- Who We Are
- Topics
- By Subject Area
- dummy
- By Level
- Projects
- Projects Column 1
- Agency by Design
- Artful Thinking
- Arts as Civic Commons
- Art|Play
- Causal Learning Projects
- Center for Digital Thriving
- Citizen-Learners: A 21st Century Curriculum and Professional Development Framework
- Creando Comunidades de Indagación (Creating Communities of Inquiry)
- Creating Communities of Innovation
- Cultivating Creative & Civic Capacities
- Cultures of Thinking
- EcoLEARN Projects
- Educating with Digital Dilemmas
- Envisioning Innovation in Education
- Global Children
- Growing Up to Shape Our Place in the World
- Projects Column 2
- Higher Education in the 21st Century
- HipHopEX
- Humanities and the Liberal Arts Assessment (HULA)
- Idea Into Action
- Implementation of The Good Project Lesson Plans
- Inspiring Agents of Change
- Interdisciplinary & Global Studies
- Investigating Impacts of Educational Experiences
- JusticexDesign
- Leadership Education and Playful Pedagogy (LEaPP)
- Leading Learning that Matters
- Learning Innovations Laboratory
- Learning Outside-In
- Making Ethics Central to the College Experience
- Making Learning Visible
- Multiple Intelligences
- Navigating Workplace Changes
- Next Level Lab
- Projects Column 3
- Out of Eden Learn
- Pedagogy of Play
- Project DELTA
- Reimagining Digital Well-being
- Reimagining Early Childhood Education
- Re-imagining Migration
- ROUNDS
- Signature Pedagogies in Global Education
- Talking With Artists Who Teach
- Teaching for Understanding
- The Good Project
- The Good Starts Project
- The Studio Thinking Project
- The World in DC
- Transformative Repair
- Visible Thinking
- Witness Tree: Ambassador for Life in a Changing Environment
- View All Projects
- Projects Column 1
- Resources
- Professional Development
How Fast Fish Sink or Swim: Adopting an Agentive View of Learners
PUBLISHED: 2021AUTHORS: Tina Grotzer, Emily Gonzalez, and Tessa Forshaw
Workforce development programs have at their core, conceptions of human beings and what they are capable of. In a series of briefs, we set forth a broadened notion of human learners as Next Level Learners that accounts for thriving in a workforce context. This first brief invites us to consider learners as agentive within and across contexts. Inspired by the quote above, it focuses on agency within the interactions between learners and their environments. It draws upon research in the learning sciences, neuroscience, and cognitive science to reposition how we think about the relevant variables and the supporting environment. In education writ large, it is common to aim for engaged, attentive learners—people who deeply learn the content that is presented to them. We agree that this is important to achieving and maintaining mobility and stability in the workforce today. However, we argue that it is not nearly enough. Like “fast fish” that create eddies and vortices to push off from to propel performance, we suggest that humans must be able to be agentive in their learning and to learn within malleable contexts that they can actively adjust to be supportive of their growth and performance. The brief presents the cognitive science behind why this aspect of Next Level Learning that we refer to as “fast fish learning”—of being agentive and leveraging contexts—presents a more powerful workforce development vision to adopt and for whether displaced workers ultimately sink or swim.