Social Learning Isn’t Just for Kids: Learning in Public at Conferences and Workshops

Here is a fantastic article from Beth’s Blog: How Non Profits Can Use Social Media, on how social media is shifting the way we all learn…

Social Learning Isn’t Just for Kids: Learning in Public at Conferences and Workshops

This past week was a busy one for leading workshops.   I was in Washington, DC where I did a session on social media strategy for a convening of Packard Grantees.

My participation included:

  • An interactive presentation on best practices for using social media for external communications
  • Peer discussion on use of online tools for collaboration for bounded networks, exploring some of the concepts in Digital Habits (each participant got a copy)
  • Half-Day Session: Social Media Strategy Game which included small group work for participants to come up with a strategy for both external communications and an internal learning network to share best practices.

I also lead a workshop on social media strategy for communications professionals who work with networks, nonprofits, and foundations. My reflections are here.

My reflections have mostly that has been around the subject matter of how nonprofits and foundations are thinking about and using social media.  But, I’m also interested in improving my skills as a trainer – especially facilitating social learning or learning in public.

I’ve heard that phrase “learning in public” a few times this week and I’m also seeing how social media accelerates this – especially at conferences and other places where we have typically gone for our professional development and opportunities for adult learning.

What is Social Learning or Learning in Public?

Learning in private is what most of us did in school.  You wrote your essay, studied your spelling words, took tests (without looking at anyone else’s answers). Learning was an individual, often solitary activity.    for many of us, that learning style carried over to our work culture where we are rewarded for our expertise and to keep private what we don’t know.

Many people call me an expert in social media – and when you’ve been given that label there is a certain pressure about having to know everything.  It may also happen when you have the word “scholar” in your title too.   But, I think that social media is unleashing a new opportunity for social learning or learning in public for adults.  (Thanks to Jeris to sending me the link)

And that can be fun too! Certainly less exhausting than having to know everything.

Creating an environment for learning in public means that it is okay to say “I don’t know” about an issue or problem and to ask others what they think.  When professionals acknowledge not knowing and reach out to a colleague, it not only opens us to learning, but it signals to others that they can acknowledge that there are things they don’t know – it begins to change the culture – whether that be the training room or within an organization or at a conference.   I find myself doing this on Twitter more and more.  Retweeting is boring.  I want to know what you think.

We are also learning in public when we engage in in-depth conversation whether it is offline or online, for example in the comments of a blog post or asking questions on Twitter.  Conversation is a “learning in public” tool – maybe one of the best.  Social media is a conversation engine.

Using social media and social networks successfully requires a culture shift away from learning in private to learning public or what Nancy White has called “Over the Shoulder Learning.”  How do you do this?  How do create an environment where it is okay to learn in public?  This environment can be a training workshop or it can be in an organization.  The answer comes from Eugene Eric Kim in a recent presentation he did about networks, “Be the Change You Want To See” – it’s about modeling.

Putting It Into Practice As a Facilitator

As social media becomes more and more present at conferences as way to capture, document and share what is happening at conferences, presenters will need to become more comfortable with public learning and integrate a social strategy.  Jeremiah Owyang has a terrific post with some advice on how to do this.  He suggests:

  • Prepare More Than Ever
  • Know Your Audience’s Social Technology Adoption.
  • Monitor the Backchannel While Speaking
  • Develop Backup Resources to Monitor
  • Interact with the Audience
  • Practice Two-Fisted Speaking

I’ve thought about this pretty deeply for the past few years – how can you make your presentation as responsive and interactive with the audience.   During the panel I organized at SXSW last year, I incorporated audience interaction without having to do the two-fisted speaking which is distracting for me.  Here’s what I did:

  • Created a unique #hashtag for the session and encouraged the audience to use it
  • Designated back channel moderators in the room to answer questions, throw links in the discussion while it was happening.  Also, I introduced the back channel moderators to the audience at the beginning and at appropriate times ask them to verbalize what they were reading in the Twitter stream and we addressed.

For the preparation piece,  I spend more time researching the audience than anything else.  If follow their social media ant trails and screen capture examples that show up in my presentations.  I even ask them to twitter their answers or provide more insights for the audience via the back channel.  I tell the audience up front that they might be part of the presentation.

Illustration by Carl Haggerty via David Wilcox, Social Reporter

See larger illustration here

Offline/Online Interaction

Many conferences have an intentional, overall social strategy to raise the profile of the conference or document the learning.   Next week the Communications Network Conference will unleash a Gorilla Capture Team who live twitter, use FLIP cameras, digital cameras, and blogs to cover the conference.   They’ve set up some fabulous training materials and guidelines for the capture team.

I love the way they’ve made fun for the capture team to document the conference and their evaluation questionnaire.  What I wonder about is the next step of engaging people or sharing the learning with people who are not in the room?

I know as part of my social strategy for presenting,  I’m live tweeting to people who aren’t in the room but could add to the conversation.

David Wilcox shared the above diagram from Carl Haggerty that illustrates this point.

  • Are you learning public?
  • Is your organization engaging in social learning?
  • Why or why not?

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