• abuse
  • accelerated learning
  • active verbs
  • adapt activities to the available time
  • adapt learning activities for large groups
  • adapt participatory activities for large groups
  • administrative organization
  • admit mistakes
  • adult learning principle
  • advanced leadership institute
  • affinity diagram
  • agenda process wall map
  • ampliication options for facilitating small groups
  • answer interview questions
  • anticipation
  • attitude
  • audience size
  • audiovisuals
  • avoid trainer mistakes
  • binders
  • blaming messages
  • blocked compassion
  • Bloom's Taxonomy
  • brain research
  • brainstorming
  • build in extra time
  • burnout
  • business growth
  • candles
  • case study
  • celebration circle
  • change
  • change initiative
  • change management
  • check AV equipment
  • check marking pens
  • children
  • choosing learning activities
  • class audits
  • classroom management
  • classroom training
  • clear action-oriented requests
  • close training session
  • code of conduct
  • cognitive load
  • comic strips in av
  • common ground questions
  • communication
  • community college
  • compassionate communication
  • conflict management
  • constructive criticism
  • constructive dialogue
  • content mistakes
  • courage
  • craft organization
  • critical conversation
  • critical evaluation
  • Croatia
  • crossword puzzle
  • curriculum design
  • customer service
  • customer-centered
  • debriefing activities
  • decisions
  • delegation
  • demonstration
  • design mistakes
  • difficult participants
  • dignify jobs
  • do the best you can
  • Dr. Deming
  • dry topics
  • effective trainers
  • effective training
  • Elderhostel
  • emotional liberation
  • emotional slavery
  • empathy
  • employee emotional needs during change
  • employee productivity
  • employee turnover
  • encore career
  • energizers
  • engage learners
  • enrich learning situations
  • entrapment
  • entrepreneur
  • evaluation mistakes
  • evidence-based
  • examples
  • Exploritas
  • express feelings
  • facilitate
  • facilitate large groups
  • facilitation mistakes
  • facilitators
  • fading
  • fatigue
  • flip charts
  • fourth level education
  • free tuition for seniors
  • frequent breaks
  • gender subversion
  • generosity
  • George Soros
  • Golden Circle
  • good business
  • good impression
  • grace
  • group facilitation
  • handle disruptive participants
  • hands on activities
  • help participants be more focused
  • highly technical topics
  • hiring interview
  • hiring steps
  • hope
  • humor
  • humor in training
  • incompetence
  • independent training consultant
  • interpersonal communication skills training
  • interpreting other's actions
  • interview strategy
  • isolation
  • job interview
  • Jordan
  • just-in-time training
  • keep lights on during AV
  • key learning
  • kinesthetic objects
  • leadership training
  • learner competence
  • learner confidence
  • learner participation
  • learner-centered training
  • learning
  • learning activities
  • learning contract
  • learning environment
  • learning institute
  • learning objectives
  • learning process
  • learning styles
  • lesson plan
  • level of learning
  • life management
  • lifelong learning
  • limited training time
  • long-term memory
  • luggage snafu
  • make a difference
  • make boring topic interesting
  • make good impression during interview
  • make participants more alert
  • make participants more comfortable
  • making requests
  • making requests instead of demands
  • management issues
  • manager's role
  • mark up
  • materials checklist
  • mature learner
  • measure learning
  • mistakes when timing activities
  • misuse of training
  • monitor performance
  • moralistic judgment
  • more beginnings and endings
  • multi-day training
  • naysayers
  • negative attitude to training
  • negative participants
  • nightmare
  • nonviolent communication
  • number pages
  • NVC
  • observation without evaluation
  • off-the-shelf training
  • oral relay
  • organizational success
  • overcome adversity
  • overextension
  • pair share
  • paraphrasing
  • participant buy-in
  • participant materials
  • participant resistance
  • participatory activities
  • participatory learning
  • peace
  • performance feedback
  • performance impact
  • performance management
  • planning
  • political
  • poor health
  • pop ups
  • positive difference
  • powerlessness
  • PowerPoint
  • practice
  • preparation
  • presentation
  • prime learners to participate
  • priming employees to learn
  • printing training materials
  • problem-solving
  • problem-solving conversation
  • productivity
  • program feedback
  • promotional organization
  • prompt return from breaks
  • proper use of Power Point
  • quality service
  • questionnaire
  • reading AV
  • receiving empathetically
  • redirect negative attitudes
  • relay race
  • responding to questions
  • role-play
  • room arrangement for large groups
  • satisfy participants
  • self-discovery activity
  • Simon Sinek
  • social networking
  • solo practitioner
  • song
  • specific learning objectives
  • spirit
  • start with "why"
  • steps during change process
  • stop waiting for life to start
  • stress
  • success
  • successful training
  • supervisory involvement in training
  • supervisory training
  • supplementing lecture with AV
  • survive business challenge
  • system barriers
  • table of contents
  • take digital photos of flip charts
  • take responsibility for feelings
  • teachers
  • team mission
  • team operating principles
  • team training
  • teamwork
  • TED
  • three decisions trainers make
  • time limitations
  • timing learning activities
  • timing mistakes when scheduling activiites
  • title pages
  • too much information in training program
  • trainer assumptions
  • trainer characteristics
  • trainer credibility
  • trainer mistakes
  • trainer preparation
  • trainer preparation materials
  • trainer respect
  • trainer's primary mission
  • training activities
  • training benefits
  • training design and delivery
  • training design questions
  • training evaluation
  • Training in Nigeria
  • training logistics
  • training mistakes
  • training needs assessment
  • training participants
  • training preparation
  • training reinforcement
  • training scheduling
  • training travel
  • turn AV off
  • UCLA Mastery Teaching Model
  • Uncategorized
  • understanding
  • use a pointer with AV
  • use of audiovisuals
  • validate concerns
  • value of training
  • vicious cycle
  • walkabout
  • why and change
  • win/win communication
  • worked examples
  • working memory
  • worry
  • wrong participants
  • wrong training focus
  • Tip #349: Avoid Mistakes When Timing Learning Activities, Part Two

