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    work with me

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    A blog about learning design & facilitation by Dwayne Hodgson

    Entries in bicycles (2)

    Friday
    Aug132010

    On Letting Go: Teaching My Son How to Ride a Bike

    Today my son, Isaac, age 4 and a bit, learned to ride a bike without training wheels. This is a rite of passage for any child, but as he is the youngest member of a somewhat bicycle-obsessed family, the accomplishment warranted many high-fives, a iPhone video (see below), proud emails to the grandparents and a celebratory bowl of ice cream. .... In my work, I've created many learning designs to help people master long, complicated planning processes (e.g. Results-Based Management, Dialogue Education, The Natural Step). Usually, I start by explaining the underlying theory in plain language and metaphors, and then help the learners complete a series of logically-sequenced, hands-on learning tasks that divide the process into manageable chunks. For most of my learners, this method of instruction combining theory-practice-reflection works well. But I'm not sure I can teach someone to ride a bike this way. For starters, I don't really understand the physics of how a bicycle works; and even after 35 years of riding, the best instructions I can provide are "Sit on the seat, pedal, don't look backwards, steer the handlebars towards the side that you're falling.....Don't look backwards! Watch-out!...." Bam!

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    Thursday
    Mar042010

    How to Go Nowhere Fast

    It's dark. It smells like sweat. The music is pounding at 120 beats per minutes -- almost as fast as my heart as I rise out of the saddle to conquer the next hill. My thighs burn, I'm gasping for breath. The leader is yelling at us to go faster. There'd better be an ice cream stand at the top!

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