Self-Directed Learning Frameworks

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Summary

Self-directed learning frameworks are step-by-step guides that help people take charge of their own learning journeys, allowing them to choose what, how, and when they learn. These frameworks encourage autonomy, reflection, and adaptability—moving away from teacher-led education and towards learner-led exploration.

  • Define your goals: Start by identifying what excites you and set clear learning objectives that are personally meaningful.
  • Break down skills: Divide your learning topic into manageable chunks and focus on building one skill at a time for steady progress.
  • Act and adjust: Apply what you learn right away, review your progress regularly, and make changes to your approach as needed.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Justin Seeley

    Sr. eLearning Evangelist, Adobe | L&D Community Advocate

    12,492 followers

    A year ago I shared a framework called GROWTH™. It didn’t perform particularly well. Which is funny, because over time it’s become one of the models I rely on most when designing learning experiences. Most training programs are built as courses. But the way people actually develop capability looks very different. Progress happens across a series of experiences—practice, feedback, reflection, and iteration. In other words, it happens through a learning journey, not a single event. The GROWTH framework is a way to design those journeys more intentionally. It breaks the process into six stages: G — Goal Setting R — Research & Empathy O — Outline the Experience W — Work in Layers T — Test & Adapt H — Highlight Progress Over the past year, I revisited the framework, expanded it, and turned it into a practical guide with examples, worksheets, and a full case study on redesigning onboarding as a learning journey. I also realized something interesting. GROWTH is actually one of the foundational pieces behind another model I’ve been developing called The Academy Engine™, which focuses on building scalable learning ecosystems. If the Academy Engine explains how education systems operate, GROWTH focuses on how the learning journey itself should be designed. If you’d like the full guide and templates, you can download it below. Curious how others think about this. When you design learning, do you think in terms of courses or journeys?

  • View profile for Alexandra Macare M.Ed

    A pioneer integrating neuroscience, education, and whole-human development | TEDx Speaker | international Consultant | Founder, Always Meaningful Education | Redesigning Learning With Neuroscience and Contribution

    1,675 followers

    The art and science of learning analyzed- • Pedagogy: teacher-directed, often used with younger learners. • Andragogy (Malcolm Knowles): learner-centered adult education. • Heutagogy (Hase & Kenyon, 2000): self-determined learning—focused on capability, not just competency. Heutagogy emphasizes: • autonomy • nonlinear exploration • reflection and adaptability • learning how to learn AME takes heutagogy further by rooting it in neuroscience, curiosity, and contribution. From Pedagogy to Heutagogy: AME’s Learning Revolution In traditional schools, pedagogy rules: the teacher leads, the student follows. In adult education, we shift to andragogy. But in Always Meaningful Education (AME), we go a step further: Heutagogy—self-determined, reflective, curiosity-driven learning. In AME: • Learners co-design their paths. • They explore what lights them up—and create something real with it. • Learning isn’t about performance; it’s about capability, contribution, and growth. This isn’t hypothetical. Since 2019, AME students have created museums, published books, launched restaurants, performed original theater, and delivered TED-style talks, among many other real world connections and contributions—all from their own inquiries. The future isn’t content recall. It’s adaptability, creativity, and the power to learn how to learn. AME isn’t just learner-centered. It’s learner-led. And that’s heutagogy in action.

  • View profile for Eshu Madaan

    🎯 Empowering Learners | 📚 Curriculum Specialist | 🌟 Trainer & Life Coach | 💡 Founder @ SkillsSphere Training | 🚀 Passionate about Math, EdTech & Teacher Capacity Building

