Dear Reader,
Days have fewer and fewer hours, it seems. The demands placed on us, those
obligations we accept and those that we choose ourselves make our daily to-do
lists grow. Doesn't it happen to you that you don't even read all emails
anymore, that you browse through your inbox and leave many for later (not sure
if "later" is a real time or a metaphor for "I-don't-know-when, -if-ever,
I-just-know-that-not-now")? With this overload and days getting progressively
shorter, going to conferences means a real challenge. I appreciate the fact that
you're even reading this paragraph, and so in this issue we wanted to bring a
conference closer to you.
We're featuring an extract of the first International Action Learning Conference,
held at the Henley Management College, in the UK, a few weeks ago.
Enjoy the reading!
Isabel Rimanoczy
Editor
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| Issue 93 | The LIM Newsletter | May 2008 |
International Conference – Henley Management College
March 2008
A few weeks ago, the Henley Management
College in the UK hosted the international conference Action Learning:
Practices, Problems & Prospects. The conference,
the first of its kind, was organized by a group associated with the journal
Action Learning: Research and Practice, and consisted of: Mike Pedler
(Henley Management College); Kiran Trehan (University of Lancaster); Jeff Gold
(Leeds Metropolitan University); Sue Pritchard (Bath Consultancy Group); Helen
James (Henley Management College) with support from Joe Raelin (Northeastern
University, USA).
The invitation brought together over 140 participants, representing
practitioners and scholars from 9 different countries: USA, Canada, Germany,
Italy, Finland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Australia and the UK. True to the Action
Learning spirit, the conference was designed in the form of a learning
community, welcoming everyone as contributors and participants, accepting all
relevant submissions and asking everyone to encourage questioning and the
sharing of inquiry, avoiding "telling", "selling" and "talking heads".
To build in relevance and ownership, participants had an opportunity to reflect
what their main questions were, and what they wanted to explore during the
conference. Daily debriefs in the form of a general session encouraged social
learning, to share reflections and impressions gathered during the day.
The conference featured 44 different sessions, some as accounts of practice set
up as action learning sets, where the presenter shared his questions and the
participants provided input and inquiry, papers and workshops.
A Quarter of a Century learning about Action Learning
Richard Thorpe: Professor of Management Development, Leeds University
Business School offered a retrospective of the evolution of AL over a 25-year
period. While it originated as a practice to stimulate growth in small firms, it
later was used to bring about strategic change as well as a vehicle for
management development, and then in a third phase, was employed as a means of
developing critical reflection and of enabling change.
Several papers addressed the use of AL within MBA programs, as an alternative to
solving the shortcomings of MBA programs that fail to provide students "with
useful skills, for not preparing them adequately for leadership roles and for
not imbuing them with appropriate norms of ethical behavior". They argued that
the main cause was a failure to ground the curriculum in actual business
practice. But since AL has been applied in many different ways, some papers
indicated that there is still a need for some clear ideas and/or principles to
inform the practice. Furthermore, some presenters indicated that the use of a
facilitator to make the most out of an AL set is a challenge since it required
some specific contracting and skills.
Accounts of Practice
Susan Turner, Director of an AL program at a health organization in Canada
presented her two-year experience with an AL program that included over 1500
employees, and that had the purpose of changing an organizational culture where
workplace bullying was rife, and where there were internal communication
blockages and a reluctance to take responsibility among managerial ranks.
From the US, Dr. Deborah Cron, the superintendent of the Weatherford Independent
School District in Weatherford, Texas, and her team shared their experiences
with a program which uses action learning as a foundation for developing
leadership in her staff. This project has been running since 2006, and has been
yielding surprising results. The presentation referred to how AL can help
creating engagement among employees, a topic that is also currently of concern
in corporate environments.
ARL was also present. Carole Brown and I conducted an experiential workshop
designed within the ARL principles, using "the medium as the message". The
approach was rated as innovative by the participants, and we were able to share
the 10 ARL principles that can enrich and optimize the designs of Action
Learning programs. Since the need for some underpinning guidelines to inform the
practice had been raised in other sessions, this workshop provided some answers
and also addressed the various "hats" that an AL coach can wear to help
participants maximize the learning: teacher, facilitator and team coach.
