Showing posts with label language. Show all posts
Showing posts with label language. Show all posts

Thursday, April 14, 2016

It's a 'something' ...



Rachel Burnham writes:  Whenever I write a blog, I always feel slightly apprehensive about its reception and more so, when it contains strong opinions or personal stories. 

Today, I feel this particularly, as I want to share a story from my involvement in my local church and I know that that most people who will read this won’t be Christian and may be of another faith or of no faith.  But I have decided to go ahead anyway because the focus of this story isn’t religious but is, always in this blog, L&D.  

Anyway, enough preliminaries…on with the story.



Some years ago, I was part of a small working group from our church with charged with the task of helping to build relationships between the congregation and the community.  To my great delight, this was not a committee, nor a talking shop, but a small group of five that generated ideas and put them into practice, not on our own, but working with lots of other people, both within and outwith the church.  I hadn’t thought of this before writing this blog, but interestingly out of the five, three of us ran our own businesses – an L&D consultant, a painter & decorator and (appropriately) a carpenter – I wonder if we had an entrepreneurial bias?

We did all sorts of things, some traditional, many not.  We had some great successes; some middling successes, which we built on; and some out and out flops – in relation to the latter a summer outing to hear brass bands particularly comes to mind!

What was interesting was the way the group worked.  It was a great group to be a part of – we often disagreed, but no one was negative for the sake of it, no-one was grandstanding, people listened and built on other people’s ideas.  I remember lots of conversations which included ‘why don’t we…’ ‘would it be possible….’ ‘how could we make that work?’ ‘and we could also…’ ‘alternatively we could…’  and lots and lots of laughter.  

One of the many things that made us laugh, was the phrase ‘It’s a ‘something’…’ which we used very frequently.  It was a phrase we used when we were developing an idea, but wanted to keep it fluid.   It allowed us to explore possibilities, without the limitations of placing a label on what we were planning.  We would identify the characteristics of the ‘something’ – its purpose, who needed to be involved, who we would like to be involved, its look & feel and so on, but leave open what it was until we were well down the road with imagining it. 

In my work as an L&D consultant, I often work with people new to L&D (and some who are not so new to L&D), who are quick to jump to talking about designing & delivering a face to face ‘training’ session.  I know that many stakeholders in organisations can also be quick to make that leap.  I spend a lot of time encouraging a more open approach, which might include blended learning options or even alternatives to face to face learning sessions or formal learning.   There is such a range of possibilities that can meet learning needs and help improve performance - it is important to consider what will be most effective in that particular situation and not to shut off worthwhile avenues from the outset.

It helps to use language thoughtfully to ensure we haven’t already made assumptions – so sometimes I talk of learning ‘solutions’ – though that always sounds to me, too finished and polished, for a process that might be rather more emergent and evolving.   Sometimes, I use learning ‘intervention’ – though that always sounds such a jargon term (even to myself) and also as though it is done to you, rather than with you.

Which brings me back to using ‘it’s a ‘something’…’ .  Messy, open, full of potential and possibilities, specific to context – just what L&D should be.

Rachel Burnham

14/4/16

Burnham L & D Consultancy helps L&D professionals become even more effective.  I am particularly interested in blended learning, the uses of social media for learning, evaluation and anything that improves the impact of learning on performance.

Follow me on Twitter @BurnhamLandD









Thursday, October 9, 2014

Treat people as adults: Be more playful



Rachel Burnham writes: I don’t know about you, but I love a contradiction – something that stretches me in two seemingly opposing directions.  
 
Managing with both my head & heart
Holding both the big picture & obsessing about the fine detail
The value of analysis and beautiful pictures

I like the creative tension of doing both.  I like the ‘and’ thinking rather than ‘or’ thinking.  I like the cracks in the pavement created.

This last week or so, the contradiction that has been echoing through the conversations I’ve been participating in and the reading I’ve been absorbing, is between treating people (learners in particular) as adults and wanting/needing to be more playful.

 'Home-grown lettuce sandwiches' - in playful mood one lunchtime.

A little while ago I was asked if I ‘only taught classroom-based training on the Certificate in Learning & Development Practice?’ – to which the answer is a resounding ‘No & no!’  For those who don’t know me, one of the things I do is work as an Associate Tutor for MOL Training on the CIPD’s CLDP Level 3 programme. I am passionate about CLDP as a starting point in L&D & I will enthusiastically drop this into conversation at any opportunity.  What I don’t do is ‘teach’ – I describe what I do as ‘facilitating learning’ and this is much broader than just face to face learning.  I also see myself as a ‘fellow learner’.  I am astounded at just how often I am challenging people who ask ‘what am I teaching today?’
 
I think we in L&D do ourselves no favours when we 'infantilise' the people we work with by using the language of education and particularly schooling to describe what we are about.  This whole area was recently discussed by Andrew Jacobs in a recent post, so I won’t go over this ground.  Though I think this is one of the things 50 big ideas that actually is quite straightforward and we could do right here and now!

But treating people as adults is more than just the language that we use – it, of course, impacts on the relationships between L&D and the people we work with, what approaches to learning are used and ideas such as peer assessment.

Playfulness was something that very much came to mind, as I participated in last week’s LDConnect Unconference in Glasgow.   If you haven’t participated in an unconference or something similar based on an Open Space environment – this style of event very much works on the basis that we are all adults and take responsibility for our own learning, contribution and the direction & form of the learning. 

One of the discussions I participated in during the day, was about what other professionals & fields we could learn from.  We shared ideas about learning from medicine, software development, sports, curating in museums & galleries, nature and children.  Leaving aside the question of whether children are more or less creative than adults, which is discussed in a recent post by Alf Rehn, children certainly now how to play.  We talked about how children can play & what we can learn from this.

Part of my experience this year, as a self-employed consultant, is of having a quiet summer work-wise.  I had a super busy spring and the autumn is shaping up to be full of interesting work, but the summer was quiet.  And what a joy this was!  I had time not only for family & friends, to garden, to fully participate in the Manchester Jazz Festival, but also time to pursue my own work interests.  These included some studying, lots of reading and an amazing amount of play – experimenting with different social media, trying out ideas, drawing pictures, talking to people.  It made me appreciate just how important playtime is for us as adults and how core it is to learning new stuff.  Vera Woodhead recently shared an interesting article on the value of play from the Guardian.


 Sweet peas - combining summer play of gardening & drawing


Last Friday’s Unconference was for me a fabulous example of both being treated as an adult and being playful.  Maybe some contradictions are more apparent than real.  Perhaps it is only when we treat people as adults & are treated as adults ourselves, that we can be free to play?

Be more playful: Treat people as adults

Rachel Burnham

9/10/14

Burnham L & D Consultancy helps L&D professionals become even more effective.  I am particularly interested in blended learning, the uses of social media for learning, evaluation and anything that improves the impact of learning on performance.

Follow me on Twitter @BurnhamLandD

With thanks to @acockroft for playfully responding to a tweet on this topic, whilst being in the midst of introducing Twitter & PLNs to colleagues!