
Together, the three of us fine-tuned the details of the proposal and once in agreement, it was time
to find the appropriate language and description to present the idea of the pilot project to the
principals in the Network, keeping in mind that there were similarities and differences between
the schools, their cultures and needs and that participation in the project would be voluntary.
We decided to present the project using the working title Project Mentsch, from the
Yiddish which meansgood human being. The idea of using a word in Yiddish and its
emphasis on being a good human being and learning good manners could help bypass the
differences between the schools and emphasize their common goal in educating good and
responsible citizens within the Jewish tradition. The board president suggested I present the
project proposal in the next Network Board meeting which was scheduled the following week.
The meeting agenda was full, but the president was able to allow 15 minutes on it to present the
project.
The Characters: Relationships Again
Given the time constriction, the fact that the project presentation was added to the agenda
at the last minute, and following my belief in the importance of conversations and relationships
to develop trust and intimacy, I decide to arrive early to the meeting, hoping to have the
opportunity to talk with the members of the Board as they arrived. I was not a stranger to most of
the people I would meet, I have had a life- long relationship with some of the principals who I
had gone to school with and worked with in the community, others knew my work because I
have been a consultant in some of the schools, and some I had never met meet. The principals I
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knew were very curious about my presence in the meeting. We began informal conversations
about updates in our personal lives and people we had in common, the way you usually meet
people you knowthe small chit-chatting. These informal conversations created a relaxed and
friendly environment, slowly the rest of the members joined in and the people I knew introduced
me to the members of the Board I did not know. When it was time to present the proposal, I felt
comfortable and the group was curious and open to listening to the ideas. The president of the
board introduced me and talked about the project and his interest in it, then I gave a brief power
point presentation and left a few minutes for questions and comments. The principals liked the
project idea and they thought there was a need in their schools for it. At the end of the meeting I
offered to meet with each Principal and their school personnel (at their school) to talk about the
program, listen to their needs and incorporate their unique and valuable expertise from the years
of experience in working with teachers in the program content and design.
The Response
Their responses to my invitation to meet with each of them arrived the following day by
phone and e-mail and included additional questions and comments. They wanted more details
about the program, including the philosophy, teaching methodology and content. They also
wanted guidance in choosing the appropriate teacher candidates for the program. I followed-up
with a visit to the schools that wanted me to come and talked with the principal and some of the
teachers at each. I invited their input and addressed their questions and concerns. Being available
to meet in the schools and have conversations with them was an important element in building
relationships with trust, respect and confidence.
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We started the training program one month later; it included 18 teachers from the 8
schools that decided to participate. The group was scheduled to meet for two-hour sessions for
ten weeks and would meet at the university.
The Creation of Our Collaborative Learning Community
Following my years of experience teaching in universities it was important for me to
begin the first training session by providing the time and space to meet each participant as a
unique human being and to have them meet each other, both to creating a collaborative learning
community (Anderson 1997). Taking time for what we call conversational or narrative
introductions, begins to acknowledge the importance of each participant and does not assume
that members, regardless of their histories together, know each other. Each member is
introducing themselves in a new context, full of opportunity to be known differently and to know
the others differently. To create the context in which it is possible to experience the possibility of
knowing the familiar differently. I used an exercise that began with three questions: What is
your name, what is the story of your name and how do you want to be called in this group? This
exercise invited participants to introduce themselves through personal stories that connected
them to their families and experiences. At its conclusion, they shared and discussed their
experiences of it and I shared my reasons for beginning the group with it. Later in the training we
would discuss ways they could take the concept of the exercise back to their classrooms. I
followed with a second exercise that focused on the participants goals and learning styles and
included the following: What do you think needs to happen in the training during our ten
meetings that would make your investment in time, money and effort worthwhile?
The second question was about their learning styles and preferences for learning formats.
They discussed these two questions in three small groups, and then each group told the highlights
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of their conversation and summarized their goals and learning styles. We then had a group
discussion about the shared goals and the implications of the differences in preferences and
learning styles. We also compared their experiences of the two exercises, of talking in big and
small groups and the difficulty of reporting or reproducing the content of the conversations in the
small groups. At the end of the first meeting we had developed the beginning of a learning
community and learning contexts and had begun to talk about possible ways to take the concepts
and exercises to their classrooms. Each teacher had the opportunity to include his or her voice,
expressing their ideas, knowledge and expertise as well as personal agendas, learning goals and
styles.
