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Lessons in Learning, e-Learning, and Training: Perspectives and Guidance for the Enlightened Trainer
 
 
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Lessons in Learning, e-Learning, and Training: Perspectives and Guidance for the Enlightened Trainer (Paperback)

~ Roger C. Schank (Author) "It often seems that everybody talks and nobody listens..." (more)
Key Phrases: story database, dragon story, New York, Carnegie Mellon, European History (more...)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Stories are the jewels of learning and Roger Schank is the prince of  storytelling. This collection of training stories is a must read!"
--Elliott Masie, founder, e-Learning CONSORTIUM

"Learning has become a strategic advantage in business over the last decade, but in trying to ‘optimize’ that advantage we've sterilized the process. In this book, Roger reminds us that teaching and learning can be fun and effective. It's like having a long personal conversation with Roger--it's fun, interesting, and illuminating."
--Tom Kelly, vice president, Cisco

"Roger Schank is a genius, his ideas are insightful, and provocative. His latest book is a must read for those who want to stay at the leading edge."
--Brandon Hall, lead researcher and CEO, Brandon-Hall.com



Product Description

From Roger C. Schank—one of the most highly respected thinkers, writers, and speakers in the training, learning, and e-learning community—comes a compelling book of essays that explore the myriad issues related to challenges faced by today’s instructional designers and trainers. The essays offer a much-needed perspective on what trainers do, why they do it, and how they do it. Lessons in Learning, e-Learning, and Training serves as a barometer to the issues that often perplex trainers and helps to illuminate three main points: what can and cannot be taught; how people think and learn; and what technology can really effectively provide. In addition, each essay is filled with practical guidance and includes a summary of ideas, tips and techniques, things to think about, checklists, and other job aids. 

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Pfeiffer; 1 edition (February 14, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0787976660
  • ISBN-13: 978-0787976668
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #634,047 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Just Learn It!, June 12, 2005
By Jay Cross (Berkeley, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
A few days ago, I finished reading Roger Schank's latest book, Lessons in Learning, e-Learning, and Training, and I've recommended it to everyone with whom I've spoken at any length since. If you follow Roger's work, you won't find many new concepts. What's new is that Roger has chiselled his messages in bold relief so that only the totally clueless can fail to get the point. He eats his own cooking by bringing his material to life through compelling stories.

Admittedly, Roger is a lightening rod. No one who has experienced him is ambivalent. Many people can't get past his faux-movie star persona: Roger's a big, buff, bald, larger-than-life character who beats George Hamilton in the tanning department and tops Salvador Dali in ego. He's also an original thinker whose acolytes from the Institute for Learning Sciences have spread his gospel far and wide. He particularly irks academics because he's one of them, having been a professor at Stanford, Yale, Carnegie-Mellon, and Northwestern.

Ruth Clark sums up Lessons in Learning, e-Learning, and Training in the foreword: "The basic premise of this book is that learning is an inductive process. In everyday words, learning occurs by experience, and the best instruction offers learners opportunities to distill their knowledge and skills from interactive stories."

From the book:

"People who learn on their own learn exactly what they find interesting and potentially useful."

"For years I have been preaching that the big three issues in education are reasoning, communication, and human relations. Schools must enable students to learn these skills, that they are more important in daily life by far than physics, mathematics, or ancient history."

"Classrooms are, for the most part, a waste of time."

"We define ourselves through the stories we choose to tell. Story exchange is what conversation is all about. Stories are at the center of our ability to understand the world around us."

"Time constraints are the enemy of learning by doing. It takes time to practice - and without practice there is no real learning."

Socratic Arts links to many of Roger's papers and to his hyperbook Engines for Education. Excerpt from Engines:

Mostly, [kids] should be learning that learning is fun. They should be learning that expanding one's horizons is fun, that learning you were wrong about something is not so painful, and that taking an educational risk is worth doing. They should be learning that school is a good place to do these things. The children of today dread going back to school in September, dread exams, dread receiving their grades, and are generally fearful. No wonder school is stressful. But there is no reason children cannot have intellectual fun, cannot be excited by ideas, and cannot be challenged to acquire new knowledge. Natural learning is a basically enjoyable thing to do. Two-year-olds love to learn. Many adults love to learn. Only school-age children associate learning with fear of failure. We must get the fear of failure out of the school system. Cramming for an exam or trying to please a teacher ought not to be the goal of those seeking an education. If we fail to understand this in a profound way, there will be no helping our schools or our children.

Roger's latest Educational Outrage column rants about criticism of Trump University (of which he is Chief Learning Officer). Why does the press take on Donald Trump for naming a university for himself but accept it when Leland Stanford did the same thing? Actually, Stanford named the school for his son, Leland Stanford, Jr., but that's beside the point. The reaction of the press sets Roger in motion on an old but worthy rant:

The question is why school teaches the subjects that it does and whether that should be allowed to continue. Most of what you learn in high school is irrelevant to anyone's real life. Ask any high school student - they know this all too well. The truth is that unless you want to be a professor, most of what you learn in college or graduate school can be quite irrelevant as well. Even MBA programs, practical as they may be in principle, tend to forget that the students are just there to learn how to do well in business. Professors, who are of course quite academic, might not be the best determiners of what students want to learn or need to learn. Typically they just teach what they want to teach, which is not the same thing. The high school curriculum, school incarnate, was designed by a bunch of professors in 1892. They were not thinking about what students might need to learn in order to succeed in today's world.

...

I have always said that everything wrong with education starts with the letter P:

1. Publishers - because they dominate the world of education the way it was.
2. Politicians - because they only care about measurable change in existing education, hence tests.
3. Princeton - or any great university that requires SATs and a fixed HS curriculum that was designed in 1892.
4. Princeton - home of the education testing service the great evil of our time.
5. Press - which intimidates all schools with publishing results of minute differences in test score results.
6. Parents - who insist that school be like it was when they went to school.
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Answers to Real World Learning Problems, March 23, 2005
The key to this book is summed up in the first chapter:

People who learn on their own learn exactly what they find interesting or potentially useful.

After making this point he goes on for the rest of the book telling stories. Mr. Schank uses stories as a teaching aid. Stories move material from the what he wants to tell the student, to the this is "interesting or potentially useful" column in the student mind. Motivated students learn.

The next strongest point is that people learn mostly by doing. Some things are hard to train by doing. How do you train Art History by doing? Well, how about you give the class some pictures, with the instruction that some of them are old masters and some are forgeries. The class assignment is to determine which is which. Now the students have to really examine the pictures. They have to learn techniques, they have to DO!.

Finally he gets to eLearning and to a discussion on what high school and the rest of our educational system teaches. As I look at the job the local schools are doing, someone should ask these questions, but the teachers union isn't going to like the answers.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Worth the money..., January 3, 2007
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
I was looking for a few quick tips and some basics to get me started in the eLearning category. This book delivered on that need. It reads like a motivational speech and most of the content seems to come straight from the author's own experience but still good content given my newness to the subject area and body of knowledge.
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