Person-orientation 1.0

Lese­zeit: 21 Minu­ten

Note (15.02.2024): Last updated on 23.09.2021 (chan­ge­log). This page has been repla­ced by a cur­rent ver­si­on and is available here as an archi­ve for the AEL book ver­si­on 1.0 until fur­ther notice. 

… but this tech­ni­cal infra­struc­tu­re only forms the frame­work. Only the (par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry) dia­lo­gues and the rela­ti­onships bet­ween them are the glue [sic!], that holds ever­y­thing tog­e­ther: the vir­tu­al and phy­si­cal spaces.” (trans­la­ted with DeeplPro) 

Kers­tin Mayr­ber­ger (2019, S. 44)1 

The Agi­le Edu­ca­tio­nal Lea­der­ship approach is deve­lo­ped here from the con­text of edu­ca­ti­on and digi­ta­li­sa­ti­on or, more spe­ci­fi­cal­ly, from the exami­na­ti­on of the digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on of the (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor under the con­di­ti­ons of a cul­tu­re of digi­ta­li­ty. Even if it seems obvious to focus on the digi­tal infra­struc­tu­re or ques­ti­ons of mecha­ni­sa­ti­on as well as the design of con­tent in the form of digi­tal edu­ca­tio­nal offe­rings or online (self-)learning envi­ron­ments, becau­se the edu­ca­tio­nal sec­tor is the focus here, this should not hap­pen here. Put sim­ply, alt­hough digi­tal tech­no­lo­gies and con­tent are important pre­re­qui­si­tes for digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on and the deve­lo­p­ment of a cul­tu­re of digi­ta­li­ty in the edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor, they are not suf­fi­ci­ent con­tex­tu­al con­di­ti­ons for agi­le edu­ca­tio­nal lea­der­ship. Rather, agi­le edu­ca­tio­nal lea­der­ship is about what can deve­lop, form and be expres­sed in bet­ween or bet­ween all actors. It is about how the right frame­work can be desi­gned and main­tai­ned on the basis of peo­p­le and pro­ces­ses and how it can be sup­port­ed by the many dif­fe­rent peo­p­le invol­ved. And it is about this in-bet­ween that this chap­ter will focus on the diver­si­ty of peo­p­le in the net­work of actors in the cour­se of the digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on of the (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on sector. 

Licence2

[Note: If the media file is not dis­play­ed cor­rect­ly in your brow­ser, all pod­cast chap­ters of the AEL book ver­si­on 1.0 can also be lis­ten­ed to direct­ly here.(ger­man version)]

Enabling relationships in between

By this in bet­ween, I mean the rela­ti­onships and exch­an­ge with each other and among all actors. Com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on and inter­ac­tion have always been rele­vant for social inter­ac­tion and remain so, par­ti­cu­lar­ly in the cour­se of the digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on and espe­ci­al­ly under the con­di­ti­ons of a cul­tu­re of digi­ta­li­ty. Only open dia­lo­gues that pro­mo­te par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and the rela­ti­onships bet­ween the actors are the glue that holds ever­y­thing tog­e­ther in today’s edu­ca­tio­nal reality. 

A few impres­si­ons from the cur­rent (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on con­text, which can cer­tain­ly be found in a simi­lar form in other con­texts, should brief­ly illus­tra­te the importance of rela­ti­onships. Once again, the micro-level of inter­ac­tion bet­ween tea­chers and stu­dents is used pri­ma­ri­ly as a frame of refe­rence. Like­wi­se, the dis­cus­sion at the meso level of how degree pro­gram­mes could be desi­gned as blen­ded pro­gram­mes in line with the times or with the fin­dings from the coro­na­vi­rus pan­de­mic could have been shown here, or examp­les of a digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on of admi­nis­tra­ti­ve pro­ces­ses, which is curr­ent­ly taking place almost prag­ma­ti­cal­ly, could have been shown, as is pos­si­ble, for exam­p­le, in the uncom­pli­ca­ted digi­tal hand­ling of exami­na­ti­on-rele­vant pro­ces­ses. Howe­ver, the topic of online tea­ching via video con­fe­ren­cing and lear­ning plat­forms, inclu­ding online exami­na­ti­ons, is curr­ent­ly domi­na­ting the cur­rent and even public deba­te – and ulti­m­ate­ly says a lot about rela­ti­onships, trust and con­fi­dence at the micro level of teaching. 

The important role of func­tio­ning rela­ti­onships for suc­cessful online inter­ac­tion can be seen, for exam­p­le, in didac­tic and metho­do­lo­gi­cal dis­cus­sions about the value of a trus­ting rela­ti­onship, an open atmo­sphe­re for dia­lo­gue or trust in the frame­work that online tea­ching can offer. For exam­p­le, under the key­words Ener­gi­zer and War­mUp in tea­ching, the­re is an exch­an­ge among col­le­agues about the design of good initi­al pha­ses in a syn­chro­no­us, simul­ta­neous online event in order to bring lear­ners into (bet­ter) cont­act with each other and with the tea­cher. Ano­ther expe­ri­ence is that, in addi­ti­on to the ple­na­ry view in the lar­ge group, lear­ners stron­gly favour and also demand working in brea­kout rooms as part of online events via video con­fe­ren­cing sys­tems, becau­se here they can exch­an­ge ide­as in small groups over a cer­tain peri­od of time accor­ding to their own rules and get to know each other and build rela­ti­onships. They draw moti­va­ti­on and per­se­ver­ance from this. The importance of this beco­mes clear in the dis­cus­sion about the so-cal­led black tiles, i.e. peo­p­le are log­ged into a video con­fe­rence for various reasons wit­hout a pro­fi­le pic­tu­re visi­ble as a pla­ce­hol­der or came­ra image and they talk to each other on black tiles or when the­se are auto­ma­ti­cal­ly hid­den in a room wit­hout refe­rence points or reso­nan­ce. Lec­tu­re situa­tions are also simi­lar when lec­tu­re recor­dings or live lec­tures are main­ly spo­ken into the came­ra – here, ima­gi­na­ti­on alo­ne helps to crea­te a good com­pu­ter-media­ted atmosphere. 

