Comments on: Performance Support Second? https://blog.learnlets.com/2013/07/performance-support-second/ Clark Quinn's learnings about learning Sun, 21 Jul 2013 09:32:36 +0000 hourly 1 By: Jason Silberman https://blog.learnlets.com/2013/07/performance-support-second/#comment-371881 Sun, 21 Jul 2013 09:32:36 +0000 http://blog.learnlets.com/?p=3382#comment-371881 Hi Clark,

Cool article and blog, and I agree with performance support higher on the list than courses. I think that in addition to the expense of courses, they serve (or at least they should imo) serve a different role than that of skill training or how to perform needed tasks. I think they should focus more on the bigger picture and context, while in-work job aids and performance support are more effective in employees learning how to perform tasks successfully.

Jason

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By: Clark https://blog.learnlets.com/2013/07/performance-support-second/#comment-369734 Tue, 16 Jul 2013 21:02:35 +0000 http://blog.learnlets.com/?p=3382#comment-369734 Thanks for the feedback!

Chad, I think as L&D professionals we will have roles to fill, but new ones: the occasional course (see below), well designed aids, but more and more facilitating others in their learning. As well as experimenting, measuring, exploring. And we do have to carry that value proposition forward that there are significant skills required (as I was reminded this morning, many folks think designing effective learning is easy, “why does it take 30 hours to develop 1 hour of learning?”).

Mark, exactly. We want them to know that a course is needed, and why, before they can take it, not force it on them.

Craig, as I recall in Australia, “on the nose” meant something else (an ‘off’ smell), not hitting the mark, so you threw me there ;).

Craig, Bob, and Richard, I do think social and performance support are part of a continuum of support. I do think users can create resources and share them that are performance support we *haven’t* designed. However, I do want to be careful about the things we develop: courses, job aids, from what others develop (and we facilitate): social. As I’ve blogged before, from the users’ perspective, social and performance support both feel like informal/pull, and courses are push. From the L&D perspective, however, the job aids are something we design, like courses, so it’s more formal. I eventually want a seamless ecosystem of performance support from courses, through job aids, to user-generated help.

Ara, I do think that there are times we need full courses, for significant skill shift, but we too often use courses as our only hammer, instead of the full suite of tools, and I’m erring on the side of emphasizing the things we miss.

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By: Ara Ohanian https://blog.learnlets.com/2013/07/performance-support-second/#comment-369591 Tue, 16 Jul 2013 14:05:34 +0000 http://blog.learnlets.com/?p=3382#comment-369591 re right that immediate performance and learning needs should be addressed first socially and secondly by performance support. And if we focused on this approach we could liberate alot of resources currently tied up in delivering ineffective training. Here’s a question: what about long term capability development? If we want skilled engineers, IT technicians, project managers, linguists – do you believe there is a place for courses to develop these capabilities? I ask this not to disagree with your point but simply to reframe the debate to include both social learning, performance aid AND longer term capability and development.-]]> Clarke, I think you’re right that immediate performance and learning needs should be addressed first socially and secondly by performance support. And if we focused on this approach we could liberate alot of resources currently tied up in delivering ineffective training. Here’s a question: what about long term capability development? If we want skilled engineers, IT technicians, project managers, linguists – do you believe there is a place for courses to develop these capabilities? I ask this not to disagree with your point but simply to reframe the debate to include both social learning, performance aid AND longer term capability and development.-

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By: Richard Morris https://blog.learnlets.com/2013/07/performance-support-second/#comment-369135 Mon, 15 Jul 2013 16:17:42 +0000 http://blog.learnlets.com/?p=3382#comment-369135 Thank you again, Clark for your insightful post. However, like Craig and Bob, I am having difficulty distinguishing Social from PS as steps in a response sequence. Some definition here would be helpful.
Richard

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By: Bob Mosher https://blog.learnlets.com/2013/07/performance-support-second/#comment-367333 Thu, 11 Jul 2013 13:43:34 +0000 http://blog.learnlets.com/?p=3382#comment-367333 Clark.. Totally agree! In fact, I would add that if done correctly, Social is one of many tools that Performance Support enables. Why separate the two? They can be so much more powerful if united into an overall Performance Support Strategy! We see too many look at these disciplines in silos and then limit their potential. They take a checkbox approach in trying one and then moving on to another. I would argue that if we took a more “blended” approach enabling social in a PS framework as part of an overall strategy we may have the “secret sauce”. Too many of these tools don’t work because they are approached as a single solution trying to do too much, but like any one tool they have blind spots/weaknesses and are rarely able to cover the full spectrum that is informal learning.

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By: Craig Taylor https://blog.learnlets.com/2013/07/performance-support-second/#comment-367011 Wed, 10 Jul 2013 21:49:38 +0000 http://blog.learnlets.com/?p=3382#comment-367011 Hey Clarke,

On the nose again Clarke!

I’m wondering though if there needs to be any distinction between ‘social’ and ‘performance support’. If ‘social’ provides that the ‘performance support’ then what do we call it? (I’m not suggesting the industry come up with ANOTHER term by the way!)

;-)

Craig

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By: Mark Britz https://blog.learnlets.com/2013/07/performance-support-second/#comment-366927 Wed, 10 Jul 2013 16:23:52 +0000 http://blog.learnlets.com/?p=3382#comment-366927 Couldn’t agree more Clark. Its probably accurate to say that from executive to employee all would agree that they “come” to work each day to work, to perform, not to learn. The first two options you present align to this desire and are on the path to least resistance to getting stuff done, built, sold, etc. That’s the path everyone wants to be on. The other path “can” get them there of course (although more slowly and with a monetary, productivity, and possibly morale cost) but one better be sure its absolutely required before heading down that way.

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By: Chad L https://blog.learnlets.com/2013/07/performance-support-second/#comment-366893 Wed, 10 Jul 2013 14:32:25 +0000 http://blog.learnlets.com/?p=3382#comment-366893 I appreciate the post, but it makes me wonder whether organizations will bother with paying L&D professionals to conduct the social aspect and create the job aids. The temptation will likely prove too great to simply give over this work to some other employees who look like they have some free time. That will then present two problems: 1) If L&D professionals are retained by their company (despite the fact that others have been entrusted to handle the first and second lines of the company’s learning offensive), they will be left to create courses that correct others’ mistakes, and 2) As implied by the first problem, companies might simply not bother to employ L&D professionals if they feel other, less skilled and lower paid workers can be made more efficient by handling what is seen as simplified tasks. This will be a tall hurdle to clear.

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