My Practice

My Practice

My work is held in a principle of #WorkingOutLoud , whereby i share my evolving thinking as i travel. It’s reflective practice and in this work some ideas solidify, whilst others remain nebulous, or fail.

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There is an archaeology and?architecture ?to this work and way of working: most of the central ideas in my practice i can trace back to being both trans-disciplinary and evolutionary in nature. In that sense i am inescapably a connector and?storyteller , a discipline which is held less in certainty than constant curiosity.

Under this method of working, there are times when my work is divergent, sometimes terrifyingly so, and other moments when it converges. It’s a rather self predatory approach whereby one has to consume one’s own certainty to move forward: latterly i have tried to formalise this approach with the ‘Fragments’ work (where i deface and deconstruct my own legacy work around learning theory, methodology, and practice).

Over the last ten years or so i have found some organising principles: the overarching one is the notion of the?Social Age ?(whilst although the definition has changed, the paradigmatic nature of change persists). Today i describe my work as happening at the intersection of formal and social systems. It is consistently research based, evidence informed, and increasingly dialogue based.

Latterly you will have seen that i am finding some vertical organising principles, as well as horizontal connectivity: so the context of the Social Age requires us to redefine the Organisation (‘The Socially Dynamic Organisation’ book), requires leadership at the intersection (‘Social Leadership’ and it’s modular aspects of ‘Quiet Leadership’ and ‘Daily Practice’), social collaboration at scale (‘Social Learning’ and the associated work on ‘Trust’, ‘Communities’, and ‘Power’), and a broader understanding of change itself and the culture that forms the backdrop to that.

I think my current research and writing reflects this: ‘Identity ’, ‘Social Currencies ’, and ‘Experimentation and Failure ’. These are broadly granular aspects of that defined system, not specifically challenging to that system of understanding itself.

If (and it’s always an ‘if’) i can pull this work together, i think it will define the first major book on ‘The Social Age’ itself.

With all of this in mind, i have started to spend some time considering my own practice, and this sketch is a first attempt to do that: today, i will take a broad tour of this space.

I should stress that this whole ecosystem that i seem to have created and inhabit is almost entirely accidental: however, by good fortune, partly as a result of momentum, and partly due to the?communities ?that inhabit it, it does seem to work. At least for me, and for now.

The Blog is still my first reflective space: the principles that i had when i founded it remain true today. To write for myself, to be unafraid of exploring, to avoid certainty, and to retain a positive nature and tone to this work (not to avoid conflict, but to always be constructive).

With over two thousand articles, covering a very broad range of topics, the Blog remains (for me at least) the primary landscape of my work, and the first place to dig to explore the taxonomy and archaeology of the ideas within it.

Inherently this space is trans-disciplinary and it is relatively easy for me to see the origins and foundational nature of certain ideas: the way my work frequently relates to landscape and uses visual-spatial ideas to navigate. The way it refers to social vs constructed systems. The way it focuses on ‘meaning ’ as a created artefact, not a natural phenomena. The granular and tribal nature of social systems, and the tendency to clump and cluster. I see ‘power’ as a foundational construct to understand most of this. And latterly a focus on the ethics and values underlying individual behaviours within the system. And so much more.

There is no natural boundary to this work: it is, essentially, an understanding of how the world is changing, and how we will need to reformulate our systems of organisation, productivity, effectiveness, education, government, and belief, as well as associated systems of trade, freedom, belonging, habitation, innovation, change, and society.

So quite a lot.

It’s not intentionally ambitious: simply that there are no natural boundaries.

Through this week i will expand upon aspects of this reflection.

Julian - love it of course, but this phrase "one has to consume one’s own certainty to move forward" is key. Every industry needs that, I find echoes of that in Amazon's "Day 1" principle, but wow does the #learninganddevelopment #training world need that thinking...at scale! I think if you and maybe Donald Clark built a course on how to apply critical thinking to learning theories and then @willthalheimer and Clark Quinn built another course on myth debunking, package those two up and sell them into undergrad and grad programs and you'd both make tons of money and raise the intellectual level of the industry by an order of magnitude.

Julian Stodd

Author, Researcher, Artist, Explorer

2 年

Mark - you may appreciate the archaeology in this - i will expand on this thinking through the week. I’m just writing this evening about knowledge artefacts and fragments of failure too…

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