Tech­no­lo­gies as a frame­work
What the­se examp­les are inten­ded to illus­tra­te at the micro level of inter­ac­tions is that alt­hough the tech­no­lo­gy, e.g. for video con­fe­ren­cing, enables coope­ra­ti­on in terms of the tech­ni­cal frame­work, it is the peo­p­le them­sel­ves who ensu­re that the who­le thing func­tions in a trus­ting man­ner through their joint inter­ac­tion within the tech­ni­cal envi­ron­ment with per­so­nal rela­ti­onships. The importance of trust in online tea­ching in addi­ti­on to tech­ni­cal con­trol opti­ons is shown by dis­cus­sions about con­cerns about secret recor­dings of online events wit­hout the con­sent of the peo­p­le invol­ved or the inten­si­ve deba­te about the imple­men­ta­ti­on bet­ween online exams as con­fi­den­ti­al, writ­ten work (take-home exams) to con­trol­led query exams or e‑exams with mul­ti­ple video sur­veil­lan­ce in pri­va­te rooms (proc­to­ring). Rela­ti­onships here repre­sent the glue bet­ween what is tech­ni­cal­ly pos­si­ble and what is not yet possible. 

With their func­tions, tech­no­lo­gies the­r­e­fo­re only offer the tech­no­lo­gi­cal frame­work that enables the actors to act with the func­tions pro­vi­ded. Basi­cal­ly, as tech­no­lo­gi­cal actors in the inter­ac­tion pro­cess, they have a powerful posi­ti­on in that they can enable, con­trol and limit as well as pre­vent inter­ac­tions. At the same time, they can only ful­ly uti­li­ze this struc­tu­ral power if the indi­vi­du­als as actors are not wil­ling or able to coun­ter the­se struc­tures with their own ide­as and prac­ti­ces and make their pre­fer­red prac­ti­ces pos­si­ble within the given frame­work. This can hap­pen on the part of indi­vi­du­als such as tea­chers and lear­ners, for exam­p­le, by brea­king down indi­vi­du­al tech­no­lo­gi­cal boun­da­ries by using addi­tio­nal tech­no­lo­gies to com­pen­sa­te for gaps or hurd­les in order to enable the form of inter­ac­tion, rela­ti­onship and com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on that is nee­ded by the respec­ti­ve group for good, trus­ting coope­ra­ti­on. This kind of brea­king down of tech­no­lo­gi­cal frame­works can some­ti­mes be expres­sed by com­bi­ning video con­fe­ren­cing sys­tems with mes­sen­ger ser­vices as well as vir­tu­al white­boards and social media net­works in order to make the sys­tem via­ble or uni­ver­sal for ones­elf, the group of lear­ners or an inte­rest group. 

If such forms of inter­ac­tion can now take place in face-to-face situa­tions and com­bi­ned for­mats again in the fore­seeable future, what will we have lear­nt and taken with us about the spec­trum of rela­ti­onship forms, rela­ti­onship pro­mo­ti­on and rest­ric­tions, but in this con­text about par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on oppor­tu­ni­ties or power issues? And whe­re will we con­ti­nue to estab­lish (per­haps even prio­ri­ti­se) digi­tal for­mats and for what reasons? With regard to tech­no­lo­gy-sup­port­ed, sus­tainable rela­ti­onship work, what works well and some­ti­mes even very well online or com­pu­ter-media­ted — and what works even bet­ter in face-to-face situa­tions or com­bi­ned pro­gram­mes? The basis for sha­ping this appro­pria­te­ly is now in the hands of ever­yo­ne invol­ved by imple­men­ting chan­ges in small steps ins­tead of wai­ting for time to turn back soon. 

