Never been to DevLearn but what the hell, we took the
opportunity to head out early to Vegas, hire a car and set off on a 2000 mile road
trip across Nevada, Utah, Arizona and New Mexico. Two weeks later we arrived
back in Vegas, with a car coated in bumper bugs and sublime images seared into
our heads.
I’m a fan of the SW US but not a fan of Vegas. You can walk from the
Pyramid of Luxor (even though the pyramids are hundreds of miles away in
Cairo), through Caesar’s Palace (where a statue of Caesar stands among a legion of slot
machines), shop in the Appian Way Shops, then into a tacky, medieval England to gamble
among the knights at Excalibur, on to Renaissance Venice (where a gondola waits to paddle you through canals in a desert state that is suffering
a drought). You may even pop into Paris on the way home. It purports to mimic
European culture but it mocks it. Vegas is as tacky as a piece of used
flypaper.
Anyway – I was in the MGM Grand for a conference, really a small city full of slot machines (Vegas is not really a high-roller, gambling city - it's mostly slots) and a few Chinese folk who were at the card tables when I went to breakfast, after all-nighters. Our room was at the end of a corridor so long, we couldn't see the end. I'm OK with hedonism but this was ugly.
Rootsy
So, what of the conference? Overall DevLearn is much more rootsy than say, the overly self-promotional Masie Show, down in Florida. It’s practitioners, who work in real
organisations do real work for real people. So you get some great, grounded
sessions, packed full of tips about how to do things better. On the other hand,
some of the bigger thinking can get a little lost. That’s OK. We have a surfeit
of big thinking at conferences, often from people who have never really built,
run or led anything. I’m tired of hearing about ‘Leadership’ from people who
have never ‘led’ anything, other than a course on ‘Leadership’. It was
refreshing to be among some realists.
The good stuff….
First reflection: I had
a great three days at this meeting. I met (for the first time) some people I’ve
long admired – Clark Quinn, Alison Rossett, Will Thalheimer, Mark Britz, Cammy
Bean and so on. It was good to have some
in-depth conversations with people who have a track record and some depth in
their experience and insights.
Then there were the excellent sessions where I gleaned lots
of practical advice from expert practitioners. To take just one example, I learnt
tons in the session on running Webinars. In one sense there was an abundance of
good sessions, so many that it was difficult to choose.
As usual, most of the interesting stuff took place
off-piste. I gave three sessions, all of
which I found easy to deliver, as they were packed with enthusiastic and informed
participants, so I'd like to thank the DevLearn folks for allowing me to
speak. The early morning ‘Buzz’ sessions were debates, with no PPT slides –
these I loved and the one I ran on AI was full of lively and knowledgeable folk
who made time fly.
Futurists are so last year....
But let me come back to the ‘big ideas’ issue. One expects keynotes
to provide some new, insightful thinking. Sorry, I didn’t feel or get it. A guy
called David Pogue did a second-rate Jim Carey act. His ‘look at these wacky
things on the internet’ shtick is becoming a predictable routine. Kids can play
the recorder on their iPhone! No they don’t. Only a 50 year old who bills
himself as a ‘futurist’ thinks that kids take this stuff seriously. To be fair,
I didn’t know about the DickFit, a ring that tracks your sex life. That was the
only thing I learnt from that session. I’ve begun to tire of ‘futurists’ – they
all seem to be relics from the past.
Not one to give up, I attended the next keynote, an enthusiastic
guy called Adam Savage. I had never heard of him, but he’s a TV presenter in
the US and hosts a show called Mythbusters. In over an hour the only thing he
said that was remotely interesting (unwittingly), was a quote from Wolfgang
Pauli, who used the phrase "not even wrong" to describe an argument
that claims to be significant but is, in fact, banal. I say ‘unwittingly, as
this guy tried to claim that art and science were really the same thing, as
both were really (and here comes his big insight) – storytelling. The problem
is that the hapless Adam knew nothing about science or art. It was trite, both
reductionist and banal. That's bad.
My own view is that these conferences need outsiders who can talk knowledgeably about learning and not just about observing their kids or delivering a thinly disguised autobiography. I want some real relevance.
Hat’s off to the
DevLearn team…
But that was only two things out of many. What makes this
conference unique is that it’s run by enthusiasts who are also experts. They do
it on a shoestring and do it damn well. Sure I had a few beefs, like the keynotes
and the boorish E-learning Brothers, who hollered their way in orange tee-shirts through all three
days, as if they were on a stag party, making it impossible for people to hear
the speakers on the side stages. On the other hand, I enjoyed talking to the
developers, who were pushing the limits on adaptive learning, the woman who
works in compliance who explained to me, patiently, how the compliance training
she had to deliver was an illusory evil that deliberately ignored the very idea
of ethical behaviour, compliant only to the idea that these things are a
regulatory nuisance and don’t really matter. I enjoyed seeing some good British
people out there selling their wares – Ben Betts, the Totara guys, the Learning
Pool crew (who wowed their audience with their open source authoring tool
ADAPT), the lovely Laura Overton. Lisa Minogue-White, Colin Welch from Brightwave and
Julian Stodd, who gave us a running online commentary on the dodgy bars of
Vegas. In the end, it’s all about the people.
Leaving Vegas
On reflection, I'd recommend this show for folk who want to learn about making this stuff. It's easy to point to weaknesses but I'd change tack on the keynotes, appeal to a more international audience, have a big debate around some key issue and make sure that the stages in the exhibition area were more functional. One last note - I’m writing this on a Virgin Atlantic 747. Foiled by their
labyrinthine online check-in process. I tweeted my frustration and within 30
secs got a Tweet in reply confirming my seat allocation. It made me glad that
I’m in the tech business. It’s so damn weird and unpredictable.
2 comments:
Was wonderful meeting you as well Donald. Greatly enjoyed post session chat with attendees, you and Julian. Sorry to have missed your sessions... oddly work got in the way ;)
"Dear Admin,
I am Jamal Lloyd Johnson. Very informative post! I am thankful to you for providing this unique information.
Jamal Lloyd Johnson
Apollo Management:Mail: 1236 N. Sweetzer Ave, unit 17
West Hollywood, CA 90069
Jamal Lloyd Johnson
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