From a collaborative practice perspective, learning takes places within the walls of the
classroom and outside of it. In other words, the classroom learning is a springboard or invitation
to continue the learning process and be a reflective learner outside the classroom as well It is
therefore important for the one designated as the trainer or teacher to help facilitate the
continuance of the outside learning. The participants and I discussed this concept and developed
the idea of a writing a weekly chronicle at the end of each session, Each week a designated
teacher would create a written document summarizing the learning along with their reflections
on their experiences of the session and he or she would share it with the rest of the group
between sessions via email. The group members were encouraged to respond with comments,
questions, etc about each others documentations and reflections. These reflections would invite
the teachers to reflect upon their learning and create interactions and connections with each other
I offered to write the first chronicle to start the process and as one example of a description and
reflection that I hoped would invite responses from the group. There was a lot of enthusiasm and
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participation in this first meeting: our learning community had begun and the stage and tone
were set for the rest of the training.
The Experience
The teachers began the program with hesitation, meeting at 4 PM after a full day of
teaching with no break and little time for lunch, did not provide the best conditions for learning.
After the first meeting they all seem to be engaged and willing to participate in the program.
They found the content challenging but potentially useful to solve their daily dilemmas. Being
part of an active learning community, being able to talk about their dilemmas and listen to others
provided a safe environment to share and wonder. Experiential exercises, interviews and
reflective processes provided an interesting laboratory to asses and practice their teaching and
relational abilities.
Assessment and Evaluation
As mentioned earlier, the program was designed as a pilot project and we needed to
assess its applicability within other schools in the Network. The basic question that guided our
work and the goals of the course was adapted from Andersons (1997):
How can professionals create the kind of conversations and relationships that allow all the
participants within the school community to access their creativity, strengths and resources to
develop possibilities where none seem to exist before?
I wanted to use an assessment tool that would help the teachers have an awareness of
their strengths and talents and would help them find ways to use these in their work as teachers
and learners, as well as create a culture of appreciation and possibilities.. The VIA Signature
Strength questionnaire developed by Seligman and Peterson and available on-line (
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www.authentichappiness.com) met the criteria. They completed the survey questionnaire
between the first and second sessions and then would re-take between the 9th and the 10th ones.
The teachers brought the survey results on the second session, the information was used to talk
about strengths and possibilities individually and as a group. I also created exercises through
which they could practice nurturing their strengths in the classroom. The questionnaire
experience and the exercises helped us create a strength-based culture and language. Teachers
were encouraged to take the strength culture to their teaching environment and look at their
students through these lenses. At the end of our ten week training the information produced in
the post-questionnaire allowed us to assess the possibilities of change as they related to the basic
questions that guided our learning experience. Below is the comparison of averaged results of the
group, listed in descending order of strength frequency:
Questionnaire Results:
Pre-Questionnaire Post-Questionnaire
Curiosity Creativity
Appreciat.ion of beauty and excellence Curiosity and Sense of Humor
Justice and Equity Team Work
Tenacity Optimism and hope
Gratefulness and sense of humor Gratefulness
We can appreciate some differences when comparing the results of the groups strengths
between the pre- and the post-surveys: In the post-survey we see that the first strength is
creativity, we also find team work and hope, three strengths that were not present in the pre-
survey. We could assume that the changes we found in the group might be a result of the training
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program as they seem to represent the content and spirit of the philosophical stance as expressed
in the basic question, though the teachers themselves would be the ones to explain the
differences.
Comments from the Participants
University Required Questionnaire. In addition to the strength assessment, the universityalso had a standard questionnaire that they used to assess all of their programs. It
included the following questions:What do you value about the training program?
What did you learned? How do you plan to implement the learning in your personal and professional life? What have you applied so far? Who do you recommend this training to and what would you say when recommending it? What recommendations you have for the institution where you work? What do you suggest to improve this training program?Summary of Responses to the Universitys Questionnaire.
The teachers commented that it was easier to first take the learning to their personal lives,
mainly at home in their relationships with family members and then to try them in the classroom.
They said that this was not a program to learn tutorial abilities, but a program that trained them
to change their lives especially the ways that they thought about themselves, their roles as
teachers and their students. They said they would recommend this program to any person
interested in improving their relationships and making a better world. On the other hand, they
felt that the program was too short and did not provide enough time to practice the application of
the ideas and abilities. They did not feel ready or confident to take the ideas to the classroom yet
or share them with colleagues. They valued the opportunity to work with teachers from other
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schools and realized that they shared similar challenges and dilemmas. They appreciated the
richness of the reflective processes and the possibilities of looking at multiple ways to solve
problems and value multiple perspectives.