Seam­less
The cur­rent rea­li­ty of lear­ning and edu­ca­ti­on, as we take it for gran­ted in our ever­y­day lives today, is con­sti­tu­ted equal­ly in vir­tu­al and phy­si­cal spaces that are cou­pled, intert­wi­ned or blen­ded. In the con­text of e‑learning and the digi­ta­li­sa­ti­on of tea­ching and lear­ning, terms and ter­mi­no­lo­gy such as blen­ded lear­ning, hybrid lear­ning or seam­less lear­ning have beco­me estab­lished over the last few deca­des to descri­be the­se com­bi­ned (lear­ning) spaces across sup­po­sed boun­da­ries. Seam­less lear­ning is inte­res­t­ing in two respects as a frame­work for edu­ca­ti­on and lear­ning in an area refer­red to here as in bet­ween, becau­se it intro­du­ces both a tech­ni­cal and a lear­ning cul­tu­re per­spec­ti­ve. Seam­less is trans­la­ted here as con­sis­ten­cy. From a tech­ni­cal per­spec­ti­ve, this means that the tran­si­ti­ons bet­ween dif­fe­rent tech­ni­cal appli­ca­ti­ons such as lear­ning plat­forms and apps or hard­ware should not be bum­py, but that they should be con­nec­ted in such a way that seam­less tran­si­ti­ons are pos­si­ble for users – so that appli­ca­ti­on chan­ges ide­al­ly do not influence or even dis­rupt the inter­ac­tion pro­ces­ses. From a lear­ning cul­tu­re per­spec­ti­ve, seam­less lear­ning can be defi­ned even more broad­ly, name­ly as the con­ti­nui­ty of phy­si­cal and real lear­ning spaces on the one hand and across dif­fe­rent lear­ning con­texts, inter­pre­ted very broad­ly, even in the sen­se of lifel­ong lear­ning. And this per­spec­ti­ve could also be trans­fer­red bey­ond the area of tea­ching, which is often con­side­red first, to other rele­vant are­as in the (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor, such as the asso­cia­ted admi­nis­tra­ti­on and manage­ment, sup­port for rese­arch and tea­ching as well as the are­as of rese­arch and trans­fer or so-cal­led third mis­si­on in coope­ra­ti­on with social con­cerns. Seam­less also stands for over­co­ming boun­da­ries and thin­king in silos and respon­si­bi­li­ties, as this is nee­ded across all are­as in order to enable seam­less continuity. 

Sha­ping the frame­work
It is clear that tech­no­lo­gy alo­ne will not be able to set the thread through the lear­ning pro­ces­ses and, abo­ve all, main­tain it over time. A wide varie­ty of actors come into play here, from the tech­no­lo­gy and the orga­niza­ti­on to the tea­chers and lear­ners. Media didac­tics, as the theo­ry and prac­ti­ce of tea­ching and lear­ning under the con­di­ti­ons of digi­ta­liza­ti­on and, abo­ve all, a cul­tu­re of digi­ta­li­ty, offers a design-rela­ted frame­work for desig­ning such frame­works or envi­ron­ments, espe­ci­al­ly when it also cri­ti­cal­ly con­siders the inter­ac­tion with the meso and macro levels in the field of edu­ca­ti­on via the micro level. 

Par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry media didac­tics pro­vi­des sug­ges­ti­ons on the ext­ent to which rela­ti­onships, com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on and action can be shaped in such a frame­work of mutu­al trust and con­fi­dence and can con­tri­bu­te to a chan­ged and con­tem­po­ra­ry lear­ning cul­tu­re by ope­ning up spaces for par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and encou­ra­ging par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on (Mayr­ber­ger, 20191 and for a bund­led over­view of the theo­ry and prac­ti­ce of par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry media didac­tics3) – also to think fur­ther with regard to agi­le edu­ca­tio­nal leadership. 

Par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on under the con­di­ti­ons of digi­ta­li­ty is sup­port­ed or limi­t­ed by all kinds of rela­ti­onships, espe­ci­al­ly per­so­nal ones. Accor­din­gly, in addi­ti­on to peo­p­le, all other pos­si­ble actors, inclu­ding tech­no­lo­gy and the orga­ni­sa­ti­on, which open up or rest­rict the space for par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on (Mayr­ber­ger, 2020)4 could be just as rele­vant — pre­cis­e­ly as tho­se who have the power to (co-)shape the framework. 

Alt­hough the focus here is on peo­p­le and their spaces for inter­ac­tion and action, the ques­ti­on remains as to how important orga­ni­sa­ti­ons are or can be for the abili­ty of (indi­vi­du­al) peo­p­le to act in the cour­se of Agi­le Edu­ca­tio­nal Lea­der­ship. Is it enough to speak of par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on here? Or, in view of the later comm­ents on agi­li­ty and lea­der­ship in the (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor, should it not be con­side­red whe­ther it makes more sen­se to go bey­ond participation? 

Participation in the Field of Education

Par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on is par­ti­cu­lar­ly valuable for joint pro­cess design and indi­vi­du­al deve­lo­p­ment in terms of poten­ti­al lear­ning and edu­ca­tio­nal pro­ces­ses when it invol­ves actu­al par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on. In other words, the direc­tion of deve­lo­p­ment in inter­ac­tion situa­tions moves from the expe­ri­ence of grea­ter hete­ro­no­my to the expe­ri­ence of grea­ter self-deter­mi­na­ti­on. Actu­al par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on means that the peo­p­le invol­ved are gran­ted a right to par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on, co-deter­mi­na­ti­on or self-deter­mi­na­ti­on, i.e. to actual­ly take part in decis­i­on-making pro­ces­ses and to be able to exert a noti­ceable influence on the out­co­me or even to be respon­si­ble for the enti­re out­co­me. Ever­y­thing else, accor­ding to the stage model of par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on used as a basis here, are preli­mi­na­ry stages of actu­al par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on or even forms of pseu­do-par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on, such as can be expe­ri­en­ced in the con­text of infor­ma­ti­on events with the oppor­tu­ni­ty to ask ques­ti­ons wit­hout direct influence on the fur­ther decis­i­on-making pro­cess (cf. in more detail Mayr­ber­ger, 20191 ) or the par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on model of par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry media didac­tics5). You can pro­ba­b­ly think of a num­ber of examp­les of this, not only in the field of edu­ca­ti­on, bet­ween hete­ro­no­my and self-determination. 

