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10 Keys to Designing A Personal Lifelong Learning Process
By Catherine Franz
A Lifelong Learning Plan is a conscious, continuous
engagement in acquiring, assimilating and applying knowledge
and skills in the context of authentic, self-directed growth
and challenge. It is rare for individuals to take this
initiative. Most people operate on a "what they need now" plan
and typically attend educational institutions for their
training.
Lifelong Learning is a philosophy of approaching learning
as an integral, inseparable part of our life’s activities.
Here are ten guidelines to help you formulate your own
personalized Lifelong Learning Process.
1. Commit to approach learning as a lifelong journey.
Choose to keep it alive throughout your lifetime. You don't
need to attend formal educational institutions for this
process. In fact, you can learn more in small, consistent
spurts than you can in a classroom, if you set up your plan
correctly.
2. Maximize your resources. With lifelong learning, there
isn't a structure like you had in school, so it’s easy to
ignore and procrastinate. If you allow this, eventually the
"you snooze, you lose" theory will catch up with you. A prime
example is how changes in the national economy have hit the IT
industry these last few years. The companies that priorize
learning are still in the game, whereas their competitors who
focused on "what we need now" are out of business. Create a
system and plan that works and can last a lifetime. Keep
learning journals for each topic.
3. Maximize your environments. Identify and create settings
that support and inspire you both inside and outside your
home. How does the library spark your learning? How about the
mall, the park, or even McDonalds! Explore different
environments and label each one (e.g., "inspiring,"
"relaxing," "great for concentration.") What supplies help you
keeping your energy up? Do you need quiet for some learning
and busy environments for others?
4. Know how you learn. To learn effectively, know how you
learn. How do you take in information, process, and retain it?
There isn't one best way. Tie everything into a learning
purpose and vision. When and how often does you mind need a
break? Do you have reading spurts? How do you retain the
information -- by reading aloud, notes, summarizing in memory,
or sharing with others?
5. Tap into the power of your mind. Your mind’s power is
evident in everything you do. Analytical, critical and
creative thinking enables the mind to process, store, and
create all the facts and ideas it encounters. By practicing
different types and ways of thinking, you keep your mind
strong and flexible. Consider it "going to the gym" for your
mind! (Talking about how the mind works is the subject of a
huge tome, not a Top 10!)
6. Harness the power of words and ideas. Words, when
joined, form ideas, and are tools with enormous energy.
Whether writing a memo, letter, e-mail, article, or journal
entry, make each an opportunity to fulfill a learning goal.
Each is a chance to work toward improving and using words to
construct understandable ideas. Learn to express ideas in
writing. This will evolve into clearer thinking. Keep an idea
journal by theme or topic.
7. Absorb, retain, and demonstrate knowledge. What do you
do with the facts, opinions, and stories that you accumulate
daily? Listening helps absorption and memory skills, which
enables retention. Listen to a teleclass or book on tape, then
write your own version and master what you learned by moving
it into long-term memory. Listening can be compared to using a
camera. First, you view the image and focus (listening). Next,
you snap the picture (remembering). Finally, you print the
image (demonstrate knowledge). Mastering knowledge means being
able to apply it in other situations.
8. Value diversity. The greater part of our day involves
interacting with others. Experiencing other people’s
communication styles, learning methods, and the roles played
in groups and teams helps us to grow, prosper, open our minds
and develop new perceptions. Dealing with conflict, criticism,
and any points of vulnerability strengthens our ability to use
any situation as an opportunity to learn.
9. Take exceptionally good care of yourself. Physical and
mental health affects learning. Examine these aspects and set
up contingencies within your plan to identify and work through
all health challenges as soon as they appear.
10. Map your course. Maximize time, energy and focus by
defining a yearly learning theme. Subdivide into monthly
topics with time commitments. (Example: Ten years ago, I
defined a learning goal of three new computer steps in no more
than 15-minutes per day. It has compounded and saved time and
money ever since.) Minimize distractions by learning to "table
the other topics." Create a "next year" folder to contain
those great ideas and set up a review month of tabled topics
to decide how to use them in the following year.
Catherine Franz, a Certified Professional Marketing &
Writing Coach, specializes in product development, Internet
writing and marketing, nonfiction, training. Newsletters and
articles available at:
http://www.abundancecenter.com blog:
http://abundance.blogs.com
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