Ghislaine Caulat, from Ashridge Consulting, shared her experience facilitating
virtual Action Learning sets, which she called Audio Action Learning. While some
authors argue the importance of people having initial face-to-face meetings to
establish trust and generate an open climate in the virtual group, her
experience indicates that an initial face-to face meeting is not necessary. On
the contrary, "preserving a certain degree of anonymity can foster openness and
paradoxically speed up the building of trust in the group". She recommended
having an initial contracting session, to agree on norms, such as:
Be in a quiet room and alone.
All participants should use the same virtual communication channel, namely the telephone, even if some of them happen to be in the same location and could in fact meet face-to-face.
Use technology that is as stable as possible: bad connections are frustrating when careful reflection is required.
Don't work, drive or read during the session.
Take sufficient time for the session and do not squeeze it in between other activities.
Some journaling after the session is recommended, in order to capitalize on the learning.
Confidentiality (just as in face-to-face meetings).
Commitment to the dates.
Punctuality (even more critical than in face to-face).
Clear time scheduling, particularly when different time zones are involved.
Reflection for all?
Bernhard Hauser, from Germany, presented the challenge and satisfaction that
Action Learning participants experience in relation to the "reflection" part.
Managers and students quite naturally immediately focus on working on what they
define as their work—the project. Their willingness to engage in reflection, on
the other hand, represents a much greater challenge to them. They are not used
to instinctively use the "soft skill", and most of the participants we see in
the sets have little or no experience in doing personal reflections in a group.
Of course they have their opinions of what is happening and how it is happening,
but they are not used to addressing these reflections openly or to putting their
theory-of-action into question. So when beliefs are mentioned they are often
expressed as a fact and not as an assumption. For many participants reflection
does not seem to be a very pleasant or satisfying task, or something they even
would regard as work at all.
Many varieties of "action" based approaches
Joe Raelin, from Northeastern University, discussed the many modalities
based on action: action research, action learning, action science, developmental
action inquiry, cooperative inquiry and participatory research, plus other
experiential programs such as cooperative education, internships, service
learning, clinical practice, or study abroad. He introduced 10 elements that he
found these diverse action modalities have in common.
Ten Unifying Elements
They are practice-based rather than didactic or classroom-based.
They develop useful theory applicable to specific contexts
They invite learners to be active participants, leading often to change in the self and in the system in question.
They endorse reflection-in-action rather than reflection-on-action.
They emphasize meta-competence over competence, meaning it is not any particular skill which is critical but how to adapt to the changing environment.
Learning tends to be facilitated rather than taught.
They espouse the development of double-loop rather than just single-loop learning. In single-loop learning, when something doesn't go according to plan, most people look for another solution that will work but they tend to look within their portfolio of existing approaches. In double-loop learning, these approaches and even the values connected to them are questioned, resulting in new choices, more valid information, and high internal commitment to any new behavior attempted. People learn to question what might even be considered sacred.
They welcome the contribution of tacit knowledge to learning.
Their measured learning outcomes are more often practice-based rather than academic.
They are
comfortable with tentativeness rather than certainty.
The Final Session
The Conference ended with an unusual session for conferences, yet one very
well-suited for the Action Learning setting. Participants gathered in a big room
and were invited to share their thoughts, reflections, insights and collectively
elaborate on the next steps they could envision as a result of the two days
experience of practices, problems and possibilities. Organized in the AL spirit,
I don't think the conference could have had a better closing.![]()
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From
the organizer's perspective: A comment by Mike Pedler1
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1 Mike Pedler is Editor of Action Learning: Research & Practice - The first international journal dedicated to the advancement of knowledge and practice through action learning. To receive contents alerts for every new issue, please visit http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/14767333.asp
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If you want more triggers for reflection, visit http://isabelrimanoczy.blogspot.com. |
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