Friday, 6 July 2012
Zen and the art of competency measurement
In other words, says Professor Jorgen Sandberg, competence is not attribute- based, but understanding based.
Our understanding of what our work is would then inform our subsequent actions in that particular role.
The problem, Prof Sandberg says, in measuring competency via attributes is that it does not necessarily reflect the in-work performance of the individual.
In other words, just 'cos someone has skills doesn't mean he would use them effectively.
Don't look at competence from the outside, exhorts Prof Sandberg, look at it from the "inside". Don't divorce the attributes of a worker from the worker himself.
Of course, attributes are necessary -- a doctor still needs to study medicine (and pass his exams!) to be a doctor. The question here is: "What makes one doctor better in his job than another doctor in his job?"
And here's the bad news: There is no one single answer to that.
Thoughts?
Associate Professor Leesa Wheelahan's Friday keynote presentation
Adult learners don't want to go to school, really
Professor Stephen Billett certainly thinks we are.
Singapore's great challenge for CET is that we are playing catchup in terms of training our adult workforce, especially for the 40+ age group.
Unlike initial preparatory training, which comes under the purview of MOE, CET has been supported by MOM, mainly through initiatives by WDA and IAL.
We can do more, says Prof Billett.
He envisions a national CET model, which marries MOE and MOM, where WDA and IAL focuses on providing dedicated CET centres, and where grassroots organisations, through People's Association and community centres, help adult learners pull themselves up by their bootstraps.
The key, he says of adult learners, is not to treat them as students, but to engage them through learning dialogues.
CET should be more than just training programmes, it is about a learning process.
In other words, adult learners don't want to go back to school, they simply want to learn.
While it may be easy to quantify CET simply by administrating courses and, as Prof Billett puts it, counting bums on seats, the challenge is for us to go beyond the orthodoxy, to focus on helping those who want to learn, learn.
And maybe merge a couple of ministries while we're at it, eh?
Thoughts?
Degrees of separation
His quantitative research into skills utilisation in the UK has thrown up a host of interesting conclusions.
He found that the UK government has had great success in equipping people with degrees, but has not been so successful in providing jobs that required said degrees.
He also found that over the years, people feel that they have had to work harder, and have less control over what they get to do in their jobs.
On the plus side, more people have had more training over the years, although this training seems to be overly concentrated on a smaller, younger, more prominent group.
Worryingly, his data shows that as workers get older, training slows down, which is a challenge for the adult continuing education sector.
While all his data has been culled from UK sources, IAL has carried out its own survey in skills utilisation in Singapore, so it would be interesting to see how similar (or different) the results may be.
But even without looking at these results, I find Prof Felstead's results distressingly familiar to my experiences in Singapore.
Disagree? Have you been reading our newspaper headlines recently?
Thoughts?
Be capable, not just competent
And that is a big problem, says Professor Leesa Wheelahan. It is a big problem because many students don't end up in jobs that they train for.
It is a big problem because in liberal economies like Australia and Singapore, vocational education and training is often treated like a lesser cousin to higher education.
It is a big problem because by focusing on rote learning and following formulae, students are not empowered to go beyond what they are "qualified" to do.
In other words, a plumber will be a plumber will be a plumber forevermore.
If someone wants to be a plumber, then it's all fine and good, but what if he wants something else? How has he been equipped to do so?
All these questions are extremely relevant to Singapore. Just think about our ITE system. Can you imagine an ITE graduate managing an NUS grad? Now ask yourself, why not?
Prof Wheelahan's passionate argument is to move away from competency-based training and into capability training. Focus on using skills as a lens to view the world, not just on applying said skills. Teach math, she says, not just formulae.
This, she argues, would help not just graduating students, but adult learners, in their transitions from one job to another, from an occupation to the next.
Strong words, bold vision.
Now, how do we do it?
Thoughts?
Thursday, 5 July 2012
Mr Eric Lee, Facilitating learning in mid-career transitions
Keynote from Professor Diana Lourillard
Learner, learning; teacher, teaching; teacher, learning?
Just because the resources are available, it doesn't necessarily mean that students know how to use them.
Of course, Wikipedia and other web-based resources have made online knowledge acquisition much easier, but telling students to simply "google it" is like letting a bunch of kids loose in a candy store.
And you can be sure that it'll end in tears.
"Learners need to learn how to learn," says Prof Diana Laurillard in her keynote address at the ALS.
