1 / 16

Family &Youth Information Services Conference Action Learning in a Nutshell! 28th March 2014

Family &Youth Information Services Conference Action Learning in a Nutshell! 28th March 2014. Institute of Public Care. For well led, evidence-based public care Oxford Brookes University Social care, health, education, youth offending, housing Analysis, implementation and development

jtibbits
Télécharger la présentation

Family &Youth Information Services Conference Action Learning in a Nutshell! 28th March 2014

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Family &Youth Information Services ConferenceAction Learning in a Nutshell!28th March 2014

  2. Institute of Public Care • For well led, evidence-based public care • Oxford Brookes University • Social care, health, education, youth offending, housing • Analysis, implementation and development • Performance management, commissioning, managing practice quality and change • Central, regional and local government, NHS, private and voluntary sector

  3. Purpose of this Session • Welsh Government support for continuous shared learning and improvement through action learning: • Families First • Flying Start • Accredited ‘Team Manager Development Programme’ • SSIA Support for Directors • Different approaches, common interests • IPC action learning methodology

  4. What will we Cover? • Why action learning? • IPC methodology - how does it work? • Structured conversation • Key roles and skills • Components of successful action learning • Some ground rules • The methodology in practice

  5. What are the Benefits? An opportunity: • Individual learning and growth • Valuable feedback and support • Better managerial solutions • Adopt different styles and processes • Take risks, learn from mistakes as well as success • Action and progress on problems

  6. What is Action Learning? • Developed by Reg Revans as a method of management and organisation development • Learning by doing: working on real problems, focusing on learning and implementing solutions • Based on premise that “there can be no learning without action” • People work in small groups/sets with a facilitator to tackle important organisational issues or problems • People learn from their attempts to change things • Involves doing something other than what you are currently doing

  7. Some Things to Consider • People learn best when working on real problems • People learn best when they share feedback • People get stuck on perceptions, values and feelings • Finding the right problem is as important as solving it • The person with the problem is the real expert

  8. The Learning Cycle

  9. Key Roles • Facilitator • Issue holder or presenter • Set members

  10. Successful Action Learning Sets • Project self-management - people take responsibility for own actions and learning • Consistent, committed membership: commitment to own development, to the set, and to taking action • Members’ problem tasks act as main vehicles for action and learning by individuals • Clear ground rules: agree early on to govern behaviour inside and outside the set • Support people: a good set builds up its ability to offer members support and challenge to their existing views and perceptions

  11. Suggested Ground Rules • Confidentiality • Punctuality • Attendance • Listening • Non judgemental • Minimum number of members

  12. Key Facilitation Skills • Holding boundaries • Maintaining the agreed ground rules • Listening for emotions • Reflect and summarise • Good questions

  13. Each Discussion • ‘presenter’ talks through issue • individuals ask questions of clarity • individual reflection • individuals take turns to feedback suggestions and comments • feedback from ‘presenter’

  14. In Practice … In small groups: • ‘presenter’ talks through issue – 5 mins • individuals ask questions of clarity – 5 mins • individual reflection – 5 mins • individuals take turns to feedback suggestions and comments – 10 mins • feedback from ‘presenter’ – 5 mins

  15. In Practice … • Your reflections? • Next steps? • How can you use this approach at work?

  16. Contact us • http://ipc.brookes.ac.uk • ipc@brookes.ac.uk • 01225 484088

More Related