In response to the university questionnaire the teachers decided to write a joint letter
addressed to their Institutions where they made comments and suggestions regarding what
needed to be present in the school in order to be able to put collaborating relationships and
generative learning processes in action in the school in general and with their relationships with
their students in particular. Two schools contacted me after the training was concluded and
asked me to provide this type of training to all of their educational personnel. As well, the
training group members contacted me at the beginning of the following school year asking for a
refresher course. We met and revisited the ideas presented in the course, discussed how
members were putting the learning into action and developed ideas for further applying their
learning in the new school year.
In response to the evaluation and the success of the first group, the university decided to
organize a second group with the same format and content for the following semester. This time
the group was composed by a mix of teachers from middle and grammar schools. We began the
training program with the same content and exercises. The nature of the group and the individual
characteristics of the participant created a different learning environment and community. This
group was very interested in learning and practicing reflexive processes and the design of
reflective teams. Following their initiative, at the end of the ten weeks, the university organized a
consultation group on a biweekly basis to offer a consultation space for interested teachers.
Reflecting Remarks
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I was very excited about the possibility to bring collaborative ideas and practices to the
school system and to work with the teachers. The training with the two groups provided me the
experience and realization that it is possible to make significant changes in the school
environment by helping teachers consider and change the value they give to themselves and the
way they relate to each other and to the students in the classroom. The changes take place in the
type of relationships and conversations they foster on the daily interactions and do not seem to be
very visible or important, but in the long term they have the possibility of influencing the school
culture. I am pleased to report that in the four years since the pilot project, I have implemented
the above, or similar, training in seventeen schools and organizations. I have worked with
approximately 1500 teachers in the public and private sectors in Mexico. The program remains
very close to my heart and I keep exploring ways to improve the quality of conversations and
relationships inside and outside the classrooms.
Harlenes Reflections on Sylvias Story
I have heard Sylvia tell this story before, but each time as with this reading, I hear it as if
for the first time. A story told always has nuanced differences in its telling and the context and
listeners of the storytelling is often different. This ability to hear or see as if the first time is
critical to collaborative practices: the ability to not-know ahead of time and to be able to see and
hear the familiar with fresh eyes and ears requires the same genuine interest in the retelling as in
the first telling. In Sylvias story, though she was familiar with the Network, its schools and its
members she approached the situation freshly. Of course, previous experience with the systems
and its members influenced her but her pre-knowing (which is always there) did not determine
her words and actions. Just as I was hearing her story as if for the first time, she was able to meet
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them and be curious and learn about their needs and expectations from its members as if for the
first time--from the university president to the teachers.
Though a heading in the story is preparing the stage, preparing does not refer to
planning as in planning a structure or steps ahead of time. Preparing refers to being ready to meet
each and every situation as a new one that you have not met or experienced before and to being
ready to spontaneously respond to it. Being prepared is also being able to be open to, inviting of,
appreciative ofand to be able to work within the other persons local knowledgetheir wisdom,
custom, language, etc. Sylvias story illustrates the critical nature of local knowledge and its
importance in inviting a sense of belonging, participating, creating and owning of what is
produced and how it is produced. As always, she was keeping in mind, as in this case, that local
knowledge is not static. It continually evolves.
When she began the consultation/training, she had no idea where it would lead. She was
open to where the relationships and conversations would take her and the participant, trusting the
uncertainty inherent in a collaborative process. Just as I began to touch my keyboard in Houston
and Sylvia began to touch her keyboard in Mexico as we began to write this article, on our work
with schools , we had no idea where our collaborative journey would take us.
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iWe use knowledge as a collective term that includes expertise, truth, perspective, etc.iiAll educators would say their goal is new learning. We are emphasizing the difference between thinking that a
student learns what is said or read as it is in contrast to thinking that a student in their interactions with they hear and
read that they create new learning that is unique to each.iiiIt is important however that the difference not be so great as to jar the students and invite what can be mis-
interpreted as resisting behaviors.
Harlene Anderson, Ph.D.
Houston Galveston InstituteTaos Institute
Sylvia London, M.A.
Grupo Campos Eliseos
Houston Galveston Institute
Taos Institute