learn.5tein.com Jared Stein's grad-school-community blog on teaching and learning.

15Sep/093

Questions re. solitude and learning

I take my very broad initial question ("What impact does solitude have on learning?") from my passion consideration and explore it:

Definitions and Assumptions

"solitude"...
...is a neutral or positive state of aloneness ("loneliness" is a negative)
...is a form of disconnecting from others, not from information
...in (post)modern American culture (may be) diminishing (through social media)
...has (some) connection to (some kinds of) learning
...may affect some learners more than others
..may be naturally more attractive to some learners than others
...(may be) related to individualism, creativity, self-reliance, independence
...as a mode for learning can be tested and measured through experimental group(s)

The last assumption is the most tenuous, but I might get around to that yet!

Expansion, Rephrasing, and Refinement

(My brainstorming is far looser that those done in class last week.)

What (impact | affect) does solitude have on (learning | e-learning | creativity | attitudes toward learning, e.g. self-reliance)?
Does e-learning occur in more or less solitude than traditional learning?
Is there a historical trend visible in observations of teaching from solitude toward collective/collaborative learning?
How much solitude do modern learners prefer?
What are teachers' attitudes toward solitary learning?
Is solitude a common observable element in the lives of high-achievers?
Is solitude a correlative to student achievement?
What are the cognitive processes of individuals in solitude?
(Define "solitude"?)
How is learning different from creating?
Is solitude an advantage or disadvantage for informal learning?
(When | why | how) do (solitary | self) learners seek input from (others | experts | peers)?
How do cycles of solitude and group interaction vary amongst different learners?
(Define "different"?)
What environmental design decisions may support learner solitude?
Does (development of | positive attitudes toward | proclivity to) (self-reliance | solitude) increase learner (interaction with | exploration of) (open) educational resources?
<Your question or variant here>

This was my first foray into any sort of concerted examination of this question, so I'm content that the results are all over the map. I don't know if I'm closer to anything usable here in any pragmatic sense, but I certainly have more to chew on.

As I write these questions my mind can't help but leap ahead to the question of support for such a study. Who would be interested in finding out the impact of solitude on learning? Organizations with interest in supporting creativity or the arts might be more interested, and so I may reconsider this question

Comments (3) Trackbacks (0)
  1. More questions and clarifications:
    (Define “informal”.)
    How important is members’ solitary work for (individual | collective) success of self-forming online learning communities?

  2. “…is a form of disconnecting from others, not from information.” Since information sources come to us “asynchronously” from other people, does solitude imply a disconnection from synchronicity, not from people?

    The idea of the cycle of async / sync seems really interesting.

    If this exercise has given you more to chew on, then it’s been successful. Now see where the shower, dishes, and lawn mowing take you. As for who would fund, what sounds like a “higher risk” study than someone who brazenly rejects the conventional wisdom about the messianic role of always-on social media in learning?

  3. @David
    I think its a challenging question, but also that the semantics matter in this distinction. We can say that literacy allows us to talk to dead people (as Gardner reminds us)–is that the same as talking to people? I’m inclined to answer that solitude requires lack of interactivity with living people, rather than use synchronicity as the distinguishing factor. I suspect there are a myriad of factors that originate from the social that can affect intellectual and creative pursuits that are absent in solitude (e.g. peer pressure, scrutiny, digressions, politeness).

    But I do have to now wonder if there is a difference in solitary experiences that are connected to programmed data networks (e.g. Google, Wikipedia), vs disconnected, period. I suppose one could relate it to wandering a library, but there is an addictive quality to clicking hyperlinks that may not be comparable.

    Who would fund it? Maybe no one. Perhaps the NEA — not the National Education Association, mind you, but the National Endowment for the Arts? Any organization that is invested in studying the psychology of creativity, perhaps. I’ll have to consider this further…


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