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Teaching Effective Collaboration Skills

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Successful collaborators know how to 'win friends and influence others. ... who know how to knit are required to teach a classmate, in class how to knit. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teaching Effective Collaboration Skills


1
Teaching Effective Collaboration Skills
  • Success Beyond the Sandbox
  • Laurie Dinnebeil
  • Laurie.dinnebeil_at_utoledo.edu
  • A presentation at the 2005 Inclusion Institute,
    Chapel Hill, NC

2
The Purpose of this Session is to
  • Describe major types of collaborative
    relationships
  • Coaching
  • Consultation
  • Supervision/Mentorship
  • Teaming
  • Discuss ways to prepare individuals to be
    effective partners

3
Teaching Skills for Effective Collaboration
  • Dinnebeil, L.A., Buysse, V., Rush, D., Eggbeer,
    L. (in press). Teaching Skills for Effective
    Collaboration. In P. Winton, J. McCollum, and C.
    Catlett (Eds.) Preparing effective professionals
    Evidence and applications in early childhood and
    early intervention. Washington, DC ZERO TO
    THREE Publishers.

4
Whats So Important About Collaboration?
  • The success of early education and intervention
    is dependent on the quality of relationships that
    adults have with children and each other
  • Given that services to young children involve
    more than just one adult, the quality of the
    interactions between and among adults will have a
    direct impact on the quality of services.

5
Collaboration Defined
  • Each person both teaches and learns.
  • Mutual respect for the role of each individual is
    implied and demonstrated.
  • A strong degree of reciprocity underlies each of
    these relationships.
  • A joint goal helps to serve as a roadmap to
    collaborative work.

6
Major Types of Collaborative Relationships
  • Coaching
  • Consultation
  • Supervision/Mentorship
  • Teaming

7
A Variety of People Can Serve in a Variety of
Roles
8
Coaching
  • Key Components of a Coaching Model
  • Iterative and Interactive
  • Reflection and Feedback
  • Refine existing practices
  • Develop new skills
  • Promote continuous self-assessment and learning

9
Process of Coaching
  • Agree to participate in coaching relationship
  • Identify goals, expected outcomes and criteria
    for measuring learners mastery
  • Observe one another, reflect on current and/or
    new skills,
  • Learn and practice new skills, provide feedback
  • Evaluate success of coaching plan

10
Consultation
  • An indirect, triadic service delivery model in
    which a consultant and a consultee work together
    to address an area of concern or common goal for
    change.

11
Process of Consultation
  • Gaining entryclarify need for consultation and
    process, identify expected outcomes, delineate
    roles
  • Gather additional information
  • Use results of assessment to formulate observable
    and measurable outcomes
  • Identify possible strategies select one or more
  • Consultee implements selected strategies
  • Evaluate success of plan

12
Supervision/Mentorship
  • Professional relationships designed to support
    knowledge and skill development, often in younger
    or less seasoned practitioner.
  • Effective supervision or mentoring relationships
    are characterized by reflection, collaboration,
    and regularity.

13
Process of Supervision/Mentorship
  • Preparing for discussion
  • Greeting and reconnecting
  • Opening the dialogue and finding the agenda
  • Information gathering and focusing on details
  • Formulating hypotheses about the meaning of the
    issue being discussed
  • Considering next stepsdiscuss options and make
    decision about issue.
  • Closing acknowledge end of session, briefly
    recap, consider what lies ahead

14
Descriptors of an Effective Team(Friend Cook,
2000)
  • articulated goal understood by all team members,
  • a climate in which all team members feel
    respected and valued,
  • recognition that individual team members are
    accountable to the group,
  • effective group process and ground rules that
    lay the foundation for the teams work,
  • appropriate leadership skills of all team
    members.

15
Process of Teaming
  • Coming togetheracknowledge role of team, clarify
    goals and objectives
  • Identify problem and gather information about it
  • Generate possible solutions plan for solution
  • Plan for and implement solution
  • Evaluate success of solution

16
Common Features of All Models
  • Stages reflect a problem-solving approach to
    triadic intervention
  • Stages are fluid, rather than fixed.

17
Outcomes of Collaborative Models
18
Requisite Knowledge, Skills and Dispositions
  • Knowledge of
  • Ones discipline
  • Typical/atypical child development
  • Setting and childs environment
  • The collaborative process

19
Interpersonal Style
  • Successful collaborators are
  • Flexible, adaptable approach to interaction
  • Able to consider others perspectives and are
    able to set aside their own beliefs or
    expectations if they interfere with a productive
    working relationship
  • Are objective and make sound decisions based on
    the reality of a situation.

