April 13, 2008

The role that "Career Blockage" plays in International Assignments

Increasingly, firms find that it is necessary and prudent to expose their promising talent to international assignments.  Sometimes it works out fine, other times it doesn't.Sidetracked

One of the reasons cited by expats that leave posts (or firms) is "career blockage", or better known as the feeling that working abroad has gotten their career sidetracked, while people back home are climbing the corporate ladder.

I used to travel abroad extensively, and would frequently run into an expat that after a few drinks would admit “the home office has forgotten about me”

It doesn't seem to matter whether you are doing your job or not, it's just a human nature response to conditions.  It appears to the expat that there is a lack of collegiality and communication when working abroad, especially when surrounded by cultural natives who are in their natural setting, and receiving support and personal communications routinely.

The role of "HQ" managing this common concern is significant. 

HR needs to ensure that expatriates know that an international assignment helps in terms of advancement within the firm.  This also needs to be periodically reinforced by upper management.  Sometimes this is hard to do, especially when there is a lot or organizational "churn" at the upper management levels with people moving to different jobs, or leaving the firm altogether.  Remember that the initial expectations that may have been set, if not committed to a written agreement, may not survive if there is (as if often the case), changes in upper management.

Likewise, planning needs to take into consideration, the very real concerns that expats have about their return to their "home base."  I have declined some overseas posts because the company was unwilling or unable to describe what would happen upon my return to the states.
Expat_setting
Will the firm respect (and value) the unique new skills that I have acquired while overseas?  Will my return represent a "loss of status" (either real or perceived)?  Will there be a plan for re-integrating me into the stateside business?  Reverse "Culture Shock" can also be a factor, (and an adjustment period is a wise idea for the expat, as well as their family)  If firms are not prepared to do these things, it can really impact on the willingness of personnel to go overseas on assignment.

It is food for thought, hmmmm?

March 10, 2008

Nontraditional Teachers Lining Up

Non_traditional_teacher One of the great educational challenges we face today is the shortage of individuals want to teach and who can teach our youth what they will need to know to cut it in our rapidly changing world.

Why does this article resonate with me?

For one thing, the teachers "in the system" are in many cases struggling just to maintain their existing teaching load, and are themselves challenged by school district bureaucracies and policies.  Where are the "real world" perspectives to come from, amidst a rapidly changing jobs landscape.

For example, how many teachers and guidance counselors are introducing our youth to careers in construction, where the pay, benefits and job security are above average?  Do the current faculty see construction as much more than the "summer job" that they may have held before, where they were little more than job site general labor?  Does such an attitude dissuade them from encouraging youth to learn about jobs in this industry? 

Do our current cadre of teachers and guidance counselors have an awareness of the types of match, science, or communications skills that these youth will need to be able to enter the field at the "skilled worker" level?  Are these teaching professionals even aware that people without a degree with just a few years of experience with these skills are being actively sought after and snagging annual pay in the high five and low six figures? 

Yet because of youth making misinformed academic choices they often end up competing after graduation for "commodity" jobs that are often not fulfilling.  If they had chosen a path that enabled them to grasp basic math/algebra/geometry skills, they would likely find themselves in  a better bargaining position for jobs.

So it boils down to how to get people from the professions to step into the teaching profession to expose our youth to some of these possibilities.

Check out this story about a St. Paul schools program, designed to find candidates for hard-to-fill jobs by making teachers out of professionals coming from other fields.

read more | digg story

March 06, 2008

Who says that online learning can't be fun?

Have you ever taken a really dry and boring online course?Bored_learner

Most of us have at one time or another...

However the days where online learning choices are limited to boring and static "page turner" type of experiences. 

Take a look at some of the methods that leading eLearning course developers are putting into learner-paced instruction in order to more actively engage the learner in the process (not to mention helping reinforce important teaching points):

Flip book:

Matching:

Hangman:

Active Listening Techniques

Crossword

Learning Wheel

So if you're still learning the "old fashioned" ebook way, you may want to consider that there's a more engaging and fun way to learn "out there"

Make sense?


 

 

February 22, 2008

How Organizational Learning Occurs

I am always on the lookout for resources that help explain how people and organizations learn. 

I've discovered "The Fifth Discipline - the Art and Practice of the Learning Organization" (an earlier book by Peter M Senge) that brings word of "learning organizations," organizations where people continually expand their capacity to create the results they truly desire, where new and expansive patterns of thinking are nurtured, where collective aspiration is set free, and where people are continually learning how to learn together. 

Five disciplines are described as the means of building learning organizations. Case studies are in the book are provided to show how the disciplines have worked in particular companies.

Each of the five disciplines represents a lifelong body of study and practice for individuals and teams in organizations.

1. Personal Mastery
This discipline of aspiration involves formulating a coherent picture of the results people most desire to gain as individuals (their personal vision), alongside a realistic assessment of the current state of their lives today (their current reality). Learning to cultivate the tension between vision and reality (represented in this icon by the rubber band) can expand people’s capacity to make better choices, and to achieve more of the results that they have chosen.

2. Mental Models

This discipline of reflection and inquiry skills is focused around developing awareness of the attitudes and perceptions that influence thought and interaction. By continually reflecting upon, talking about, and reconsidering these internal pictures of the world, people can gain more capability in governing their actions and decisions. The icon here portrays one of the more powerful principles of this discipline, the “ladder of inference” depicting how people leap instantly to counterproductive conclusions and assumptions.

3. Shared Vision

This collective discipline establishes a focus on mutual purpose. People learn to nourish a sense of commitment in a group or organization by developing shared images of the future they seek to create (symbolized by the eye), and the principles and guiding practices by which they hope to get there.


4. Team Learning
This is a discipline of group interaction. Through techniques like dialogue and skillful discussion, teams transform their collective thinking, learning to mobilize their energies and ability greater than the sum of individual members’ talents. The icon symbolizes the natural alignment of a learning-oriented team as the flight of a flock of birds.

5. Systems Thinking

In this discipline, people learn to better understand interdependency and change, and thereby to deal more effectively with the forces that shape the consequences of our actions. Systems thinking is based upon a growing body of theory about the behavior of feedback and complexity-the innate tendencies of a system that lead to growth or stability over time. Tools and techniques such as systems archetypes and various types of learning labs and simulations help people see how to change systems more effectively, and how to act more in tune with the larger processes of the natural and economic world. The circle in this icon represents the fundamental building block of all systems: the circular “feedback loop” underlying all growing and limiting processes in nature.

Senge is also the author of a more recent work, "The Dance of Change" that is alsoThe_dance_of_change groundbreaking work, that among other things recognizes that the impact of learning culture on organizational performance takes many years to track.

(Many people claim to espouse the Kirkpatrick model, and when I ask HOW they are tracking results of learning, provide me an answer that is really not tracking the results of learning, but rather, the ACTIVITY of providing learning experiences.)

It's important for us who are responsible for development of the workforce to understand how learning models work.  This is as good a source as I've found to date.  Check it out, and let me know what you think...

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  • Roughly 35% of firms report problems maintaining an adequate supply of workers. This phenomenon is global and impacts every industry. My desire for this blog is to share with you the many perspectives, causes, and solutions that are available to address this matter. As an educator, consultant and a RedVector Fellow, I am committed to figure out how we can better recruit and develop talent in the workplace. Please join me in this blog to share some experiences, "best practices" as well as "horror stories" so that we can all benefit and be better able to attract, grow and retain the talent we will need now and in the future.

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