Facilitation as Midwifery: Facilitation and Praxis in Group Learning |
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Authors: | McMorland Judith Piggot-Irvine Eileen |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Management and Employment Relations, The University of Auckland, New Zealand;(2) Department of Education, Albany Campus, Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | This paper is an inquiry into practice for the purpose of reflection and theory proposal. We discuss the way in which we, as facilitators of action research/learning groups in diverse contexts, confront the challenge of assisting people to work and learn together in authentically collaborative ways. We each describe our very different respective practice examples (Eileen's based on productive and defensive routines; Judith's on sociodramatic exploration) and then collectively discern some substantial similarities in the way that we work. We have likened these similarities to the midwifery process, i.e., "colaboring" or facilitating the birth of whole and healthy group process in which honest and bilateral interactions of action and reflection occur. Finally, we present a meta-reflective account of the way that we have confronted the challenges of working together to write this article. We present this account as a model of a series of five deepening levels of challenge in collaborative learning. These levels reflect the challenge associated with a growth in awareness of both our own process of working together, and that of every other group with which we work. |
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Keywords: | group learning action research facilitation productive reasoning sociodrama group process |
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