A curated conversation on how Heutagogy can help develop creativity in learning in our present day education systems. With ideas from key thinkers, practical examples from practitioners, and a range of useful tools for stimulating thinking.
7. Ronan O’Beirne
• #Heutagogy. A walk, a wander through
learning. Getting lost, by intent or by
accident. Sifting and sieving through
serendipity. Gathering the riches of
experience. Creating a bricolage of possibly
useful artefacts that will shed light on the
journey.
• Synthesizing concepts and opening the mind
to consider new vistas of discovery…
Ronan is Director of Research Soton Uni
8. Mark Narayn
• Heutagogy may not suit everyone, because it
requires a leap of faith – faith in one’s ability
to embrace uncertainty and explore, yet find
ways forward.
• It’s about paying attention to what is around
us, and taking risks.
• A boat in harbour is safe, but that’s not
what boats are for.
Mark runs Everything Unplugged East Norwich
11. Silvia Floarea
• Learnity's "Creative thinking" experience is
about unborify the boring;
• We choose boring contexts or activities, then
explore different perspectives and create
resources for solving everyday boredom…
creating new satisfactions.
• Students choose their own challenges and, with
teachers, co-creating new ideas everyday
Silvia runs Learnity in Bucharest
12. Lisa-Marie Blashke
• Talented and amazing educators are co-creating
pockets of innovative education with learners
everywhere, guided by learning leaders…
• realised through open learning spaces with
student-designed curricula.
• Their inspiration shows how heutagogy can incite
educational transformation, with stakeholders
working together to create environments for
nurturing creative thought, expression, and
learning.
Lisa-Marie is Program Director Oldenburg Uni
13. Chrissi Nerantzi
• Creativity is a way of being, re-acting
positively to life and passionately embracing
(im)possibilities; enacting our imagination,
playfulness and risk-taking to create a better
world….
• Modelling such ways of being & immersing
others in creative experiences helps recognise
creativity in bringing us closer together,
transforming our life for the better.
Chrissi runs Greenhouse (creative practitioners) MMU
16. Stewart Hase
• Human brains are wired for creativity from birth.
• Heutagogical approaches to learning are
designed to provide an environment that
facilitates rather than hinders creativity.
• This environment is flexible, learner-focused,
process rather than content oriented, pattern
seeking and exploratory. It is based on an
understanding of human agency rather than
predetermination.
Stewart is Mr Heutagogy…
17. Devaji Patil
• As an expression of True Self heutagogy,
seeks, generates and maintains; environments
internal and external, that are free to explore,
unlearn and relearn.
• Creativity, not as a brilliant accomplishment ,
but as living, authentic, shared, human
understanding & experience, that keeps
growing in the most unassuming of ways
Devaji is a Public Health Consultant in Bangalore
18. Paul Henderson
• The New Music Collective is a heutagogical
learning project, influenced by Roland
Meighan and John Holt.
• It’s where young musicians come together to
create, learn, rehearse and perform their own
music.
• A learning facilitator, provides resources,
helps and answer questions enabling a gig at
the end of the project.
Paul materialised in Messenger…
19. Chris Kenyon
• Australian artist Fiona Hall described the
approach she took to creativity with Paradisus
Terrestris; amorphously creating something
completely different using ordinary objects.
• Whilst working ideas sparked more ideas than
she could apply to her work.
• Was this “rows of sardine teas from which
sculpted life forms emerge” a heutagogical
journey?
Chris is offline right now
22. Terry Loane
• Contemporary schooling promotes compliance,
obedience and conformity.
• Everything from exam syllabuses to the clothing
worn at school is, at least in the UK, becoming
more prescriptive. Compliance, obedience,
conformity and prescription all stultify creativity.
• For creative learning to blossom we must reverse
the trend towards conformity and promote self-
determination.
Terry is Grumpy
23. Fred Garnett
• Education points you at a world identified by
policy makers and categorised by academics.
• We learn mimetically, instinctively; searching
for affirmation socially. Our profound human
curiosity seeks release beyond trained
literacies.
• Trusting the learner enables our natural
creativity to emerge; the only way any
educational process can be justified
Fred curates (participatively)
24. Bernard Nkuyubwatsi
• The growing demand for higher education is not
matched by the capacity in formal education.
• To achieve socioeconomic inclusion and respond
to current global concerns, an innovative
learning approach is mandatory.
• Heutagogy positions learners as key agents in
their educational transformation and empowers
them as independent problem solvers.
Bernard thinks we need heutagogical resources
26. so… here are some
creative thinking tools…
to reflect on & use
Heutagogy Curated Conversation
27. Bridget McKenzie
Bridget is interested in the Learning Planet
MODES Creative Methodical
Ways of
communicating Connotative Denotative
Ways of thinking
Divergent and
open-ended
Convergent and
judging
Ways of
perceiving
Inward and
reflecting
Outward and
observing
Ways of making
Poietic and
generative
Technical and
imitative
30. #digital Thom Cochrane (BYOD)
Pedagogy Andragogy Heutagogy
Productivity Collaboration Community
Reproduction Incrementation Re-initiation
Induction to supportive
learning community
Enabling user-
generated content
Enabling collaboration;
user-generated contexts
Reconceptualising
mobile social media
Reconceptualising
role of the teacher
Reconceptualising the
role of the learner
Thom continues to evolve the PAH continuum
33. Workshop Resources #myHeutagogy
We started with the question “is Heutagogy the Pedagogy of
Creativity?” and this curated conversation represents our answers
Workshop Activities
Do we need to think about how to encourage creativity?
Whose comments inspire you most – how can you use that?
Is creativity about freeing learners to explore?
How can you co-create learning activities for your learners?
Should facilitation be about inspiring independent learners or
completing shared tasks?
Some of the tables are for personal reflection and some are to
help in learning design. Can you use both?
This curated conversation was developed collaboratively on #FB
https://www.facebook.com/groups/606276602801146/
All comments welcome…
34. Creativity in Learning w/Heutagogy #wHday16 Resources
From Andragogy to Heutagogy
What is Heutagogy?
All You Need is Heutagogy
Heutagogy Community of Practice blog
How Schools Kill Creativity (Ken Robinson TEDx)
Learnity in Bucharest
Heutagogy & Lifelong Learning
Greenhouse for Creative Practitioners
Stewart Hase Heutagogy Blog
The Heutagogic Archive
The Learning Planet
John Davitt #FreeLearning
Thom Cochrane BYOD mobiles & Creative Pedagogies
Tony Hall Instagram
Contact @fredgarnett
36. Curated Conversations
We started Curated Conversations as a kind of “wisdom of
crowds” method for sharing deep knowledge quickly. A number
of people (12-20) with expertise or experience summarise their
understanding in 50 words. From these contributions both a
shared narrative emerges and some recommendations.
Previous Curated Conversations…
Education Innovation
Technology Innovation
Social Innovation for a Network Society
Digital Inclusion
Everything Unplugged (Learning Conversations)
What is Heutagogy? (a curated book)
British MOOCs
Technique derived from Oxford Muse conversation dinners