The abili­ty to par­ti­ci­pa­te is also a goal of edu­ca­ti­on if it also aims to pro­mo­te the abili­ty for self-deter­mi­na­ti­on com­bi­ned with par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and soli­da­ri­ty, as for­mu­la­ted by Klaf­ki. Par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on in social, demo­cra­tic pro­ces­ses can the­r­e­fo­re always be read as a goal of per­so­nal deve­lo­p­ment. Par­ti­cu­lar­ly in the cour­se of cur­rent poli­ti­cal ori­en­ta­ti­ons, which are once again moving more towards the frin­ges of the poli­ti­cal spec­trum, the edu­ca­tio­nal man­da­te to repre­sent the values and prin­ci­ples of a demo­cra­tic basic order and the Basic Law is important to empha­si­ze in the Ger­man edu­ca­ti­on sys­tem. And from a didac­tic and pedago­gi­cal point of view, this includes, in the best case sce­na­rio, making the­se prin­ci­ples tan­gi­ble and expe­ri­en­ceable as ear­ly as pos­si­ble in a sub­ject-rela­ted or inter­di­sci­pli­na­ry way, which appli­es to the non-insti­tu­tio­nal edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor as well as to the insti­tu­tio­nal edu­ca­ti­on con­text, such as hig­her education. 

Par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on here means that someone with more respon­si­bi­li­ty hands over part of this respon­si­bi­li­ty for decis­i­on-making pro­ces­ses to others with less respon­si­bi­li­ty in order to increase their share and also makes this trans­pa­rent. The idea behind this is that tho­se who are given respon­si­bi­li­ty are also in a posi­ti­on or are put in a posi­ti­on to share and mana­ge this respon­si­bi­li­ty. Trus­ting rela­ti­onships or rela­ti­onships that can deve­lop through shared expe­ri­en­ces in working tog­e­ther, such as col­la­bo­ra­ti­on and coope­ra­ti­on, play a key role here – inde­ed, they are the glue for a func­tio­ning par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry space. 

In the field of edu­ca­ti­on, the most obvious exam­p­le of rela­ti­onships is to be seen at the micro level bet­ween tea­chers and stu­dents, but this can also be found in many forms in hig­her edu­ca­ti­on at the meso and macro levels, whe­ther bet­ween uni­ver­si­ty manage­ment and facul­ty repre­sen­ta­ti­ves or bet­ween depart­ment repre­sen­ta­ti­ves and pro­gram­me managers.

Par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and dele­ga­ti­on
Regard­less of which par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on rela­ti­onship is con­side­red, it is strict­ly spea­king always cha­rac­te­ri­zed by a powerful asym­me­try as the start­ing point and thus by a per­son or orga­niza­ti­on that defi­nes the frame­work for the ext­ent to which decis­i­on-making power can and may be dele­ga­ted. If no scope for par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on is ope­ned up at a struc­tu­ral or orga­niza­tio­nal level, actu­al par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on is eit­her impos­si­ble or very unli­kely. Enab­ling actu­al expe­ri­en­ces of par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on is important across all age groups, with a par­ti­cu­lar focus on hig­her edu­ca­ti­on, which many of tomorrow’s decis­i­on-makers go through. Par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on expe­ri­en­ces up to the hig­hest form of self-deter­mi­na­ti­on are important in order to expe­ri­ence and learn how to deal with dele­ga­ted respon­si­bi­li­ty — this also includes the expe­ri­ence of having made mista­kes or having fai­led. What is important here for authen­tic expe­ri­en­ces is that the dele­ga­ti­on of respon­si­bi­li­ty is also car­ri­ed out authen­ti­cal­ly and serious­ly. This requi­res trust and con­fi­dence that can be built up through shared experiences. 

Apello’s Levels of Dele­ga­ti­on and the asso­cia­ted methods of the Dele­ga­ti­on Poker and Dele­ga­ti­on Board6 pro­vi­de an exam­p­le of how the power to shape bet­ween actors can be map­ped. They show and illus­tra­te very well how important the dif­fe­ren­tia­ti­on, trans­pa­ren­cy and joint nego­tia­ti­on of are­as of respon­si­bi­li­ty can be depen­ding on cer­tain con­texts. The spec­trum of exter­nal and self-deter­mi­na­ti­on is also impli­cit­ly clear here. 

Bey­ound par­ti­zi­pa­ti­on
What beco­mes clear in the models of par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and dele­ga­ti­on is that here, too, it is pri­ma­ri­ly a per­son, i.e. a tea­cher or a supe­ri­or, who deci­des or opens up the frame­work for nego­tia­ting par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and dele­ga­ti­on levels. This is important preli­mi­na­ry work. But what if it went bey­ond the hig­hest level of actu­al par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and full dele­ga­ti­on again, becau­se it fits in with the peo­p­le and estab­lished pro­ces­ses? What if the­re was even full auto­no­my and the frame­work allo­wed for self-admi­nis­tra­ti­on or self-organisation? 

