This week it is Staff 糖心Vlog传媒 week here at Webanywhere, so聽each day we have been sharing聽with you a new blog post from one of our employees. Today, it’s the last of the week and we have Cieran Douglass asking why does learning have to be so serious?
In order to write this blog post, I鈥檝e been wracking my brains for examples of where I did some learning that was particularly notable, so I could provide an interesting hook rather than just a fairly mundane observation. I had a pretty standard education really – local village primary school, grammar school in a nearby town, then university, where I muddled through and managed to get a 2:1 in Politics. None of it stands out as particularly notable really.
Then I started thinking about the other places I鈥檝e learned things, things outside of my education, and my mind wandered back to 2007. This was the year I got my first proper computer I didn鈥檛 have to share with my family, and I developed an interest in graphic design, first just through MS Paint, then GIMP, right up to Photoshop. It was the last of those that drew me, late that year, towards the 鈥溾 series of video tutorials on YouTube. It鈥檚 not really safe for work, but I鈥檇 recommend anyone interested in digital imaging check it out, since as well as being informative it鈥檚 also hilarious.
Chronicling a man鈥檚 descent into madness and rejection while also providing some very handy Photoshop tips, the series has taught me things I鈥檓 still using to this day. Ever since, when I want to learn something, I鈥檝e headed for online videos, and the engaging ones are the ones that are both informative and entertaining. If I鈥檓 learning for pleasure, I want the pleasure part to be an important factor! It keeps me focused and also helps me to remember things – a joke鈥檚 as good a mnemonic as anything else!
I don鈥檛 want you to get the wrong idea from this – I鈥檓 not saying that there鈥檚 no place for important documentary film-making or anything – I enjoy Attenborough as much as the next guy, and there鈥檚 some things it can be difficult to make light of – but when it comes to memorisation of facts, retaining engagement and producing effective results, I find I learn much better when I鈥檓 laughing.
It鈥檚 not just video content though – when browsing through Waterstones with a friend the other day we came across the textbooks section, and I was reminded of my science lessons at school. By far the most interesting and memorable textbooks I had were – a company managing to fuse important topic with an air of whimsy I really appreciated. They certainly made revision that bit less stressful, for me at least!
Of course, everyone learns differently – I enjoy humour, you might not, I like computers, you might not etc, and just because I found a way to learn that helped me doesn鈥檛 mean it鈥檒l work for you too – this is my experience, and I鈥檓 not here to be prescriptive!
Cieran Douglass
