Dialogic Explorations

Transformative learning and the experience of rhythmic dilemmas

Paterson's Land, University of Edinburgh (Photography: Michel Alhadeff-Jones, 2017)

Paterson's Land, University of Edinburgh (Photography: Michel Alhadeff-Jones, 2017)

I was recently in Edinburgh to participate to a one-day conference on Transformative Learning theory (Transformative Learning Theory and Praxis: New and Old Perspectives) organized by the Institute for Academic Development of the University of Edinburgh. From a rhythmanalytical perspective, the papers presented and the discussions that followed triggered many interesting reflections. Retrospectively, it appears to me that there was an invisible thread between most of the communications presented: being committed to foster transformative learning may bring educators and learners to experience and question specific forms of rhythmic dilemmas.

Rhythmic dissonance between different organizational cultures

I started my own communication around "The Rhythms of Transformative Learning" by sharing with the audience the "rhythmic dissonance" I experienced when I taught in the United States for the first time. As I described it elsewhere (Alhadeff-Jones, 2017, p.1):

"In 2004, when I moved to New York City and designed my first life history seminar at Columbia University, I had to adjust a process that used to be facilitated over 30 sessions [in Switzerland] to fit within a five-week period. It required me to divide the number of class hours by two. The compression – some would call it an acceleration – was not only concerning the amount of time spent with students; it was also affecting the frequency of our encounters and the learning process that was occurring between each session."

I experienced this episode as a source of dissonance for two reasons. First, because it challenged the way I used to conceive the activity of teaching in higher education in Switzerland. Second, because it confronted me to the political, economical and psycho-sociological issues raised by the requirement to 'accelerate' the learning process involved in my course.

Temporal double binds within institutional expectations

In her presentation on "High Impact Learning in Higher Education", Kris Acheson-Clair (with J.D. Dirkx and C.N. Shealy) also expressed some of the dilemmas experienced in the field of academic development. Their presentation revealed what I have identified as a "temporal double bind" (Alhadeff-Jones, 2017, p.104), that is a temporal constraint shaped by tacit contradictions. In the case presented by Acheson-Clair, on the one hand, the institution (i.e., the university) requires that training programs implemented display 'high impact learning', that is a learning that participates to the learner's transformation, mainly understood as a process that should contribute to their employability and efficiency in the tasks they have to accomplish. On the other hand, the institution requires such high impact learning to be measurable in the short term (i.e., following the training implemented, or after learning opportunities provided, such as traveling abroad). The dissonance appears embedded between two requirements (transformation and evaluation/accountability) whose temporalities are in contradictions with each other: the first one may be difficult to anticipate, as it may require a long duration to be processed by the learner; the second one is inscribed in a fixed temporality, prescribed by the organization and oriented toward the short term.

Rhythmic mismatch between the nature of the task and participants' habits

Sarah Moore in her presentation on "technology-enhanced learning" and Daphne Loads in her communication around "collaborative close readings" (based on the use of poetry and other forms of texts) in professional development, both provided examples of learning activities potentially experienced as disorienting for the participants involved (e.g., university lecturers or professors). The first one illustrated how the use of new technology by professors in higher education may be lived as a destabilizing experience. The second one illustrated how reading policy documents or academic articles, as if one was reading poetry, also constitutes a practice that potentially challenges one's assumptions about the meaning of teaching or doing research in higher education. In both case, it appeared to me that part of the dissonance that may have been experienced by participants has to do with the fact that the activity promoted (e.g., using real-time technology or exercising slow reading) appears to disrupt the usual pace associated with the professional activity (i.e., teaching or doing research). Such disruption may thus provoke anxiety (how to cope with the requirement involved in the use of new technology?) or impatience (how reading poetry may contribute to my everyday practical needs?)

The experience of rhythmic dilemmas embedded in transformative learning

Rhythmic dissonance, temporal double bind and rhythmic mismatch, represent three forms (among others) or rhythmic dilemmas. They confront educators and learners to complementary, antagonistic and contradictory temporal requirements whose complexity may appear at first as destabilizing. On the one hand, in congruence with Mezirow's transformative learning theory, one may assume that the experience of such dilemmas may trigger transformative processes. On the other hand, one has to admit that whenever such rhythmic dilemmas remain tacit or unsolvable, the contradictions they reveal may become a source of dysfunctional behaviors or frustration.

How to make rhythmic dilemmas a source of meaningful learning?