After all, what do I learn if I know that I can’t make any mista­kes becau­se someone else will make the final decis­i­on in the end? And what does someone learn if the decis­i­on-making frame­work is clear and the limits within which the decis­i­ons for them­sel­ves and per­haps also for their own group or team are their own respon­si­bi­li­ty are clear? Kno­wing full well that dele­ga­ting respon­si­bi­li­ty is also asso­cia­ted with trust and con­fi­dence within the shared par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on space, grea­ter self-deter­mi­na­ti­on for indi­vi­du­als will pro­ba­b­ly also have a cor­re­spon­ding effect on their motivation. 

This is becau­se, as is alre­a­dy known from the self-deter­mi­na­ti­on theo­ry of moti­va­ti­on (see Deci and Ryan)7, intrin­sic moti­va­ti­on is poten­ti­al­ly hig­her when peo­p­le are streng­the­ned in their self-deter­mi­na­ti­on by the frame­work and their oppor­tu­ni­ties for action. This is more likely to hap­pen if three basic needs can be ful­fil­led, name­ly a sen­se of com­pe­tence, social inte­gra­ti­on and expe­ri­en­ces of autonomy. 

If we now look at the ques­ti­on of par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on, self-deter­mi­na­ti­on also emer­ges here as the hig­hest level of par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on. At the same time, edu­ca­ti­on is also aimed at self-deter­mi­na­ti­on. And self-orga­ni­sa­ti­on is equa­ted with auto­no­my in the par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on model. Ever­y­thing cle­ar­ly signals that the­se high levels are not easy goals to achie­ve with ever­yo­ne invol­ved. One pro­ba­b­ly sup­ports the other in the first place, i.e., for exam­p­le, that every suc­cessful or unsuc­cessful expe­ri­ence of par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on could poten­ti­al­ly be accom­pa­nied by an edu­ca­tio­nal pro­cess. And pre­vious, actu­al expe­ri­en­ces of par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on could lead to bet­ter expe­ri­en­ces of self-organisation. 

In any case, this shows how important it is for the edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor to be given ear­ly and varied oppor­tu­ni­ties for par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and edu­ca­tio­nal expe­ri­en­ces; on the one hand, they are geared towards indi­vi­du­als, but on the other hand they also chall­enge indi­vi­du­als and requi­re a lot from them, espe­ci­al­ly with regard to self-deter­mi­na­ti­on and the abili­ty to orga­ni­ze them­sel­ves – some­thing that not all actors have as a resour­ce from the outset.

Diversity as a social mission

When we hear and talk about self-deter­mi­na­ti­on, the first impres­si­on is that it sounds rather posi­ti­ve and can be asso­cia­ted with people’s moti­va­ti­on and sen­se of achie­ve­ment as well as a favoura­ble frame­work for indi­vi­du­al or joint deve­lo­p­ment. At the same time, it is curr­ent­ly beco­ming clear that a high level of com­pe­ten­ces and resour­ces will beco­me more important for each per­son, espe­ci­al­ly with a view to their future abili­ty to act under uncer­tain con­di­ti­ons, which will con­tri­bu­te indi­vi­du­al­ly and coll­ec­tively and sen­si­ti­ze them to being able to sol­ve pro­blems in the best pos­si­ble way. A per­son-ori­en­ta­ted approach and the spe­cial cha­rac­te­ristics of indi­vi­du­als in rela­ti­on to self-deter­mi­na­ti­on and taking them into account when desig­ning the frame­work for action will the­r­e­fo­re beco­me a com­pre­hen­si­ve task for all actors involved. 

With regard to par­ti­cu­lar per­so­nal cha­rac­te­ristics in some con­texts, inclu­ding agi­le per­spec­ti­ves, it is some­ti­mes said that peo­p­le today should ide­al­ly have or deve­lop a so-cal­led T‑shape pro­fi­le. This means a com­bi­na­ti­on of a broad over­view know­ledge based on expe­ri­ence and the wil­ling­ness to view con­texts in con­text and to acqui­re com­pe­ten­ces in the sen­se of future skills or 21st cen­tu­ry skills (short T‑shape), com­bi­ned with in-depth exper­ti­se in a spe­ci­fic domain (long T‑shape). Alt­hough it is also important to keep a cri­ti­cal eye on the fact that com­pa­ny-rela­ted ide­as of neces­sa­ry skills for the future (working) world are some­ti­mes more of a gui­ding prin­ci­ple here, it is also clear that, view­ed cri­ti­cal­ly and nor­ma­tively, per­so­nal ori­en­ta­ti­on today also means enga­ging with a need for diver­si­ty and, abo­ve all, deal­ing with diver­si­ty, and thus also con­scious­ly addres­sing social ine­qua­li­ty and une­qual con­di­ti­ons (see dif­fe­ren­tia­ting the term diver­si­ty)8.

A major chall­enge is the­r­e­fo­re pro­ba­b­ly not so much to find a con­cre­te ans­wer to ine­qua­li­ty in a per­son-cent­red approach in the (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on con­text, taking diver­si­ty dimen­si­ons into account. Rather, an enorm­ous chall­enge also lies in reflec­ting on a cri­ti­cal, soci­al­ly nor­ma­ti­ve per­spec­ti­ve geared towards par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and with a view to over­co­ming ine­qua­li­ty and an explo­ita­ti­on-ori­en­ted, opti­mi­sing per­spec­ti­ve on the respec­ti­ve idea of diver­si­ty and to pene­tra­te the breadth and depth of the goals of both per­spec­ti­ves for the next generation’s future abili­ty to act and to crea­te a com­pre­hen­si­ve frame­work for action. This goes bey­ond sim­ply pro­mo­ting inter­cul­tu­ral com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on skills, for exam­p­le, as part of future skills or diver­si­ty management. 

