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An organization's leadership is responsible for all administrative and operational decisions within a company—including the decisions made by their instructors or guides during a trip. An effective outdoor organization, be it recreational or educational in nature, has five major structural components in place to ensure alignment course quality, and safety:
Principle centered leadership helps ensure that the school's mission provides a strong foundation for the organization's core structuring strategies. While missions tend to remain the same over time visions and their structuring strategies often change as social mores, economic conditions, student populations, program areas, etc. change. Revisiting the mission and how it relates to the organization's current vision, structuring strategies, and its hiring and promotion standards on a regular basis helps ensure that everyone remains in alignment over time. This understanding also helps reduce unnecessary conflict and promotes trust between administration, logistical, an program staff (common areas of dis-ease). The development of a shared course mission is a prerequisite to course planning and should be addressed during the early part of the pre-course preparation. It is usually facilitated by the instructors' field supervisor using activities designed to assist the instructors in identifying the people that they are likely to professionally synergize with during a course.
Feedback loops at all levels of the organization are necessary if the organization is to be successful. Ongoing and documented assessment and evaluation of all components of the organization need to occur on a regular basis. In most organizations feedback is a course by course, season by season, department by department process du naturally occurring breaks. To be effective, hiring and promotion standards must also be in aligment with the organization's mission, vision, and structuring strategies.
Competency-based hiring and promotional standards together with an effective staff development system help ensure that help ensure consistent program quality and safety. The focus of this article is understanding the structure of a successful staff development system
The goal of a staff development system is to train staff to meet the organization's minimum standards for hiring and promotion. The standards must be in alignment with and support the organization's mission, vision, and strategies; and they must be competency-based in order to be effective. Staff training can not stand alone. In order to meet the needs of both the organization and the instructor, training needs to be ongoing and part of a staff development system that includes mentoring, supportive written material, and accurate assessment, evaluation, & feedback.
A staff development system should ensure that all staff:
A complete system will include supportive written material that:
A comprehensive system would also ensure ongoing staff training, assessment, evaluation, and feedback via:
Understanding the distinctions between staff trainings, staff expeditions, and staff orientations is critical to structuring an effective staff development system. Each serves a specific purpose within the organization and their corresponding structure is very different.
Staff training should focus on developing the specific outdoor, educational, and human skills required to meet the school's hiring and promotional standards. Trainings should be designed to introduce new skills. While they should provide reinforcing and developmental feedback to the participants, a staff training is NOT an exam. That being said, staff should be able to perform to the minimum standards required by their position in the school.
Training should be ongoing throughout the instructor's tenure with the school. Outdoor skills training should culminate with the ability to manage specific activity sites safely, educational skills training should culminate with the ability to consciously design and manage activities that lead to character development, and human skills train ing should culminate with the ability to develop a conscious awareness of inconsistencies in another's way-of-being through the design and management of specific program activities.
Although led by a trainer, staff expeditions are NOT staff trainings. Staff expeditions are designed so that staff can make site management decisions with the trainer acting as a safety net. Unlike staff trainings, staff expeditions may be used for evaluation (hiring & promotion).
Staff orientations are neither trainings or expeditions and or may may not be lead by a trainer. They are designed to introduce trained staff to new program areas and local operating procedures. There are no performance expectations, assessments, or evaluations.
Mentoring supports training and MUST be in alignment with the school's core principles & strategies. Effective mentoring MUST take place in the field in order for staff to develop. Mentors MUST be conscious of the course process and able to articulate its structure through demonstration, conversation, diagrams, etc. They MUST be able to use the Outcome Model to design parallel experiences for the people they mentor. Mentoring is different and more difficult than instructing (students); it is part of each staff person's job at the level they are consciously competent. The ability to give accurate developmental & reinforcing feedback is essential to its success. Minimum professional mentoring expectations according to role are:
All written material should reflect and support the organization’s principles, mission, vision, and strategies.
An effective staff development system has four components: training, mentoring, supportive written material, and staff assessment, evaluation & feedback. Each must be in alignment with the organizations core principles and strategies. Trainings can not stand alone. In order to meet the needs of both the organization and the instructor they need to be progressional through out the instructor's tenure. Any training and development system requires organizational support in order to be implemented successfully. An effective staff development system will influence components of hiring, course design (both macro and micro), and general program management. In many organizations designing an effective staff development system will require significant structural changes. An effective staff development system will lead to:
*This is part 5 of a five part risk management series by Paul Nicolazzo
Feedback may be either individual or structural in nature. Individual feedback focuses on specific skills while structural feedback focuses on specific structuring strategies (including the actual structure of the organization). In order for feedback to be useful it MUST be consistent. Since an organization's mission tends to remain stable over time, it provides an accurate touchstone for assessment, evaluation, and feedback. Individual feedback should also reference the organization's published hiring and promotional standards. Assuming all are in alignment, feedback can be reduced to a few simple questions:
Individual skills, standards, and structuring strategies that move the organization closer to realizing its mission are desired and need to be encouraged; those that move it further away are damaging and need to be corrected. Both types of feedback, reinforcing and developmental, are important to the ultimate success of the organization Note that it is not a person that is being evaluated but their specific skills. Note that it is not the organization that is being evaluated but its structuring strategies and published standards. This is NOT semantics. It is difficult to accept feedback that does not allow for change; skills, structuring strategies, and standards are easier to change than individuals and organizations.
Feedback is the natural result of an assessment and evaluation process and takes one of two basic forms: formal or informal. Formal assessment and evaluation occurs when the primary goal is certification, hiring, or promotion. It is structured, planned, and therefore expected. Informal assessment and evaluation is usually unplanned, often occurs during leisure time, and rarely expected. Feedback generated from informal assessments a evaluations is often more difficult to deliver successfully. Feedback may be immediate, delayed, or withheld. Generally the closer to the event the feedback is offered, the easier it is received and assimilated. The following conditions may delay feedback:
The difficulties associated with giving and receiving feedback are contextual and associated with organizational right and wrong. Feedback can be threatening if it conflicts with an individuals self-image or advancement; written feedback is inherently more threatening than oral. The intent of the person offering the feedback must be seen by the receiver as beneficial and in the receiver's best interest overall in order to be heard. Sensitivity, objectivity, accuracy, timing, a good personal relationship with the staff member, and willingness to help design an effective development plan from the receiver's frame of reference are the keys to giving effective feedback.
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