Following my presentation, a participant asked me: "What did you learn from your experience of rhythmic dissonance in the United States and how did you accommodate to it?" Such a question is crucial. Retrospectively, it seems to me that there are at least three key aspects to consider:

  1. It may be obvious, but there is at first a need to identify what kind of learning can be reasonably expected considering the timeframe of the training, and what type of learning goes beyond. Some very meaningful learning may occur almost instantaneously, when others require a sustained effort (e.g., self-reflection, dialogue). It is not always easy to determine in advance and it may become by itself a matter of discussion between the learners and the educator.

  2. It seems crucial to acknowledge the temporal limitations that characterize the learning setting, to make sure that there is no misunderstanding with participants about what can really be accomplished through the limited timeframe of the training.

  3. It is critical that the educator raises awareness around the rhythmic dilemmas that determine the setting, to draw the learners' attention around that dimension of the training.

  4. Whenever needed, it may also be necessary to consider challenging the temporal framework of the educational setting, so that it can accommodate the learning objectives that were set by the institution. This point is probably the most sensitive one, as it suggests that trainers (and learners) are willing to challenge the temporal status quo to advocate for alternative educational rhythms.

In my own experience, I sometimes use the metaphor of the vaccine to describe the learning process. Whenever the time frame of the training remains limited, my goal becomes to inoculate some ideas, knowing that whenever the learners may be willing to use them, they may be able to do a 'booster shot' later. What becomes critical then, is to make sure that there is an opportunity to sustain the dialogue with learners afterwards. So, there is very early on in the process the assumption, that learning occurs through a form of repetition that happens on a long duration. What is at stake becomes then to provide the opportunity to sustain the reflection and the dialogue beyond the formal setting of a specific training.


Cite this article: Alhadeff-Jones, M. (2017, April 27). Transformative learning and the experience of rhythmic dilemmas. Rhythmic Intelligence. http://www.rhythmicintelligence.org/blog/2017/4/27/transformative-learning-and-the-experience-of-rhythmic-dilemmas

The rhythms of on-the-job professional coaching

Protecting time for self-reflection.png

Training, coaching and organizational learning

I was recently invited to give a lecture on the theme "training, coaching and organizational learning" to team leaders working for an institution providing home-based health-care services. What was at stake in this session was to determine how to best help team leaders to coach their coworkers in order for them to benefit the most from their continuing education and self-development efforts.

The moment of continuing education

For the professionals working in this institution, the 'moment' of continuing education appears through different formats, such as on-task training and mentoring, punctual out-of-work training sessions, or longer training curricula provided by external institutions. If their is an agreement about the importance of sustaining skills development programs, the challenges appear whenever team leaders have to help professionals appropriate for themselves the plethora of learning opportunities they are exposed to. From a temporal perspective, this issue is fascinating.

Time for learning and time to develop one's professional posture

What emerged from our discussion was the contrast between the time spent in training and the time required to appropriate for oneself its contribution. In addition, participants also pointed the tension that exists between the temporality inherent to instrumental learning (e.g., acquiring specific knowledge and skills to solve specific problems) and the time required to develop one's one professional posture, that is the specific way someone invests one's function and interpret one's role as a professional. The temporality of "professionalization" is inscribed in a much longer time frame that requires a different kind of self-reflection.

Protecting time for introspection...

Toward the end of our discussion, there was an agreement about the fact that coaching coworkers to help them become better professionals goes beyond the time spent in formal training. It requires one to protect a slow rhythm of introspection that should allow the worker to reflect on one's own experience in order to reframe the meanings of one's own learning.

... And sustaining a stream of self-reflection

Within organizations, the challenges comes from the fact that such a time may often seem unavailable. This observation triggers interesting questions about the temporality of coaching. On the one hand, there is no doubt that allocating time for people to reflect on their experience is critical and needed; such an effort has to be protected and find its place in the work schedule. On the other hand, it may also be interesting to question how such a reflective time may be integrated in daily routines that are already parts of the existing working organization. Is there a way for instance to provide reflective time through informal opportunities of dialogue? Is it possible to integrate reflective activities such as journalling within on-going professional activities?

What about you?

When do you find time, if any, to reflect about the meanings of your activity at work? Which opportunities are provided by the institution you are working for to sustain such a process of self-reflection? Do you have routines or rituals through which you proceed?

If you have the responsibility to coach coworkers, when are the formal and informal time through which you accompany them and assist them in their own self-reflective journey?

Feel free to share you experience in the comment section below. Thank you!