Diver­si­ty as an oppor­tu­ni­ty
The­re is an oppor­tu­ni­ty in the diver­si­ty of all peo­p­le invol­ved today and it has beco­me an obli­ga­to­ry task, espe­ci­al­ly (but not only) in the edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor, to con­sider and value inclu­si­on and diver­si­ty as a mat­ter of cour­se and not to regard deal­ing with it as an addi­tio­nal task or addi­tio­nal work for which the­re is time when the sup­po­sedly actu­al work is done (see, for exam­p­le, Wild und Esdar, 2014)9. Think, for exam­p­le, of the crea­ti­on of lear­ning and edu­ca­tio­nal mate­ri­als that are usual­ly only desi­gned for con­ven­tio­nal, sup­po­sedly gene­ral needs, ins­tead of being ori­en­ted towards the broa­dest pos­si­ble com­mon access for many peo­p­le in order to enable as much par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on as pos­si­ble (see, for exam­p­le, the incre­asing rele­van­ce of uni­ver­sal design)10.

This pos­si­ble diver­si­ty of per­so­nal pro­files, which will con­ti­nue to emer­ge in the cour­se of open and par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry methods in the lifel­ong edu­ca­ti­on pro­cess, may still be seen in some places, par­ti­cu­lar­ly in the edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor, as a chall­enge in deal­ing with hete­ro­gen­ei­ty rather than as an oppor­tu­ni­ty for diversity.

In this sen­se, self-cent­red approa­ches, such as the pro­mo­ti­on and faci­li­ta­ti­on of self-deter­mi­na­ti­on, also help to pro­mo­te such deve­lo­p­ment pro­ces­ses through par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry expe­ri­en­ces and the trans­fer of respon­si­bi­li­ty. But to what ext­ent do the­se approa­ches at the com­pe­tence level also har­bour the goal of giving as many peo­p­le as pos­si­ble, and legal­ly spea­king all peo­p­le equal­ly, the oppor­tu­ni­ty to par­ti­ci­pa­te in such chal­len­ging inter­ac­tion pro­ces­ses? To what ext­ent can ever­yo­ne be enab­led to par­ti­ci­pa­te today? Strict­ly spea­king, in view of the (ger­man) legal frame­work and the goal of equal oppor­tu­ni­ties for all, this ques­ti­on should no lon­ger ari­se today. 

Access as a dutye
It has beco­me a gene­ral duty to crea­te access, mini­mi­se hurd­les and enable open­ness to peros­nal diver­si­ty (see, for exam­p­le, the com­pi­la­ti­on of the for­mal frame­work with refe­rence to the hig­her edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor by Stol­ten­hoff, 2021)11. Das gilt beson­ders für den Bil­dungs­be­reich, in dem die dor­ti­gen Akteur_innen die Chan­ce und Auf­ga­be haben, früh­zei­tig Diver­si­tät als Wert zu kul­ti­vie­ren und für viel­fäl­ti­ge diver­si­täts­sen­si­ble Erfah­run­gen zu sor­gen. Eine Mög­lich­keit bie­tet hier vor allem die Mikroebe­ne der gemein­sa­men Inter­ak­ti­on bei­spiels­wei­se in par­ti­zi­pa­ti­ven Lern­sze­na­ri­en, bei denen die Ver­ant­wor­tung auf ein­zel­ne oder meh­re­re Ler­nen­de für ein gemein­sa­mes Ergeb­nis über­ge­ben wird und dar­auf ver­traut wird, dass sich die­se Lern­ge­mein­schaf­ten in ihrer Diver­si­tät für einen pas­sen­den Lösungs­weg ent­schei­den wer­den. Ein sol­ches gemein­sa­mes Han­deln ist gera­de mit Blick auf För­de­rung von Selbst­be­stim­mung für alle betei­lig­ten Per­so­nen vor­aus­set­zungs­reich, doch per se kei­ne Hür­de. So käme auf der Mikroebe­ne der Leh­re zur Min­de­rung von Hür­den bei­spiels­wei­se didak­ti­schen Rah­men­be­din­gun­gen oder Unter­stüt­zungs­an­ge­bo­ten zur Ermög­li­chung rei­bungs­ar­mer Koope­ra­ti­ons- und Kol­la­bo­ra­ti­ons­pro­zes­se eine för­der­li­che Funk­ti­on im Pro­zess zu. Doch ist es nicht allein das didak­ti­sche Modell oder eine tech­ni­sche Umge­bung, die die Bezie­hungs­ar­beit für ande­re über­nimmt. Viel­mehr wären es die Per­so­nen, die an ihren gemein­sa­men Bezie­hun­gen diver­si­täts­sen­si­bel arbei­ten. Und dazu gehö­ren die Ler­nen­den mit­ein­an­der wie auch betei­lig­te Leh­ren­de, die in sol­chen Lern­set­tings im bes­ten Fal­le auf ihre Coa­ching­kom­pe­ten­zen zurück­grei­fen kön­nen, um die Lern­grup­pe oder Ein­zel­per­so­nen mit pas­sen­den Impul­sen ihren eige­nen, pas­sen­den Weg fin­den und gehen zu las­sen – ganz im Sin­ne eines Lea­der­ship. Denn Diver­si­tät zeigt sich zumeist erst in den gemein­sa­men Bezie­hun­gen und Prak­ti­ken. Sie kann die jewei­li­ge Lehr- und Lern­kul­tur im Bil­dungs­be­reich oder einem kon­kre­ten Lehr- und Lern­ge­sche­hen maß­geb­lich prä­gen, wenn jeg­li­che Beson­der­hei­ten von Per­so­nen nicht als hin­der­lich, son­dern als selbst­ver­ständ­li­cher Teil des Gan­zen betrach­tet werden. 

