Hello,
I am reviewing our Leadership programme for frontline supervisors and team leaders, it focuses on the Adair 3 Circles model together with Motivation, Delegation, Decision taking and Communication.
As part of the review, it was suggested that precourse work could be sent out. I have already written some FAQs about the programme and the ILM Qualification and not sure how much detail to go into.
Any ideas or suggestions welcome
Cheers
Scott
6 Responses
Pre-work
Hi Scott,
I guess it depends on what you want to achieve from the Pre-work!
Are you trying to increase attendee engagement..? Reduce theory discussion so you can focus on practical application during the workshop? or assess entry level understanding of attendees?
Depending on your answers this will determine what and the best type of Pre-work to issue.
Some examples we’ve usedin the past include:
– Relevant subject matter questionnaire / quiz’s – E.g. motivational / Delegation styles / preference indicators (Result from these can be used or referred to in course session)
– Set a task – Individuals to work in groups to prepare a short presentation on (XXX) Which is then delivered in the course and used as a discussion point. I.e 5minute presentation on problems faced with Decision making (Review of their presentation to refer to how did the decide on the Presentation! Roles/Content/etc.!!)
– The most obvious one and widly used is pre=course reading. A relevant book or workbook relevant to subject matter. But be sure to make it an easy read…and not to heavy as you run risk that it won’t be done.
But what ever you do make sure it has a tangible link to the course and is reference within the course. Otherwise you set the precedent that delegates don’t have to complete it!
Let me know if need any more ideas or thoughts
Regards
Lee
http://www.toojays.co.uk
and
in addition to the previous excellent comment you must factor in the likelihood of completion:
will it damage the course if some people haven’t done the prework if so you have a choice….
risk people failing to attend because they haven’t done it
risk upsetting them when you tell them off for failing to do it
risk upsetting the people who did it when there is no penalty for those who failed (ie there was no point in it!)
One client of mine made it a condition of attendance, and the prework was elearning with a test….if you hadn’t passed the test 5 days before the course you were banned from attendance AND charged the cancellation fee
Now that’s guts!
Rus
PS
Lee mentions getting them to read a book…
I strongly recommend People Management Secrets ISBN 978-0-00-734678-3
its EVER SO GOOD…..I wrote it!
Rus
Pre-course work for a Leadership Programme
I feel a little timid putting in my ha’pence worth after the preceding heavyweight gurus….still, perhaps having been on the other side of the flip chart recently my experience of pre-course work might address yet another angle.
Thanks
Guys,
Regards Scott
Your audience
I think knowing your audience beforehand is significantly undervalued. Does it have to be pre-course work? What about pre-course engagement? A conference call, online chat, online forum, shared consequences document, etc can all work to get the participants engaging with each other and you beforehand. It sets expectations that you are there to facilitate not teach and that the audience are not an audience; they are going to have to participate.
We send participants the learning materials beforehand so they can preview what will be covered, discuss with their managers what they wish to focus on, and highlight any areas they want to cover. To date, we’ve had no complaints and more engaged learners.
Study Skills
Hi Scott,
I run a similar programme for our supervisors and team leaders but we are acredited with the CMI rather than ILM.
This sounds a simple idea and you may already cover it but I find that a lot of the candidates have never been in any kind of learning environment since school in some cases so I send them out a Study Skills Self Managed Learning pack to complete prior to the programme which includes managing time, note taking, writing assigmments, making the most of the workshops, reading skills and completion of the Learning Styles questionnaire. We then have a discussion around learning styles during the induction session.
I also ask them to think about their expectations, concerns and questions to discuss on the day.
Depending on the qualification level we invite them to complete the OPQ on-line beforehand and receive feedback as part of the programme too.
Just a few simple ideas but I guess it depends on the participants and what they require.
I’m just looking at reviewing our Level 2 Diploma in Team Leading as there’s been a restructure and we’ve offered the qualification to 140 new team leaders so I’m just trying to work out how to deliver it differently to achieve this!
Thanks
Sarah.