Cite this article: Alhadeff-Jones, M. (2016, October 14). The rhythms of on-the-job professional coaching. Rhythmic Intelligence. http://www.rhythmicintelligence.org/blog/2016/10/14/the-rhythms-of-on-the-job-professional-coaching

Preventing school violence: The value of raising rhythmic awareness

Time and Power in Organizations

Earlier this month, I facilitated a workshop at the University of Geneva on the theme "Time and Power in Organizations". The aim of this short training session was to bring the participants (e.g., school managers and school leaders) to critically reflect on the temporal dimensions of their everyday practice. The main goal was to bring them to take some distance with their daily conflicting experience with time (e.g., stress related to the burden of e-mails, conflicting agendas) to interpret it not only as a matter of 'time management', but also as a key expression of the power dynamics they experience on a daily basis (with students, teachers, colleagues and the hierarchy) and a locus for developing their own agency.

Experiencing temporal constraints

Our discussion was mostly based on the descriptions of participants' experience of "temporal constraints" (Alhadeff-Jones, 2017). Such an experience suggests that one's activity may be experienced as confined, bounded, restricted or put under tension due to the influence of specific rhythms, such as physical and natural ones (e.g., alternance day-night, seasons), biological ones (e.g., digestion, sleep), psychological ones (e.g., recurring moods or behaviors), or social rhythms (e.g., routines, programs, calendars implemented by an institution or a group of people).

Identifying rhythmic patterns of activity

As we were navigating the temporal tensions experienced by those professionals, the strategic importance of identifying rhythmic patterns of activity was emerging. Thus, our conversation evolved from the initial identification of conflicts existing for instance between the school calendar (August to June), the administrative calendar (January to December) and the political calendar (pluri-annual), to a more detailed analysis of situations involving regular patterns of activities, such as agressive behaviors between children.

The Christmas tree syndrome

At some point, the discussion revolved around what a participant nick-named the "Christmas tree syndrome" which he referred to the significant tensions that raise between children toward the end of the year, and often result in violent behaviors at school. From a rhythmical perspective, this syndrome demonstrates the cumulative effects associated with heterogeneous rhythms (physiological, cultural, financial, school-related, and natural-environmental) participating to a specific momentum toward the Christmas period, as experienced in school:

  • Increased tiredness building up at the eve of the vacation period;

  • Raising tensions emerging within some families regarding the economical burden of Christmas;

  • Increased rivalry between children at school regarding specific gifts expectations;

  • Disappointment among some students who received weak results at the end of the first grading period;

  • Changes in weather (e.g., snow) affecting moods and behaviors.

The awareness demonstrated by some of those professionals regarding the recurrence of this 'syndrome' constitutes a first step to envision the prevention of agressive behaviors from a rhythmic perspective. When discussed, phenomena such as tiredness, economical disparities, rivalries between children, school results, or environmental influences do not appear as 'revolutionary' dimensions to consider. They are part of the everyday life in schools. However, when considered through their rhythmic features and the fact that they display cumulative effects, they demonstrate another dimension: they are inscribed in a specific temporality. Such a fact is congruent with existing research in chronopsychology (e.g., Testu, 2008), showing for instance that behaviors such as bullying evolve through specific rhythms.

Anticipation and regulation of rhythmic behaviors as empowering strategies

What appears at first as an unavoidable feature of the end-of-the-year period can also be interpreted as the consequence of a movement that evolves through time and that can be therefore anticipated and regulated. Sure, nobody can control rain or snow, and their physiological effects on children's body and mind. Economical disparities, exhaustion and family dynamics seem also out of reach for school practitioners. Similarly, the definition of the grading periods is a matter of policy that cannot be changed by teachers or managers. Taken separately, each of those phenomena does not systematically burst into violent behaviors. Violence may occur when there is a cumul of tensions at a specific time of the year.

If the experience of violence constitutes a crucial expression of power dynamics in school, then the rhythmic awareness of how it may evolve through time constitutes a critical instrument for school management and empowerment. Because such temporalities are known and because their effects can be anticipated, their understanding constitutes a key resource to consider when violence prevention becomes a matter of reflection within an organization. They may become explicit topics of conversation and even raise discussions between teachers and students.

Work remains to be done in order to conceive how such a rhythmic awareness can be promoted and how it relates to other aspects of life in schools.

What about your own rhythmic awareness?

Are you aware of specific rhythmic patterns of activity that determine your professional life and responsibilities? What are they? When do they occur? What kinds of rhythm do they involve? How do you learn to anticipate them? Can they be regulated?

Are you aware of references or articles around the topic of violence prevention and temporality?

Feel free to post your comments below and share your experience and knowledge around this topic.


Cite this article: Alhadeff-Jones, M. (2016, September 30). Preventing school violence: The value of raising rhythmic awareness. Rhythmic Intelligence. http://www.rhythmicintelligence.org/blog/2016/9/30/preventing-school-violence-the-value-of-rhythmic-awareness