    “Every great mistake has a halfway moment, a split second when it can be recalled and perhaps remedied.” Pearl Buck

    There are ten mistakes that trainers frequently make when they plan and schedule time for learning activities. We considered the first five mistakes in last week’s Tip. This Tip discusses the remaining five mistakes.

    Mistake #6: Not Building In Extra Time

    Learning activities will rarely take the same amount of time with every group. It is important to build in some extra time so that you will be able to handle unanticipated questions or issues and still accomplish the scheduled activity. It is wise to budget for an extra 15-30 minutes for each activity. It is better to have the time available than to come up short. If the extra time is not needed for the activity, you can always fill it with additional discussion or (the ever popular) end early.

    Mistake #7: Not Adapting an Activity to the Time Available

    What do you do if you need 50 minutes for an activity, but something [an extended group discussion or a classroom management issue] ends up reducing the time available to 15 minutes? Clearly, the lesson design process determined that this activity was necessary and appropriate. It is better to adapt the planned activity to the shorter timeframe than to throw out the activity. For example, instead of having small groups discuss and report out their conclusions, you can conduct a large group discussion. Instead of small groups discussing a questionnaire, you can read the questions and have the participants signal whether they agree or disagree with the statements. You can then ask representative participants to explain the reason behind their signaled answers.

    Mistake #8: Not Building in Time for Breaks

    Brain studies have shown that people need breaks approximately every 50 minutes. Otherwise, their brains get saturated and the individuals get exhausted. It is very convenient if the content and learning activities fit neatly into 50- minute modules. But if they don’t, figure out how to split the content and activities in a reasonable place so the participants can take their breaks. For example, explain an activity, assign it and have the participants complete it. Then give a break. After the break, the participants can discuss or debrief the activity.

    Mistake #9: Thinking That Participatory Activities Take Too Much Time

    First of all, participatory activities are necessary to achieve any learning level higher than knowledge. It is true that some activities require more time than others. However, there are many different brief activities that can accomplish the same learning level. For example, if you want to check participant comprehension, you can use one-minute pop ups or shout outs, five-minute competitive brainstorming or signaled answers to a questionnaire, or ten-minute relay races.

    Mistake #10: Not Leaving Enough Time for Closing Activities

    There are at least three closing activities that should occur before the end of a workshop. First, there should be some activity that checks for participant comprehension of key content [such as a fill-in-the-blanks worksheet or a quiz game].

    Second, there should be sufficient time for the participants to complete a [hopefully simple] workshop evaluation. Third, there should be some general summary [such as individual report-outs of their key take-aways or concluding comments from the instructor].

    Avoiding these five mistakes should reduce stress for both the trainer and the participants!

    Special Announcement: Our four-day Train the Trainer: Designing and Delivering Dynamic Learning is now scheduled for January 11-14, 2011 in Madison, Wisconsin. There are discounted rates for early bird registration and ASTD members. The brochure with registration form is posted on our website: http://www.laurelandassociates.com. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact me at (608) 255-2010.

