Remove Action Learning Remove Organizational Learning Remove Roles Remove Skills
article thumbnail

Manager's Role in Learning and Performance Improvement

The Performance Improvement Blog

What should be a manager’s role in employee learning? In answering this question, the first thing managers have to understand is that continuous learning is the modus operandi for all high performance organizations. Individual, team, and enterprise performance can’t improve without learning. to 2:00 p.m. Eastern Time. .

Roles 207
article thumbnail

This Is What I Believe About Learning in Organizations

The Performance Improvement Blog

The skilled worker today wants a different kind of experience. People realize they need interpersonal skills, creativity, reasoning, and empathy. And in some situations people might learn best from the workflow, through action-learning conversations, through self-directed experiences, or from apprentice and internship assignments.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Learning Trends for 2022: What to watch and why

Learning Pool

The need to create learner/customer journeys that accelerated colleagues from knowing and understanding to activating their new skills in work. If you know marketing, you will have heard of the AIDA model: Awareness-Interest–Desire–Action. If that’s you, then start to develop your performance consulting skills.

Trends 88
article thumbnail

Becoming a Learning Culture: Competing in an Age of Disruption

The Performance Improvement Blog

Whereas in a learning culture, responsibility for learning resides with each employee, each team, and each manager. In that kind of culture, employees, with the help of their managers, seek out the knowledge and skills they need, when and where that knowledge and those skills are needed.

Culture 178
article thumbnail

Active and Passive Learning in Organizations

The Performance Improvement Blog

Many of the typical methods of learning in the workplace make the learner a passive recipient of knowledge and skills. Another approach is to make the learner an active creator of knowledge and skills. Logs, diaries, and journals (recording reflections and learning as it occurs).

article thumbnail

A Manager's View of Employee Learning

The Performance Improvement Blog

I love the sense of understanding, enthusiasm and acceptance the leadership team conveys here regarding their role in learning. As you might expect, based on my input to a previous blog (3/25, Training Isn’t Learning ), I was delighted to see the emphasis on the necessary role of the manager! See below.

article thumbnail

50 Ways to Lever Learning

The Performance Improvement Blog

In a learning culture , formal training is just one of many methods used to facilitate employee learning. In a learning culture, we start with the performance goal and then select the mix of methods that will help employees acquire and retain the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and beliefs they need in order to achieve those goals.