In other words, you must be able to structure e-learning and set proper goals for it -- that is, we need to have a proper pedagogical framework.
In the rest of her speech, Prof Laurillard sketches out her argument for this framework, concluding the teachers must function more like scientists, especially in collaboration arena.
Actually, there is another key assumption we have about teachers.
We believe all teachers know how to use the latest technology. After all, they're teachers, right?
Wrong.
Prof Laurillard stressed that we must not be simply driven by technology and lose sight of the goal of educating our students. To do so, teachers must know about developments in e-learning, so that we won't get dazzled by the latest toys. The key therefore, is to recognise that technology is an enabler, and not the end goal in itself.
As NTU'S Associate Professor Daniel Tan puts it, we must focus on how these tools benefit the students.
Consistently during the address, and in the panel discussion afterwards, the point that kept coming up is that teachers must receive training to harness technology.
And that they must be given the time to do so.
A footnote, however, that the panellists brought up, is that the teachers themselves need to be receptive to being taught.
Attitude, in the end, is key, they say.
Thoughts?
Mr Peter Schwartz, Keynote Speaker
Learning good, discovery better
"I studied as an aeronautical engineer, with a smattering of biology," he says, noting that now, advancements in science and technology have progressed so far and so fast that he has had to re-learn everything.
And that is probably our new reality today.
So, how?
The metaphor that Peter used at the start of his keynote address today at the ALS sums up our response perfectly.
"When white-water rafting, the key to staying in control is to move a little faster than the water."
In other words, stay ahead of the curve, else you're going to get swept away.
And that really would be where adult education comes in -- which I reckon, we'd be talking about a lot more over this two days.
Peter did a great job of weaving various thematic threads of what is happening in the world today to project possible views of the future.
But where are we in all this?
Peter brought up opportunities for the future in science, in technology, in medicine, in education, but all his examples were from other countries.
Yes, Singapore is a world leader in human capital development, and we have one of the highest per capita incomes of the world, but listening to his speech, it seems to me that discovery is the key to surviving the future.
What have Singaporeans discovered recently?
Any thoughts?
T-shaped, pi-shaped, MBS-shaped?
But what about if things go T-shaped?
Pretty good, according to Minister of State for Manpower and National Development Tan Chuan Jin.
The T-shaped individual is one who combines a deep skillset with a flexible mindset brought about by a broad big-picture understanding.
And that is the key to advancement in our fast-paced rapidly changing world. But as CSC's Mr Aaron Maniam says, just a T may not be enough. Individuals need to have a deep insight into more than just one field of expertise, he says. In other words, pi-shaped (with two "legs" of knowledge rather than just one) may very well be the standard, moving forward.
In fact, he joked, alluding to the architectural design of the iconic Marina Bay Sands resort, we may have to aim towards getting an MBS-shape in the future!
As long as things don't go pear-shaped in the process, I say.
Thoughts?
Question for all plenary members #1
Question from Prof. Jörgan Sandberg's keynote #7
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Question from Prof. Stephen Billett's keynote #12
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Question from Prof. Diana Laurillard’s keynote session #18
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Question from Mr Peter Schwartz’s keynote session #9
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Monday, 2 July 2012
Using scenarios to explore possible futures for CET in Singapore
The Adult Learning in the Digital Age programme aims to develop technology that will support people working in continuing education and training (CET) over the next ten years. But for that to succeed, we need to know what sort of context we will be working in. What will be important? What will be different? How will professional practice have to change? Developing technologies that make a genuine contribution to adult learning will depend on finding answers to these questions.
CET is a large and complex domain, with many different factors interacting with each other on different levels - policy direction, classroom practice, economic conditions, workplace trends, individual motivations and so on. Its complexity makes its future direction uncertain. One technique that strategists and policy planners around the world use to understand uncertain and complex topics better is scenario planning. Scenarios are narratives of alternative future conditions in which the decisions made in the present might unfold. They're used for a variety of purposes in a number of different contexts, but in general they are used to re-examine assumptions that are held about the way things might turn out, to explore the different contexts in which people will be operating in years to come, and to ask "what if..?"
