Not all
problems in learning and/or performance require an instructional solution. Many
times a non-instructional approach is a more appropriate solution. This week's
reading and reflection focuses on human performance, performance support
systems, knowledge management systems, and the concept of informal learning.
Chapter 14 discusses the concept and evolution of human
performance improvement. Several sections of chapter 14 present a variety of
non-instructional solutions to performance problems. Identify a performance
problem in your area of work and identify non-instructional solutions that may help
solve the problem.
For the past four years,
I have worked with the same teaching partner while the third teacher on our
team changed every year. I consider the
revolving door of our co-workers to be a performance problem. The third teacher always came down from
middle school to take the 6th grade science and social studies
position on an elementary campus. The
expectations for elementary students differ from the expectations for middle
school students. Our co-workers seemed
to have trouble making the transition and moved on to a different grade level
or subject the following year.
I believe the
expectations provided by the administration for the new teacher were not clear,
there was not timely and specific feedback when the teacher had concerns or
made improvements, and there was a lack of knowledge sharing among science and
social studies teachers.
One
reason I loved teaching 6th grade math was the collaboration among
sixth grade math teachers. The 6th
grade math teachers from each campus met monthly to discuss ideas and
concerns. This was not required but the
rewards outweighed the cost. We gained
open communication, knowledge sharing, feedback, and support from the
administration.
The goal of Human
Performance Improvement is to “achieve, through people, increasingly successful
accomplishments that are valued by the organization,” Trends and Issues in Instructional Design and Technology (p. 135). To improve the performance of the third
teacher on our team the administration can partner her with a specialized
experienced teacher. In this case, the
mentor teacher could be the social studies or science facilitator. The facilitator is already familiar with the
students, curriculum, and other teachers of the same subjects and grades. The mentor will work closely with the
struggling teacher, set clear expectations for her performance and ensure that
the necessary supplies for teaching are readily available. By bringing together other sixth grade
science and social studies teachers, a sense of community will be formed. Within this community, the struggling teacher
will sense a culture change and will become a member of a team. Positive feedback from the administration is
also required to keep the teacher motivated.
Chapter 15 presents performance
support systems. Define performance support systems and explain how a
performance support system might (or might not) help solve the problem you identified
above.
Performance
support systems are relatively new, emerging in the early 90’s. The earliest purpose of performance support
was to provide users support during computer based tasks. Throughout the years, the definition and
capabilities of performance support has evolved. The possible tasks to be supported can be
found in a wide array of jobs including, education, government, industry, and
medical. The goal of performance support
today is to provide tools that support the user at the moment of need and to
provide support before and after the moment of need. The support can be supplied electronically or
by a mentor but the end desire is for the user to gain support through the
available performance support and use other resources as secondary
support.
A more specific
explanation of the above mentioned problem could be a lack of collaboration
among sixth grade science and social studies teachers. The struggling teacher was trained in the subject
areas during college but she was not provided a team of teachers to collaborate
with when issues and concerns arose. The
lack of collaboration and the lack of community can make a teacher feel alone
and unsupported.
A performance support
system can be created to solve this problem.
After building a community among the teachers, the instructional
facilitator mentioned above will create a blog to continue the teacher support
electronically. One major concern of
teachers is the lack of time to meet during the work day with fellow
teachers. Creating an online community
after the teachers have met and established relationships face to face will
allow the community to continue. The
facilitator’s blog will include a discussion forum similar to the virtual
office in our online classes. This will
allow the teachers to share ideas while the facilitator is able to answer
questions. The blog will also contain
curriculum information, class discipline ideas, organizational tools, and links
to online teaching tools. The blog will
allow the struggling teacher to ask for help throughout the day with almost
instant feedback from the facilitator and her peers.
Chapter 16 explains knowledge management: the way we manage
information, share that information, and use it to solve organization problems.
Organizations, such as schools, accumulate a great deal information/data, which
must be organized in a way that we can make sense of it in order to use for
making decisions. What knowledge would help solve the problem you identified
above and how would that knowledge need to be collected and managed to help
facilitate problem solving?