    4,161 followers

    Pedagogy, Andragogy, and Heutagogy: What’s the Difference and Why It Matters Today As educators, trainers, or learning leaders, understanding how people learn is more crucial today than ever before. With classrooms evolving into blended, virtual, and self-paced environments, we often hear terms like pedagogy,andragogy, and heutagogy—but what do they actually mean? Pedagogy: Teaching Children Pedagogy is the traditional model of education, originating from the Greek words paid(child) and agogos (leading). It focuses on the teacher as the primary source of knowledge. The learner is typically dependent on the instructor for direction, content, and evaluation. Key Features: * Teacher-centered * Structured curriculum * Passive learning (listening, note-taking) * External motivation (grades, approval) This approach works well when foundational knowledge or basic skills need to be taught—especially for young learners. Andragogy: Teaching Adults Coined by Malcolm Knowles, andragogy shifts the focus to adult learning. Adults bring experience, self-direction, and intrinsic motivation to the learning process. They're not empty vessels; they’re partners in learning. Key Features: * Learner-centered * Experience-driven * Problem-based learning * Immediate application in real-life contexts This is essential in corporate training, professional development, and higher education where relevance and application drive engagement. Heutagogy: Learning' How to Learn?' Heutagogy is the newest evolution—focusing on self-determined learning. In this approach, learners decide what, how, and even why they learn. It’s highly learner-centered and emphasizes capability over competency. Key Features: * Self-directed and autonomous learning * Emphasis on reflection, adaptability, and critical thinking * Learning is nonlinear and exploratory * Ideal for fast-changing, tech-driven fields Heutagogy is especially relevant in today’s world where AI, lifelong learning, and adaptability are the keys to success. It's the mindset behind platforms like MOOCs, YouTube learning, and independent research. Why Should You Care? In any modern learning environment—schools, universities, or corporate training—these three concepts are not either/or. They form a continuum. Start with pedagogy to build a strong foundation Use andragogy to empower adult learners with purpose Evolve into heutagogy to foster lifelong learning and innovation In a world where information is at our fingertips, the real skill is knowing how to learn, unlearn, and relearn. Understanding this evolution helps us become better educators, better leaders—and better learners ourselves. Let’s discuss: Which of these three approaches has shaped your learning journey the most? #LifelongLearning #Heutagogy #Andragogy #Pedagogy #LearningDevelopment #EducationLeadership #CorporateTraining #AIinEducation #InstructionalDesign

  • View profile for Gav Blaxberg

    CEO of WOLF Financial | Co-Founder of Rallies.ai | #1 Source of Information for Investors | 500K+ Followers on X | Follow me for daily insights on personal development, career growth, financial strategies, & life tips.

    107,327 followers

    Too many people believe that once school ends, learning stops. That mindset is the fastest way to limit your potential. The truth is: Self-education is where real growth happens. No curriculum. No teachers pushing you. No deadlines forcing your hand. Just you vs. your ambition. The world rewards those who take ownership of their own learning. Because knowledge acquired by choice, not obligation, is powerful. It's the difference between surviving and thriving. Here's the 5-step framework I follow when self-educating: 1. Find a burning curiosity 🔥 ↳ What topic would you study even if no one paid you? ↳ That’s usually where your edge will develop. 2. Break it down into skills 📚 ↳ Big goals are overwhelming. Skills are manageable. ↳ Focus on one small skill at a time. 3. Set up a daily learning sprint 🚀 ↳ 10–20 minutes daily. ↳ Consistency beats intensity. 4. Apply what you learn immediately 🛠️ ↳ Knowledge without action fades fast. ↳ Try, fail, tweak, and repeat. 5. Reflect and adjust 🧠 ↳ Every 30 days, ask: "Am I better than I was a month ago?" ↳ If yes, double down. If no, pivot. At the end of the day: Those who self-educate control their future. Those who don't, leave it to chance. Which skill are you teaching yourself right now? Let’s hold each other accountable in the comments ⬇️ ---------- 📌 Follow me Gav Blaxberg for more content like this. ♻ 𝐋𝐢𝐤𝐞, 𝐂𝐨𝐦𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭, 𝐑𝐞𝐩𝐨𝐬𝐭 to share with your network ♻

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