20
Interpersonal Skills
  • Successful collaborators
  • put others at ease and are viewed as genuine and
    respectful
  • are reflective and can engage in active listening
  • ask good questions and provide/accept appropriate
    feedback from others.
  • are aware of the nonverbal behaviors that support
    or undermine interpersonal relationships.
  • understand and can apply principles of group
    processing and problem-solving to their work with
    others.
  • Successful collaborators know how to win friends
    and influence others.

21
Attitudes, Values, and Dispositions
  • Successful collaborators
  • Are ethical practitioners
  • Are highly cognizant of their own values and
    biases
  • Possess equal amounts of self-confidence and
    humility
  • Appreciate that both partners possess unique
    knowledge and skills
  • Are curious and eager learners
  • Appreciate that they are guiding another person
    they are not in control
  • Understand that being a knowledgeable resource is
    not the same as being a know it all.

22
Preparing Individuals for Collaborative Work
  • Preparing individuals for work with other adults
    is complex and requires experiences along many
    different levels
  • The kinds of learning experiences needed to
    support knowledge, skill, or attitude/value
    acquisition differs in complexity.

23
Examples of Training Approaches and Learning
Activities for Building Knowledge and Skill
Related to the Collaborative Process (Adapted
from Harris, 1980 and McCollum Catlett, 1997)
Engaging in a collaborative relationship under
the supervision of a professional reflecting on
the experience
Attitudes, Values
Observing other professionals engaged in
collaborative relationships and analyzing their
behavior
Skill
Desired Impact (Learning outcomes from low to
high)
  • Completing case studies
  • In-class/In-session simulations

Knowledge
  • Reading
  • Lectures
  • Guided notes

Awareness
Low
High
Complexity of synthesis and application required
24
Instructional Strategies to Promote Skill
Building and Collaborative Dispositions
  • Learners need genuine experiences to learn and
    apply critical skills. They should participate
    in group projects that require them to learn
    skills related to teamwork and collaboration.

25
For example
  • Students in a ECSE Methods Class are required to
    work together to develop an IEP for a fictitious
    child with a disability.
  • Students are made aware that the goals of the
    project include enhancing their ability to work
    effectively with each other.
  • Students set ground rules for group work and
    provide written (anonymous) feedback to each
    other at the conclusion of the project.

26
Another Example
  • Students work in teams to design and implement
    parent-child playgroups under the supervision of
    qualified personnel.
  • In addition to gaining experience in conducting
    playgroups, students are aware that an explicit
    goal of the assignment is to learn to work
    together as a team.

27
Another Example
  • As part of a general methods course, preservice
    ECE teachers are required to videotape themselves
    teaching.
  • Students partner with each other, viewing each
    others videotapes, provide written and verbal
    feedback
  • Students are also required to provide a written
    reflection of the feedback process as well as a
    critique of their partners ability to provide
    feedback.
  • The ability to provide and receive appropriate
    feedback is evaluated as part of the students
    course grade.

28
Another Example
  • As part of a mini-practicum, practicing ECSE
    professionals were required to design, implement,
    and evaluate a coaching or consultation plan. As
    part of this assignment, they identified an ECE
    professional who worked with a child with special
    needs.
  • See Dinnebeil McInerney, 2001

29
Components of the Plan
  • Practicum Requirements were based on work by
    Wesley (1994) and were undertaken jointly between
    the student and her learning partner
  • Identified child-focused goals and objectives,
  • Evaluated the childs learning environment with
    the ECERS or ITERS
  • Identified components of the environment that
    could be enhanced to support the childs
    learning,
  • Developed a plan to modify or enhance the
    environment,
  • Outlined child-focused intervention strategies to
    achieve the childs learning goals,
  • Engaged in coaching or consultation strategies
    that helped their partner learn how to use the
    strategy,
  • Gave feedback to the learning partner, and
  • Monitored the childs progress through easily
    implemented data collection strategies.

30
Another Example from Dr. McWilliam
  • Students are required to develop an intervention
    checklist designed to help a learning partner use
    a specific strategy
  • The checklist must outline operational steps to
    follow to correctly implement an intervention
    strategy.
  • Students use the checklist to teach a learning
    partner to implement the strategy
  • Both students and learning partners use the
    checklist to guide observations of each other and
    provide feedback about implementation

31
A Final Example
  • In order to give students authentic opportunities
    for giving and receiving specific and appropriate
    feedback, an instructor holds a knitting session
    in class.
  • Those who know how to knit are required to teach
    a classmate, in class how to knit.
  • After the activity, discussion focuses on giving
    appropriate feedback and instruction to an adult
    learner.

32
Other Examples?
33
Challenges to Effective Preparation
  • Lack of exemplary practice settings
  • Lack of practiced professionals
  • Attitudes and values of the learners themselves
    (e.g., apprehension about being an expert,
    resistance to the model)
  • Difficulty in supervising learners engaged in
    collaborative relationships
  • Other challenges?

34
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