The
collection and management of knowledge can be done using a blog as mentioned
above. This knowledge management tool
encourages collaboration and a sense of community. The subject area facilitator will maintain
the blog to ensure the information is accurate and up to date. Explicit knowledge such as curriculum guides,
district data on student performance, and training information will be stored
on the blog for teacher reference. The
explicit data provided is actually common knowledge that everyone needs to know
about. This information will keep the
group informed without needing to send out multiple emails.
The
blog will also include threaded discussions.
The discussions will need to be maintained and organized by the
facilitator to ensure information does not get lost. When a topic changes, the discussion will
need to be on a new titled thread. This
will allow teachers to quickly search the discussion titles to access
information discussed in the past. A
chat room will allow real time conversations among teachers and the facilitator
during conference, before, and after school.
The discussion thread and chat room will encourage the exchange of tacit
knowledge. As a teacher, I always
admired certain teachers and wondered, “What is the trick? What do they know that I don’t know?” The exchange of tacit knowledge through an
encouraging and unthreatening medium can give struggling teachers encouragement
and add to their tool box of tricks for teaching.
The
facilitator has a major role in maintaining the blog and encouraging teachers
to actually use it. She must monitor
discussions to ensure the mood is positive.
This is not a place to voice complaints.
She will also need to carefully correct misinformation without
discouraging users from sharing.
Chapter 17 describes types of informal learning. What
informal learning experiences have you participated in at your organization? Could those informal learning experiences be shared
with others? Could the knowledge gained
in those settings be codified and managed? And should it be managed or should the informal experiences
be replicated or broadened for others?
After
graduating from undergrad, the majority of my meaningful learning has been
informal. As teachers, we all must
participate in staff developments but how much do we actually learn and apply
after attending? How much of the
knowledge we apply actually comes from the formal instruction compared to the
knowledge we gained during the lunch break with colleagues discussing the staff
development? I have informally gained
classroom management techniques, lesson plan ideas, and a deeper understanding
of curriculum during lunch, conference time, and after school while informally
meeting with teachers of the same grade and subject area.
I
think my informal learning experiences can be shared with others but as a
classroom teacher, it is difficult to find the time to share, codify, and
manage the knowledge. This is where the
instructional facilitator comes in. She
must provide the opportunity through knowledge management to share the
information. It is her role to codify
and manage the information so it can be accessed by others. This can be accomplished through a blog set
up and managed by the facilitator. The
teachers would need encouragement and reinforcement to use the blog but if
maintained well, the blog could become a place to broaden other’s experiences.
Having the collaboration among sixth grade math teachers is taking the steps needed to reach the goal of human performance improvement. With your team meeting on a monthly basis you were all able to work together to reach that goal. I can understand why it would be difficult for a teacher to move down to a lower grade level where student expectations are different. I too believe the teacher would need extra support to make the transition successfully. I feel your ideas of dealing with the situation are on the right track and would help the teacher feel comfortable and settle into the new position.
ReplyDeleteUsing a blog as a performance support system for the science and social studies teachers is an excellent idea. A blog would not only help the teachers with questions and give them ideas but it would help create a sense of community and teamwork among those teachers. If the blog would have been created and been in place maybe the teachers who leave after one year would have the support they need and the teacher would be satisfied in that position.
A blog created to share teacher’s experience, suggestions, and lesson plans would be very useful. If an instructional facilitator would set that up and manage it there would be many teachers would benefit from it. That is an excellent idea that should be put into action.
I love the idea of collaborating with the Sixth grade teachers across your district. When I taught Pre K a few years ago, we used to met like that. I felt it was very beneficial. If the Science/Soc. St. teachers would meet across the district, it might help those new ones fill in gaps by sharing and getting feedback.
ReplyDeleteI think a blog is a great idea for communicating between teachers. I agree about all of the staff developments. Most of the management knowledge and skills I have acquired in my 16 years of teaching has came from informal meetings with other teachers.