Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - (Page 12) IMPERATIVES The Team as a Learner Five ways to make learning more team oriented • BY ELLIOTT MASIE inety-nine percent of corporate learning efforts are aimed at the individual worker. We enroll an individual in a class, online course or development track. The LMS tracks the activity and progress of that individual. And the assessment tools we use target one worker at a time. Yet, we know that organizational performance is critically located at the team level. What if we switched the focus of our learning activities from the individual to the team? This concept of team learning isn’t new. Organizations have a long history of sending a complete team to a training event or requiring every member of a team to take the same e-learning course. But I am talking about redesigning the learning experience to take full advantage of the team and tribal/social dynamics. Imagine that a new team is being formed in the business. Let’s say that team will be opening up a new retail store, rolling out a product or working on an evolving business process. In a team learning model, here are a few things that we might do dramatically differently: N Elliott Masie is the chair and CLO of The MASIE Center’s Learning Consortium and the host of Learning Systems ’08. He can be reached at editor@clomedia.com. inclined to go into extreme depth. The process of teaching what was just learned also adds to confidence, a form of “cognitive rehearsal.” • Team testing: Rather than test each individual for competency, focus on testing the team for its readiness to do the task. Give the team a project assignment to test its mastery of planning tasks. Or as a group, have members demonstrate their skills using a new system. • Peer coaching: Hold everyone on the team responsible for the competency of each member. I used this model on a safety training program a few years ago, in which the score of the lowest-scoring team member became the recorded score of the entire team. You should have seen the intensity of their internal coaching. Why team learning? In a nutshell, the on-theground reality is that team members will compensate for each others’ strengths and weaknesses. Why not recognize the power of social learning and leverage the team as a unit of knowledge? With a team learning model in mind, organizations might become more adept at effectively assigning members to groups based on how they will contribute to the knowledge base. With an increasingly rapid flow of employees in and out of our organizations, team learning is more important than ever. If we remember Peter Senge’s learning organization theories and apply them to our teams, organizations can accelerate workers’ time to competency and lower the cost of training per employee. Our workers do not perform in a vacuum; they perform interdependently with each other. So let’s provide learning experiences and resources for the team, work with them as a team, track their learning as a team and harness the “wisdom of a small crowd.” CLO • Team vs. individual skill assessment: Start by assessing the skills that exist at the team level. There may be individuals who gained relevant experience while working for a former employer. If two people have project management experience, is it really necessary for us to teach everyone on the team that skill? Perhaps we only need to require a minimodule on a relevant concept and then we can rely on a key team member to be the mentor/coach for that competency. • Visualizing team skills: Can we “map” the existing skill sets within the team so that both management and team members visualize and locate the right person with the right skill? • Jigsaw the content: This is a process used in many K-12 schools deploying “cooperative learning,” which is advocated by Dr. Roger and David Johnson from the University of Minnesota. Take a complex topic, such as an ERP system, and assign one-eighth of that system to each team member. After a short overview of the entire system, each member learns one module in-depth. Next, gather the team together (face-to-face or online) and have it share individual learnings with each other. Since the team is going to work together on this job, members should be less 12 Chief Learning Officer • July 2008 • www.clomedia.com DID YOU KNOW? The jigsaw classroom was first applied in 1971 in Austin, Tex., with a fifth-grade class to help diffuse racial tensions and increase positive educational outcomes. Source: Jigsaw.org. http://Jigsaw.org http://www.clomedia.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 Contents Imperatives Selling Up, Selling Down Strategies Take Five A Customer-Driven Approach to Molding Tomorrow’s Leaders The Home Depot: Accelerated Leadership CLO Profile Birth of a Salesman: Selling Learning to Solve Business Issues Selling Learning’s Potential at Siemens Transform Corporate Learning With a User Network Wiki Training Increases Productivity for RMC Vanguard Mortgage Lessons From the Feds: Mapping Learning to Strategic Initiatives Department of Labor Centralizes Content Synchronous and Asynchronous: What’s in a Name? Coping With Cultural Barriers to E-Learning The Manager’s Responsibility for Employee Learning Case Study Business Intelligence In Conclusion Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - (Page Intro) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 (Page Cover1) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 (Page Cover2) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 (Page 3) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 (Page 4) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 (Page 5) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 (Page 6) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 (Page 7) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Contents (Page 8) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Contents (Page 9) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Contents (Page 10) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Contents (Page 11) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Imperatives (Page 12) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Imperatives (Page 13) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Selling Up, Selling Down (Page 14) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Selling Up, Selling Down (Page 15) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Strategies (Page 16) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Strategies (Page 17) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Take Five (Page 18) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Take Five (Page 19) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - A Customer-Driven Approach to Molding Tomorrow’s Leaders (Page 20) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - The Home Depot: Accelerated Leadership (Page 21) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - The Home Depot: Accelerated Leadership (Page 22) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - The Home Depot: Accelerated Leadership (Page 23) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - The Home Depot: Accelerated Leadership (Page 24) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - The Home Depot: Accelerated Leadership (Page 25) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - CLO Profile (Page 26) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - CLO Profile (Page 27) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - CLO Profile (Page 28) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - CLO Profile (Page 29) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Birth of a Salesman: Selling Learning to Solve Business Issues (Page 30) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Birth of a Salesman: Selling Learning to Solve Business Issues (Page 31) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Birth of a Salesman: Selling Learning to Solve Business Issues (Page 32) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Selling Learning’s Potential at Siemens (Page 33) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Transform Corporate Learning With a User Network (Page 34) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Transform Corporate Learning With a User Network (Page 35) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Transform Corporate Learning With a User Network (Page 36) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Wiki Training Increases Productivity for RMC Vanguard Mortgage (Page 37) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Lessons From the Feds: Mapping Learning to Strategic Initiatives (Page 38) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Lessons From the Feds: Mapping Learning to Strategic Initiatives (Page 39) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Department of Labor Centralizes Content (Page 40) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Department of Labor Centralizes Content (Page 41) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Synchronous and Asynchronous: What’s in a Name? (Page 42) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Synchronous and Asynchronous: What’s in a Name? (Page 43) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Synchronous and Asynchronous: What’s in a Name? (Page 44) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Coping With Cultural Barriers to E-Learning (Page 45) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - The Manager’s Responsibility for Employee Learning (Page 46) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - The Manager’s Responsibility for Employee Learning (Page 47) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - The Manager’s Responsibility for Employee Learning (Page 48) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - The Manager’s Responsibility for Employee Learning (Page 49) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Case Study (Page 50) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Case Study (Page 51) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Case Study (Page 52) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Case Study (Page 53) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Business Intelligence (Page 54) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Business Intelligence (Page 55) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Business Intelligence (Page 56) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - Business Intelligence (Page 57) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - In Conclusion (Page 58) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - In Conclusion (Page Cover3) Chief Learning Officer - July 2008 - In Conclusion (Page Cover4)
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