To help us imagine better the kinds of futures CET professionals might be operating in, we created four scenarios for CET in Singapore set ten years from now. A series of interviews and workshops with CET stakeholders, alongside a process of desk research, examined major drivers of change within the CET sector, paying attention to the impact they would have if they continued unchecked, and the degree to which the outcome of each is uncertain. The outcomes of this process were used as the basis of a development workshop to create four alternative future contexts for CET: iLearn, New Old, Bo Pian and Maelstrom.
iLearn describes a world in which adult learning is provided by the free market, and learners make their own way through a diverse range of offerings. New Old imagines the kind of comprehensive and personalised learning that could be available through a state-run CET service. In Maelstrom, learners, employers and governments alike are all doing their best to respond to change in a disconnected and incoherent world. And in Bo Pian, learners use their own time to become qualified in sector-wide mandatory certificates. Each of these worlds presents learners, educators and learning providers with particular challenges and opportunities. Each of them feature mobile and networked technologies in a pervasive social context. And each of them draw on features of the present and trends currently shaping the adult learning experience today.
These scenarios on their own don't tell us what the specific experiences of CET professionals might be. For that, we need the contribution and insight of people currently working in the sector. What would it be like to be a practitioner in the world of iLearn? How would you manage a CET centre in New Old? What changes would Maelstrom require in the role of curriculum developer? What would the experience be for learners in Bo Pian? Over the next few weeks we're looking for opportunities to connect with the CET community and learn more about what the impacts of each scenario would be on professional lives, in order to build an awareness of the issues the ALDA programme will need to address.
One opportunity to collaborate with us in this process is our ALS workshop on the afternoon of Friday 6th July (concurrent session 4B, 14:20 - 15:00. If you're interested in the way current trends might play out, or in exploring the ways in which change might impact on your professional identity, the workshop will provide a chance to discuss these with other members of the CET community. Whatever your connection to CET in Singapore, your perspective on the future challenges that adult learning will face over the next ten years would be hugely valuable, and make a real contribution to the ALDA programme.
More information on the programme and its aims can be found at http://adulteducation.sg/alda/. Hope to see you at the workshop!
Sunday, 1 July 2012
Don’t Tell Me Anecdotes, Show Me the Data!
Alan will be talking about some of these results at the ALS 2012 conference:
1. Policy in any organisation must be based on good, scientific evidence and not hunches based, at best, on anecdotes.
Organisations should use tried and test survey questions in their own staff surveys rather than reinvent the wheel. After all, academics have often spent many years pouring over the nuances in questions, constructing sets ofquestions which tap different aspects of the same phenomenon, crunching the resulting data, and making links between this and that phenomenon. Why not engage with them?
2. The most effective learning is closer than you think.
While governments across the world are fixated by qualifications and courses, the most effective workplace learning happens on-the-job. Watching others at work, being showed what to do or simply doing the job are the best ways of increasing worker performance. These activities are rated more helpful than attending training courses or acquiring qualifications.
3. But not all jobs require much learning at all.
When surveys ask those who say they learn next to nothing at work how this affects their work performance, the resounding answer is that it makes little difference. This is not because their employers refuse to provide learning opportunities, but because their jobs do not require them. This applies particularly to jobs lower down the pecking order. The policy implication of this finding is that the delivery of formal training and the provision of learning opportunities has to be understood in the wider context of production.
4. While it is true that work is increasingly organised in teams, not all teams are the same.
For some, the word team is little more than a label which refers to a group of workers. However, in other cases, it means much more. In these cases teams self-direct themselves. They decide what effort to put in, what tasks to do, the methods of carrying them out and the quality standards expected. However, despite much talk about the importance of teamworking for business performance, the British data suggests that while the prevalence of teams in general has risen, the proportion of self-directed teams has actually fallen. Is the same true in Singapore and in other parts of Asia – what types of teams do these economies now have?
5. Knowing who’s committed to the cause.
Singapore, like Britain, has an ageing population. One policy solutionis to keep older workers in work for longer. This makes business sense when older workers often have tacit skills which are difficult to replace and are reckoned to be the most committed members of the workforce. However,survey evidence in Britain suggests that this is no longer true. Organisational commitment among older workershas decided sharply over the last ten years and is now little different fromother age groups. Businesses need to know more about why older workers have become so disillusioned and what can be done to recapture their commitment.
The best answers to questions facing organisations in the changing world of work and learning come from solid evidence.The systematic collection of such data is best placed to provide these big picture insights. So, don’t tell anecdotes, show the data – that’s Alan’s big takeaway message to delegates of the ALS Conference.
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