Training design skills
In this section we will be discussing some general
considerations to guide you in customizing the councillor training you do based
on the general workshop designs contained in the 12 handbooks on Training for
Elected Leadership.
1. Keep them busy
In designing a workshop for councillors it is important to avoid
having a passive group of participants. Have something for them to do all the
time. In a presentation, stress that they work hard at being active listeners.
In an exercise, be sure that each participant has something to do or think about
that contributes to his or her own development within that particular council
role. In other words, make it clear that each workshop participant is
responsible for managing his or her own learning and, then, give them ample
opportunity to act out that responsibility through participation.
2. Balance and sequencing
The arrangement of exercises and presentation should proceed
naturally from the more known to the less known, from the less complex to the
more complex, from the less interactive to the more interactive. Moreover, every
component of the workshop should contribute to the attainment of workshop goals.
Even the tea breaks, meals, and free times should be placed strategically in
anticipation of subsequent exercises (e.g., schedule an intensive, highly
interactive group exercise immediately after a meal to avoid the mental and
physical sluggishness that could accompany a presentation). It is important also
to have the same theme running throughout all the components of a workshop as a
basis for learning continuity. The various workshops that make up the 12
handbooks are designed with learning continuity in mind.
3. Content
Every effort possible has been made to provide
councillor-relevent materials in the various handbooks. This is vital inasmuch
as the content of a workshop will have genuine learning value only to the extent
that it parallels the kinds of leadership concerns and problems that councillors
ordinarily face in their work. As an aim in furthering the relevancy of these
materials, several of the exercises have been designed to gather on-the-spot
data from councillors about their own experiences. Participants, in several
instances, are asked to pair up or, in small groups, to gather data about a
topic central to the workshop. These concerns may be compiled on a sheet of
newsprint and even rank ordered according to urgency, importance, or other
considerations. In several instances, participants are asked to perform
independent rank ordering, establish their own points of view, and then, in
small groups, to develop a consensus ranking of the material. Questionnaires
employing checklists, rating scales, and open-ended questions are used to gather
individual data for comparison with small group and even total group results.
You can take advantage of these data collection devices to help participants
process data and to take responsibility for analysing the results, perhaps as a
group self-portrait.
4. Processing
As mentioned previously, it is imperative that everything
possible be done to encourage the transfer of learning from the workshop
environment to the realworld working life of councillors. Processing is an
important key to successful learning transfer. By processing we are referring to
efforts made to talk through and interpret data arising from a training event.
It is imperative that you as a trainer provide sufficient opportunity for
participants to sort out and share reactions to what they have been
experiencing. This cannot be overemphasized. Processing data can be encouraged
in several ways:
· You can use
observers to report on the process or outcome of an exercise.
· You can ask participants to
serve as consultants to one another to stimulate thinking and problem solving.
· You can divide the participant
group into several smaller groups for rapid processing of data and structured so
that reporters give a brief synopsis to the total group of what occurred during
the small group discussion.
· You can encourage back-home
application by having participants contract with one another to do various
things on return from the workshop, hopefully supported with planned
follow-through as described earlier.
5. Pacing
We have already stressed the importance of avoiding boredom and
passivity by keeping people involved. On the other hand, you might design a
workshop that moves at such breakneck speed that participants leave with an
information overload. Time is needed during the workshop to give participants a
chance to sort out what they have been learning. Free time is needed to give
participants an escape from the heavy cognitive demands of the workshop.
At times things can begin to drag in a workshop. When this
happens, you can point out your observation and ask for confirmation from
participants. Sometimes a simple ventilation exercise (e.g., on a scale of one
to five, with five being high and one being low, how do you feel about the way
things are going right now?) is a useful way to get participant feedback on
their feelings individually and as a group. In other words, the pace of events
in a workshop should be dictated by evidence of fatigue or boredom, the
necessity to provide plenty of time for processing data, and the need to get
responsible and accurate feedback on the process from the participants
themselves.
6. Goals
Each of the workshops in the series is introduced with an
objective for the exercise. Achieving these objectives should guide you as you
introduce and facilitate the various exercises that make up each of the
workshops. It is also important to help participants clarify the relation
between these stated objectives and their own reasons for wanting to master the
content of a workshop.
7. Voluntariness
An important trainer value is to stimulate participants to
exercise more freedom in thought and action than may be customary for them. A
demonstration of this value during the workshop is to avoid doing anything to
force anyone to take part in any activity that would cause them to feel
threatened or intimidated. This is particularly true if people are attending a
workshop involuntarily or with strong reservations. It is important for you as
the trainer to be sensitive to the feelings and needs of all participants and
not to expect participants to involve themselves with equal enthusiasm in every
single activity.
8. Flexibility
While each of the workshops in the handbook series has been
designed so that it can be presented without modification, this does not mean
that we intend them to be used this way. Quite the contrary. We want you to look
for and consider any design modification that would cause the workshop to
reflect more accurately the learning needs of a particular group of elected
leaders. This is particularly true when you are asked to custom design workshops
for councillors who serve on the same council, councillors who may have teamwork
as one of their goals - learning how to get along better with each other. In
other words, we want you to consider more than one design option for each
workshop learning objective; in fact, we want you to view this as a personal
goal anytime you are engaged in the design of training
activities.