Out of context, I wish to cite At with following statement:
>Obviously, again we must bear in mind that the
>formal concept of a LO was not known in those times.
Do we have the formal concept of a LO today? I must have missed
something.
And if we had such a concept, would it help those who do not form a LO to
become one?
Would it help those who do not form a LO to recognise a LO?
Would it help those who form a LO to maintain their LO?
I thought that a formal concept of a LO is something that emerges out of a
LO through a process of digestive learning and which is thus tightly tied
to that LO, as for instance the constitution of the USA emerged out of the
USA's learning experience and is tied to the USA - or as the Bible
"belongs" to the Christians or the Koran to Muslims etc.
Just adding some quesitons...
Liebe Gruesse,
Winfried
--"Winfried Dressler" <winfried.dressler@voith.de>
Learning-org -- Hosted by Rick Karash <rkarash@karash.com> Public Dialog on Learning Organizations -- <http://www.learning-org.com>