And so the ques­ti­on of whe­ther a blan­ket per­so­nal ori­en­ta­ti­on with a view to enab­ling par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and the expe­ri­ence of dele­ga­ti­on accom­pa­nied by self-deter­mi­na­ti­on or even self-orga­ni­sa­ti­on is alre­a­dy fair and pro­vi­des all per­so­na­li­ties and indi­vi­du­als with equal­ly sui­ta­ble access can be pro­vi­ded with an initi­al ans­wer: Par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and enab­ling self-orga­ni­sa­ti­on is only equi­ta­ble if it is seen as a task to enable ever­yo­ne in diver­si­ty-sen­si­ti­ve inter­ac­tion envi­ron­ments to have equi­ta­ble access and expe­ri­ence self-determination.

Transformation of Learning Culture

With a view to per­son-ori­en­ta­ti­on and diver­si­ty, a very apt dif­fe­ren­tia­ti­on can be made at this point bet­ween the two per­spec­ti­ves of being and doing – as will be done later in the chap­ter on agi­li­ty. Being is meant in the sen­se of mind­set and prin­ci­ples that also car­ry for­ward the idea of lear­ner-ori­en­ta­ti­on and gene­ral per­son-ori­en­ta­ti­on in a nor­ma­ti­ve and edu­ca­ti­on-ori­en­ted way, taking diver­si­ty into account and sha­ping the frame­work accor­din­gly. Doing is meant more in the sen­se of prac­ti­cal imple­men­ta­ti­on with the help of methods and design ele­ments as well as the resul­ting prac­ti­ces in joint inter­ac­tion. For the edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor, this per­spec­ti­ve can be exem­pli­fied at the micro level both theo­re­ti­cal­ly and empi­ri­cal­ly with refe­ren­ces from lear­ning psy­cho­lo­gy in the direc­tion of a con­s­truc­ti­vist-ori­en­ted view of tea­ching and lear­ning and cor­re­spon­ding (media) didac­tic design prin­ci­ples (see Mayr­ber­ger, 2019, chap­ter 6)1 as well as with a diver­si­ty-ori­en­ta­ted tea­ching and lear­ning cul­tu­re (see also Wild and Esdar, 2014, chap­ter 3)12. This per­spec­ti­ve repres­ents a fun­da­men­tal chan­ge in the tra­di­tio­nal lear­ning and tea­ching cul­tu­re in hig­her edu­ca­ti­on, becau­se it stands for deve­lo­ping tea­ching for­mats as well as lear­ning and exami­na­ti­on pro­ces­ses, inclu­ding the neces­sa­ry admi­nis­tra­ti­ve frame­work con­di­ti­ons, more cle­ar­ly in the direc­tion of pro­mo­ting and enab­ling self-deter­mi­na­ti­on. Two examp­les with ide­as for the future deve­lo­p­ment of the hig­her edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor impres­si­ve­ly demons­tra­te that chan­ges of this kind in the hig­her edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor are not only to be found at the micro level, but also encom­pass the meso and macro levels in order to func­tion. On the one hand, based on chan­ging lear­ning beha­viour and needs with a clear refe­rence to the meso and macro level, the AHEAD stu­dy pre­sen­ted a trend ana­ly­sis with four exem­pla­ry sce­na­ri­os inclu­ding the well-known model on pos­si­ble future stu­dy models in 203013. The pos­si­ble future models show evo­lu­tio­na­ry and also revo­lu­tio­na­ry con­se­quen­ces for the design of the hig­her edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor under the con­di­ti­ons of digi­ta­liza­ti­on. The rea­liza­ti­on of all vari­ants in the coming years could con­tri­bu­te to the deve­lo­p­ment of a spe­ci­fic cul­tu­re of digi­ta­li­ty and could ori­en­ta­te the hig­her edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor more stron­gly towards lifel­ong lear­ning. The second exam­p­le is of a con­cep­tu­al natu­re and calls for a rethink of lear­ning in the hig­her edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor towards a so-cal­led New Lear­ning in the cour­se of digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on. To this end, twel­ve the­ses have been for­mu­la­ted in the “Hagen Mani­festo on New Lear­ning“14, which, based on a new lear­ning cul­tu­re, also con­sider the frame­work at the meso and macro levels and ulti­m­ate­ly also pos­tu­la­te edu­ca­tio­nal poli­cy demands. In both examp­les, the argu­ment is pri­ma­ri­ly based on the indi­vi­du­als or lear­ners and their poten­ti­al lifel­ong lear­ning beha­viour under the con­di­ti­ons of digi­ta­liza­ti­on and digitality.

