1 / 71

The 3 Cs of Learning Organizations: Confidence, Competence, and Cooperation

The 3 Cs of Learning Organizations: Confidence, Competence, and Cooperation. Dr. Anthony J. Rigazio-DiGilio ‘73. Hello Cortland Scholars. Greetings from the past Me and Blockbuster Happy Sesquicentennial No recording any references. Great Skills I Learned at Cortland. Course scheduling

munsond
Télécharger la présentation

The 3 Cs of Learning Organizations: Confidence, Competence, and Cooperation

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. The 3 Cs of Learning Organizations:Confidence, Competence, and Cooperation Dr. Anthony J. Rigazio-DiGilio ‘73

  2. Hello Cortland Scholars • Greetings from the past • Me and Blockbuster • Happy Sesquicentennial • No recording any references

  3. Great Skills I Learned at Cortland • Course scheduling • Accepting chaos and ambiguity in this world

  4. Today I will Attempt to Share • The importance of professional practice that is ethical, moral, relevant, and research-based • Three examples of research that have served me well • Three TRANSFORMATIONS I would like to celebrate

  5. Background Information THE FIELD OF EDUCATION • Values Education/Character Education • Learner Efficacy • Teacher Efficacy • Teaming • Optimal Learning Conditions/How to Create Learning Communities LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT • Leading not Directing • Collective Efficacy • Personal and Organizational Growth RESEARCH POSITION • More Qualitative • Action Research

  6. Transformation #1 YOU and Your Progress into the World of Professional Research

  7. Researchers See the Future

  8. Researchers See the Future

  9. From Consumers to Producers of Research …

  10. … To Informed Critics of Research

  11. Entrance to the Profession: Initial Socialization As Participants Today • Enhanced research learning • Value of collaborative efforts As Graduates of Cortland • Commitment to ethical and moral service to: • Learners/Clients • Team • Organization • Community • Global Village

  12. Life-long Imprint • Into the Middle of the Field • At Work: Scholar/Practitioner • Translating current research into practice for clients, colleagues, and communities Problem solving in all fields and occupations

  13. Into the Middle of your Life • Common, every day experience will pull basic research skills out of you • In short, research skills will help you answer the key question: • How do we know what we know • As much as we try to reduce it to simplistic dependent and independent variables: • The world is a hierarchical multivariable mess

  14. Power to Understand the World Around Us Tony Tip #1 Power comes from your familiarity and dexterity with research methods • Necessary, but not sufficient • A cursory look at the people who are at the top of their fields indicates that they have deep knowledge of research methods

  15. Your Career-Long Obligations • Meet and Exceed Professional Standards • Provide Evidence-Based, Culturally-Sensitive Practice • Engage in Reflective Practice with Others • Sustain Continuous Professional Learning • Promote a Community-Informed Disposition

  16. Plan to Stay Connected How will you continue to remain engaged with evolving research in your field?

  17. Tony Tip #2 Use other fields to benchmark and learn

  18. Who Made it Possible? • Faculty Sponsors • Faculty and Administrators • The Committee • The Audience and Invited Guests • High School Students • High School Faculty • Local and State Officials

  19. Tony Tip #3 Over document • Longitudinal perspective • Two programs, one annotated • “Open 2059” on cover

  20. My Next Focus Today To discuss three aspects of educational research that have had a profound impact on my practice since I left Cortland 45 years ago

  21. In the Beginning …

  22. Two Key Guiding Assumptions of My Career • Working with individuals situated in a supportive Learning Community group in the community is more effective than working with individuals individually • Professionals must knowing how to create and sustain Learning Organizations

  23. Three Strands of Research • CONFIDENCE: Rosenthal Effect - Where does the inner urge to improve come from? • Pedagogy versus andragogy versus heutagogy • COMPETENCE: What is it and how do we maintain the professional spark in ourselves to strive for higher levels of professional competence • Individual professional to client/stakeholder • Individual professional to current Learning Community (team, work colleagues, department, peers) • Individual professional to organization/profession • COOPERATION: Within the Learning Community • What transcends the individual and works, sticks, and adds value to the clientele, the larger organization, and the wider community

  24. CONFIDENCE

  25. CONFIDENCE: The Good Olde Days • Little Engine that Could • National Zeitgeist: Rugged individualism; Might is right; White, male privilege; Capitalism is best • National Heroes: Teddy and Franklin Roosevelt, Susan B. Anthony, Rosa Parks, JFK, Athletes, Movie and TV stars, World leaders, etc. • Gumption was in the individual • If you had confidence you would succeed • “Whether you think you can or think you can’t, you’re right.” – H. Ford

  26. Confidence Revised: The Pygmalion Effect Finding #1 An effect caused by the expectations of a teachers regarding the performance of their students

  27. 1. CONFIDENCE: The Self-Fulfilling Prophecy [Finding #1] • Teachers’ perceptions/expectations of their students actually shifts the students’ confidence • Positively influences their performance and self-identity • Simultaneously reinforces the teacher’s own sense of competency and confidence (i.e., self-efficacy) For me, this finding was EARTH SHATTERING

  28. Transformation #2: My Journey to culturally and contextually informed community advocate to set designer working with four levels of staging to cheerleader My transformation from fisherperson

  29. 1. CONFIDENCE: Rosenthal Effect [Finding #2] • Experiment and Experimenter Bias • Objectivity was more fragile

  30. Bias Touches all Aspect of a Research Study • Framing of our research questions • The population we choose • The methods and instruments we use • The interpretation and findings we note • The conclusions, generalizability, and connections to previous research • What lasts and has impact on the way we live • That’s why the Gold Seal of Quantitative Research is double-blind studies • The Gold Seal of Qualitative Research is to have multiple member-checks and trained raters

  31. Hechinger Report: Jill Barshay 3/18/19 • Johns Hopkins Study • After criticizing Big Pharma for widespread biases in studies of new and potentially profitable drugs • Now, scholars are detecting the same type of biases in the education product industry • Infiltrated into Federal “What Works Clearinghouse” • Up to 80% higher than independent studies

  32. 1. Confidence Forward • Character/Values Education/Anti-bullying • Emotional Intelligence • Academic Optimism • Growth Mindset • Strategies for Differentiation • Personalized Education • Trauma-sensitive Educational Experiences • Mindfulness

  33. COMPETENCE

  34. 2. Competence Matters • What is it and why does it matter? • Patricia SnowOakland, CAMiddle School

  35. 2. Competence Matters

  36. 2. Competence Matters

  37. 2. Competence Matters

  38. 2. Competence Matters

  39. 2. Competence Matters

  40. 2. Competence Matters

  41. 2. Competence Matters

  42. 2. Competence Matters

  43. 2. Competence Matters

  44. 2. Competency Matters • Professional Standards • Leadership/Supervisory Practices • Instructional Practices • Competency-based Educational Practices • Classroom/School Climate • State and National Content Standards • Professional Preparation programs • Personnel Evaluation • Life-long Professional Development and Training Design

  45. COOPERATION

  46. 3. COOPERATION: From Individual to Distributed Intelligence within the Learning Community • More people lose their jobs because of underdeveloped interpersonal skills than for technical deficiencies • Individual confidence and competence in group and community settings • Joyce and Showers research on PEER supervision • Replicated many times in business, education and recreation, medical, technical, and social science fields

  47. 3. Cooperation

  48. 3. Cooperation

  49. 3. Cooperation

  50. 3. Cooperation

More Related