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Arguably the most natural and powerful form of learning
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is through experience,
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or more precisely through reflection on doing.
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Also called experiential learning,
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it’s what prima ballerinas do
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after their performance at the national opera.
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But it also happens to boys that are sad
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because their father got angry
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when they played football in the living room.
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By the age of one,
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we all had our own painful encounter with
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experiential learning
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when we tried to walk, failed,
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fell and cried like, well a baby…
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And even though this was an unpleasant and
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discouraging exercise that lasted for months
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in the end
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we all made it.
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How is that possible?
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As soon as we fell and the first shock was over,
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our brain unconsciously began to make sense
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out of all of the information available
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to identify how this embarrassment occurred.
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It remembers that when we pushed ourselves up,
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everything was fine:
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our feet on the floor,
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our arms in position and our head
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and shoulders up right.
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Ready to go!
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When our upper leg muscles
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pulled our left foot 12.3% to the front
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at an angle of 23 degree,
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our arms didn’t compliment the movement
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and the ventricles in the inner ear,
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responsible for static balance,
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got confused for a second.
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When at the same moment the cat ran by,
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our eyes sent an alarming signal to the hippocampus
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and we completely lost it…
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Outch!
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Unconsciously this is how our brain analyses
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the relationship of events within our body
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or in the environment.
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It happens all the time as we learn to walk,
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talk,
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kiss,
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function in a fancy office
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or dance the salsa.
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Once we understand the connections between
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what went wrong,
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we know what we need to change
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when we try the next time.
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Experiential Learning
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can also be used explicitly to learn a new skill
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or to become better at what we already love doing.
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Here is how it works:
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First get yourself into a situation to experience.
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After, reflect on what happened.
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Then try to understand the relationships
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to form an abstract concept
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- if I do A,
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I get B.
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Last, decide what to do differently next time.
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Then do it again.
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Experiential learning is also believed to be responsible
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for the fact that musicians
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generally fare better at most tests,
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regardless of what they measure.
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People that practice an instrument
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not only engage their brain in motor,
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visual and auditory areas,
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but they also learn by reflecting on what they’re doing
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with a fast feedback loop
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– a wrong tone on the violin sounds too terrible
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to remain unnoticed.
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While playing they therefore not only learn to make music,
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but also that progress in general comes through practice,
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reflection,
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understanding,
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and repetition.
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You can use it with your friends
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or colleagues when working on a project.
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Silicon Valley start-ups do it
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when they tell their developers to get out of the building!
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After the interaction with real potential customers,
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the team gets together,
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analyses the feedback
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and decides what to do next.
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Tell us, what do you think?
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Is learning through reflecting on doing
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only good when acquiring new hands-on skills
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or is it also suitable to study science,
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math,
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the humanities
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or abstract art?