    May your learning be sweet.

    Deborah

    Tip #345: Avoid Six Mistakes in Handling Unhappy Participants

    “It has been said that man is a rational animal. All my life I have been searching for evidence which could support this.” Bertrand Russell

    There are many reasons why participants in a training program may be unhappy and voice or act out their displeasure during the training session. They may not like the topic, the learning activities, the trainer, the timing or location of the training, the other participants, or the very fact that they are in the training. In addition, they may just be having a bad day, drawing issues into the training room that have more to do with their lives or their work rather than with the training itself.

    There are six mistakes that a trainer should avoid when faced with participants who are unhappy.

    Mistake #1: Ignoring the situation.

    It is miraculous thinking to believe that ignoring a bad situation will make it go away. In fact, whether their issues are real or imagined, participants want to be treated with respect. The only way to handle the situation is to listen carefully to their concerns and then give an honest response. If it is an issue that you can do something about, you can offer to consider it and make adjustments where possible. If it is an issue over which you have no control, you can either sympathize or provide a constructive outlet.

    For example, a limited time to vent, problem solve, or make recommendations to resolve the issue can help to dissipate the energy fueling the participants’ concerns. In the latter case, it can also give the participants a needed sense that they have some control over the situation.

    Mistake #2: Minimizing participant concerns.

    Few people appreciate being told that their concerns are trivial or imagined. When participants voice a concern, whether it is rational or not, it is still their reality. Acknowledge the concern. To the extent possible, distance yourself from the cause or the decision makers responsible for the issue. Create a sense of partnership to support the idea that you are sensitive to their concern and will attempt to provide them with skills or resources to address it.

    For example, if participants complain that they will not be allowed to apply their new skills back on the job, a trainer can help them strategize how to persuade their management to give them that opportunity.

    Mistake #3: Caving in.

    Do not make the mistake of becoming so disheartened by the participants’ unhappiness that you minimize the value of the training you are there to deliver- or worse, gloss over large portions of the training to end the session as quickly as possible. A needs assessment presumably identified their need for this training topic and the choice of learning activities. This is the time for the trainer to work at obtaining participant buy-in to the importance of the training, or at the very least, a willingness to participate.

    For example, help them identify the benefits of the training or the consequences of not receiving the training. As a last resort, invite unhappy participants to leave the training (with the understanding that you will need to alert their management).

    Mistake #4: Taking it to heart.

    As mentioned earlier, there can be a plethora of reasons why participants are unhappy that have nothing to do with the trainer. This may not be readily apparent. Apply a proven negotiation technique and reframe a perceived attack on the trainer into an attack on the problem. If the trainer is willing to take conversations off line to explore the root of the participants’ problems, it can help to put a light on the real cause of their unhappiness. It actually might be useful for the trainer to think of this situation as a positive one, in that the participants feel comfortable enough to voice their issues and complaints.

    For example, this may be the first time all of the participants have come together and have the opportunity to discuss their complaints. In this case, the trainer can consider providing time during the training or giving a longer break to encourage conversation.

    Mistake #5: Assuming responsibility to resolve organizational issues.

    Sometimes trainers, in a sincere effort to be supportive and responsive to participants, will promise more than they can deliver. Be frank about your role, your responsibility and the intended scope of the training. Stay very clear about your ability (or inability) to have a positive impact on significant organizational issues. If you are there to conduct a training program, you really have no authority to get involved or interfere.

    For example, this is not the time to become a crusader rabbit to ingratiate yourself with the participants. To do so can be the kiss of death for a trainer. You will only irritate or anger the management that hired you and disappoint those for whom you advocate.

    Mistake #6: Denying reality.

    There may be (hopefully infrequent) times when the scheduled training is simply not going to meet the needs of the participants. If there are outside issues that affect the participants’ focus and attention, it may be necessary to adjust the training content. In some cases, the only practical solution is to end the session and reschedule it for a future time. It would be unrealistic to attempt to continue with the training as planned.

    For example, when the participants’ unhappiness is due to an extreme event, such as a death or a disaster in progress that directly affects the participants, converting the session to a mutual support and problem-solving discussion may be the only constructive response.

    In summary, the reasons why participants express unhappiness during a training program frequently have little to do with the training. However, it would be unwise for a trainer to ignore the situation, minimize participant concerns, cave in, take it to heart, assume responsibility to resolve organizational issues, or deny reality.

    May your learning be sweet.

    Deborah