• Home
  • About Jean
    • Philosophy of Learning
    • Areas of Expertise
    • Skills
    • Work Experience
  • Publications
  • Designers Toolkit
    • Great Assignments Toolkit
  • Blog
  • Jean on Twitter
  • Upcoming Conference Presentations
  • Conference Presentations
    • Training and eLearning Presentations
    • Literacy Presentations
    • Ministry Training
  • Ask Jean
  • Work Samples
Applestar Productions

Learning about learning

Let me just Bang my head against the Steel Silo

7/14/2016

3 Comments

 
When one is used to working and cultivating a collaborative group that readily shares information, it is a rude awakening to return to the land of silos and secrets. I recently worked on a project where command and control was the [unspoken] expectation, and as part of my needs assessment, I DARED speak with employees outside of L&D and was taken to task for it. "We don't do it what way around here. You must ask permission to speak to people in the business lines." Huh? I thought we were all on the same team here. The people I spoke to were fine with my inquiries, and I gathered some robust insights, but since I hadn't played "Mother May I?" I was reprimanded with an attitude of "How DARE you!" and those insights, I'm sure, will wind up in a dust bin.

It puzzles me. What are you so afraid of, folks?

The Way Things Could Work

Picture
From Harold Jarche, From Knowledge Worker to Master Artisan
I've grown accustomed to the world of sharing what I learn without expectation of return, willingly asking for help, and offering help when needed. I've even taken the risk of working out loud and showing my work (Thank you Shannon Tipton and Jane Bozarth!) and learned from others who have done likewise.

Harold Jarche's recent blog From Knowledge Worker to Master Artisan was a great recap of how things could (and should) be, and a place for me to reground myself to move back to normalcy. He advocates for Personal Knowledge Mastery or PKMastery, and has developed a model of Seek > Sense > Share. 
While his model is about ever learning and always connecting to build a network on a personal level and the implications that has within organizations, Seek > Sense > Share functions well to describe what a needs assessment should be. It's an investigation (seek), looking for trends, making sense of them, then sharing your findings so that a solution can be developed to solve the problem at hand. Design thinking spends tons of time examining things first, ensuring that gaps are identified, and a solution created to fill them. Doing so ensures the right problem is solved.

Alas, not in this organization. It appears that the solution has been crafted before the problem has truly been uncovered. When you exist in a world where everything is guarded close to the chest it's really easy for mediocrity to perpetuated. You miss the perspective of the outsiders who almost always have valuable insights for you. When your focus is wrapped up on adherence to process, it's easy to forget what the process is for. When colleagues become snitches and tattle to ensure compliance with said processes, your problem is bigger than you think. When you stop looking around, it's easy to function on the hamster's wheel, always running and never getting anywhere.

​I shudder, shake the dust from my feet, and return to normalcy. It's a much better place.
3 Comments
custom writing paper link
4/27/2017 11:31:00 pm

People are all different o tone another and we need to understand them that they all need something that we should see at a different angle. There will be angles that we need to look at so that we may know the proper things to do. This will be a new way of seeing life. A new stage of life can be found at work.

Reply
desksta link
8/6/2020 05:08:53 am

Thank you for posting this useful information to us, and keep posting such good Things. Let make your blogs more plentiful on instagram with our site

Reply
Rebecca link
7/12/2024 03:19:56 am

Interresting read

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Jean Marrapodi

    Teacher by training, learner by design.

    Archives

    January 2018
    July 2017
    November 2016
    October 2016
    July 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    July 2015
    May 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014

    Categories

    All
    Active Learning
    Assessment
    Bible
    Christmas
    Conferences
    Customer Service
    Design
    ELearning
    Learning
    Learning Theory
    Maker Movement
    Needs Assessment
    Performance Consulting
    Rebels
    Reflections
    SMEs
    Talent Development
    Talent Management
    Training
    Writing

    RSS Feed

Conference
​Resources

​Training/elearning
Literacy
Ministry.
Upcoming Events

Company
Info

About
Experience
Philosophy
Contact

Jean's
​Writing

Publications
Blog
Twitter Feed
© COPYRIGHT 2022. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.