To support our peers, prioritize conversations over stories. Here's why events and associations should prioritize interaction.
https://www.conferencesthatwork.com/index.php/associations-2/2025/06/power-peer-conversation
To support our peers, prioritize conversations over stories. Here's why events and associations should prioritize interaction.
https://www.conferencesthatwork.com/index.php/associations-2/2025/06/power-peer-conversation
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Supporting Someone with a Mental Illness
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There is magic in the words "Me too."
Finding other people with bipolar disorder reminded me that I’m not broken,
I’m just part of a unique tribe.
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Read today’s Club post: https://open.substack.com/pub/speakingbipolar/p/finding-your-fellow-travelers-on?r=y4fp9&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=true
peer support (mutual aid) > psychiatry (authority)
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Peer Support Futures
My essay, “Peer Support Futures” has been published in The Perch, an open-access (free to read) creative arts mental health journal, published by the Yale Program for Recovery and Community Health.
Read “Peer Support Futures” online
This paper is based on my previous major research paper “Dreaming Peer Support Futures“, and is an exploration of the discipline of peer support through a lens of futurity and utopia. It outlines how futures thinking has always been at the heart of mental health peer support, both in terms of its social movement origins (as dreams and demands for a better world) and contemporary practices (through the peer support value of “hope”). It frames “recovery” as the reclamation of self-determination over our own futures, as well as privileges lost through psychiatrization. Lastly, it aims to trouble the dominant (white/Western) “origin story” of mental health peer support, highlight its impact on the present, and encourage the dreaming of alternative peer support futures grounded within diverse peer knowledges and lineages.
#dreams #futures #mentalHealth #peerSupport #research #utopiaRetention and completion in online learning: recommended strategies for improvement
Why learner support is the heart of an effective program
If you are designing an online or blended program for busy professionals, the single most powerful lever you control is how you support learners.
When support is strong, people are more likely to stay in the program, complete activities, and actually change what they do in practice.
When support is weak or confusing, even well designed courses with great content lose many if not most learners along the way.
The three layers of support you need
You can think about learner support as three layers that reinforce each other.
For professional development, all three layers matter, because participants are usually working full time, may be coping with professional and personal crises, and trying to apply learning in messy real-world contexts.
Institutional support: remove friction and signal that people matter
Formal education studies show that institutional support is the top factor leaders associate with online course completion. Learners themselves say that the absence of support matters (although what learners perceive may not always be useful).
For professional development, the same holds, with a few practical priorities.
Design for these.
In an international online professional development program for teachers, for example, adding personalized support such as short one-to-one sessions and encouragement messages increased completion rates by about ten percent for some groups.
Instructor support: scaffolding learning so no one is left alone
Research with university students shows that learners in online courses expect instructors to help them feel connected, understand what to do, and stay on track, and that weak instructor presence is linked to withdrawal.
In professional development, instructors or facilitators play a similar role, but with more emphasis on helping people apply ideas in their own context.
This is where scaffolding comes in.
Scaffolding means giving targeted support that helps learners do something today that they would not yet manage alone, then gradually reducing that support as they gain confidence and skill.
Here are five practical scaffolding moves you can build into your program.
In an online leadership course, for example, students described scaffolding as a kind of coaching, where lecturers monitored engagement, encouraged them, corrected misconceptions, and gave direction when needed, which helped them persist and complete.
Peer support: building a community that carries learners through
Multiple studies of online and blended learning find that peer interaction is one of the strongest predictors of engagement and persistence, especially in intensive or demanding programs.
In professional development, peers also bring real world experience, local knowledge, and emotional support that no central team can fully provide.
To make peer support work, you need to design it.
Concrete peer structures you can use include:
A grounded theory study of an authentic online professional development program found that learning happened in a web of interactions where peers and mentors were central, and content and technology played a supporting role, which is directly applicable to professional communities of practice.
Translating formal education evidence to professional development
Most of the detailed evidence on retention and support comes from higher education students. Nevertheless, some patterns make sense for professional development, if you adjust for context.
Here are three insights from higher education that apply to in-service professional development:
Online professional development reviews also point to some specific needs of professionals.
Designing your next program with support at the center
When you design or redesign a program, start by sketching the support system, not only the curriculum.
Ask yourself three practical questions.
If you can give clear, concrete answers to those questions, grounded in the evidence above, you will have moved a long way toward an effective, humane program that busy professionals can complete and use in practice.
References
da Rosa Ferrarelli, L., 2015. Online scaffolding in a fully online educational leadership course. Journal of Open, Flexible and Distance Learning, 19(2), pp.24–35. (Repository record, no DOI reported.) Available at: https://researchcommons.waikato.ac.nz/items/94bfea8f-a990-4509-b7e6-b93c1a20949e.
Leary, H., Dopp, C., Turley, C., Cheney, M., Simmons, Z., Graham, C.R. and Larsen, R., 2020. Professional development for online teaching: A literature review. Online Learning, 24(4), pp.254–275. Available at: https://doi.org/10.24059/olj.v24i4.2198.
Muljana, P.S. and Luo, T., 2019. Factors contributing to student retention in online learning and recommended strategies for improvement: A systematic literature review. Journal of Information Technology Education: Research, 18, pp.19–57. Available at: https://doi.org/10.28945/4182.
Roddy, C., 2017. A grounded theory of professional learning in an authentic online professional development program. International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning, 18(7), pp.141–160. Available at: https://doi.org/10.19173/irrodl.v18i7.2923.
Roddy, C., Amiet, D.L., Chung, J., Holt, C., Shaw, L., McKenzie, S., Garivaldis, F., Lodge, J.M. and Mundy, M.E., 2017. Applying best practice online learning, teaching, and support to intensive online environments: An integrative review. Frontiers in Education, 2, 59. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2017.00059.
Sadki, R. (2024). Why asking learners what they want is a recipe for confusion. Reda Sadki. https://doi.org/10.59350/6z9yb-r4b94
Sadki, R. (2025). Online learning completion rates in context: Rethinking success in digital learning networks. Reda Sadki: Learning to make a difference. https://doi.org/10.59350/qadwd-87309
Sadki, R. (2025). The great unlearning: notes on the Empower Learners for the Age of AI conference. Reda Sadki. https://doi.org/10.59350/859ed-e8148
Sharman, R., 2015. A model of peer learning incorporating scaffolding strategies. Doctoral dissertation, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. (No DOI, institutional repository.) Available at: https://vtechworks.lib.vt.edu/server/api/core/bitstreams/2d867c26-49b0-4474-b7f3-11d452e7d9bd/content.
#completion #facilitatorSupport #FactorsContributingToStudentRetentionInOnlineLearningAndRecommendedStrategiesForImprovement #peerSupport #professionalDevelopment #retention #scaffoldingTo support our peers, prioritize conversations over stories. Here's why events and associations should prioritize interaction.
https://www.conferencesthatwork.com/index.php/associations-2/2025/06/power-peer-conversation