This is inten­ded to illus­tra­te by way of exam­p­le that a stron­ger focus on the needs and diver­si­ty of indi­vi­du­als is rele­vant in at least two respects for the future abili­ty to act, which should be the goal of con­tem­po­ra­ry edu­ca­ti­on. First­ly, for the indi­vi­du­als them­sel­ves and their own edu­ca­ti­on and deve­lo­p­ment pro­ces­ses. Second­ly, for the lear­ner-ori­en­ted and diver­si­ty-sen­si­ti­ve design of the frame­work, inclu­ding the orga­niza­tio­nal and struc­tu­ral conditions. 

At the same time, this focus does not mean that the sole respon­si­bi­li­ty for a more open, par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry self-orga­niza­ti­on and self-deter­mi­na­ti­on-enab­ling tea­ching and lear­ning cul­tu­re under the con­di­ti­ons of digi­ta­li­ty can now be dele­ga­ted to the indi­vi­du­als alo­ne and that chan­ge depends sole­ly on them. Howe­ver, peo­p­le and pro­ces­ses are and remain the start­ing point for agi­le edu­ca­tio­nal lea­der­ship in order to work tog­e­ther on the (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on sys­tem in the digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on and to help chan­ge the sys­tem through inter­ac­tion and rela­ti­onships. Alt­hough the focus here is the­r­e­fo­re on indi­vi­du­als and the agi­le edu­ca­tio­nal lea­der­ship they assu­me, the ques­ti­on remains as to how important the orga­niza­ti­on and tech­no­lo­gy are or should be as addi­tio­nal actors for the (indi­vi­du­al) per­sons’ abili­ty to act and scope for action in the cour­se of agi­le edu­ca­tio­nal lea­der­ship. Based on a per­son-cent­red approach, agi­le edu­ca­tio­nal lea­der­ship focu­ses on agi­le values and prin­ci­ples, new forms and roles of lea­der­ship and, in par­ti­cu­lar, per­so­nal ambidexterity. 

 
  1. Mayr­ber­ger, K. (2019). Par­ti­zi­pa­ti­ve Medi­en­di­dak­tik. Gestal­tung der (Hochschul-)Bildung unter den Bedin­gun­gen der Digi­ta­li­sie­rung. Wein­heim: Beltz Juven­ta. [] [] [] []
  2. Licence: https://de.freepik.com/psd/mockup”>Mockup PSD by Vec­to­ri­um — de.freepik.com; Book-Cover by Kers­tin Mayr­ber­ger, Lizenz CC BY 4.0 []
  3. https://partizipative-mediendidaktik.de/, acces­sed 29 March 2021 []
  4. Mayr­ber­ger, K. (2020). Par­ti­zi­pa­ti­ve Medi­en­di­dak­tik. Dar­stel­lung von Eck­punk­ten und Ver­tie­fung des Par­ti­zi­pa­ti­ons­raums als kon­sti­tu­ie­ren­des Struk­tur­ele­ment. Medi­en­Päd­ago­gik 17, 59 – 92. https://doi.org/10.21240/mpaed/jb17/2020.04.26.X []
  5. https://partizipative-mediendidaktik.de/ueber-partizipation-hinaus/, acces­sed 23.03.2021 []
  6. https://management30.com/practice/delegation-poker, acces­sed 29.03.2021 []
  7. https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selbstbestimmungstheorie, acces­sed 29.03.2021 []
  8. https://gender-glossar.de/d/item/48-diversity, acces­sed 29.03.2021 []
  9. Wild, E. und Esdar, W. (2014). Eine hete­ro­ge­ni­täts­ori­en­tier­te Lehr-/Lern­kul­tur für eine Hoch­schu­le der Zukunft. Fach­gut­ach­ten im Auf­trag des Pro­jekts nexus der Hoch­schul­rek­to­ren­kon­fe­renz. acces­sed 29.03.2021, from https://www.hrk-nexus.de/fileadmin/redaktion/hrk-nexus/07-Downloads/07 – 02-Publikationen/Fachgutachten_Heterogenitaet.pdf []
  10. https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Design, acces­sed 29.03.2021 []
  11. Stol­ten­hoff, A‑K. (2021). Diver­si­tät, Geschlecht/Gender und Inklu­si­on. Leit­li­ni­en, Geset­ze und Per­spek­ti­ven . Ein Pad­let. Abge­ru­fen am 29.03.2021, von https://padlet.com/MedienDiskurs/wd5yrphg6k5ympis []
  12. Wild, E. und Wieb­ke, E. (2014). Eine hete­ro­ge­ni­täts­ori­en­tier­te Lehr-/Lern­kul­tur für eine Hoch­schu­le der Zukunft. Fach­gut­ach­ten im Auf­trag des Pro­jekts nexus der Hoch­schul­rek­to­ren­kon­fe­renz. Abge­ru­fen am 29.03.2021, von https://www.hrk-nexus.de/fileadmin/redaktion/hrk-nexus/07-Downloads/07 – 02-Publikationen/Fachgutachten_Heterogenitaet.pdf []
  13. https://hochschulforumdigitalisierung.de/de/news/ahead-studie-hochschullandschaft-2030, acces­sed 29.03.2021 []
  14. https://newlearning.fernuni-hagen.de/das-hagener-manifest/, acces­sed 29.03.2021 []
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