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The Learning Brain and Changing Behavior

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Title: The Learning Brain and Changing Behavior


1
  • The Learning Brain and Changing Behavior

What it takes to create permanent, measurable
improvements in performance
2
Well cover
  • The transfer of training problem
  • How the learning brain changes behavior
  • What it takes to improve performance
  • Three actions to begin making a difference

3
The transfer of training problem
  • We agreed that our managers knew the
    business, but most of them weren't very effective
    with people. We noticed friction and a lack of
    cooperation. Disagreements and arguments
    festered. You could sense the tension out there.
    Morale was low in many areas. It wasn't the
    positive, high-energy culture we wanted. We lost
    several of our best people.

4
The transfer of training problem
  • We concluded that our managers needed to be
    better leaders, and we decided to bring in a
    top-flight leadership effectiveness program. The
    trainers were fantastic and our managers raved
    about it. We were satisfied that it was money
    well spent.

5
The transfer of training problem
  • In the months afterward, we saw an
    improvement in several managers, but we noticed
    that most of them werent using the new skills.
    To be honest, these were the same folks doing the
    same things.
  • A year later, I look around and cant say
    theres been much change at all. Its hard to
    believe that a program of such high quality
    didnt get better results in the long run. Id
    have to say its been a disappointment.

6
The transfer of training problem
  • Baldwin Ford, Personnel Psychology (1982)
  • 100B spent, 10 transfer
  • Broad Newstrom, Transfer of Training (2001)
  • 50B spent, 50 transfer
  • Brinkerhoff Apking, High Impact Learning (2001)
  • 15 transfer

7
The transfer of training problem
  • Has your organization ever invested in training
    that did not change behavior as hoped?
  • Do you know why it was not as successful as
    hoped?
  • What did it cost your organization (time,
    resources, money)?

8
The transfer of training problem
  • In your experience, why is it is so difficult for
    training and development programs to produce
    permanent changes in leadership behavior
    on-the-job?

9
The transfer of training problem
  • It takes time to develop new work habits
  • Development time is in short supply
  • Follow-up reinforcement almost never happens
  • On-the-job priorities conflict with reinforcing
    new skills
  • Few direct managers know how to support ongoing
    development
  • Almost nobody appreciates what it takes to change
    a behavior pattern

10
The learning brain and changing behavior
  • Learning a new skill is a physical process.
    Repeated behavior (skill application) stimulates
    the dendrites of neurons (brain cells) to grow
    connections with other

neurons. Eventually an efficient pathway forms
that enables the skill. This process can take
months of consistent reinforcement.
11
The learning brain and changing behavior
  • Before Ingraining
  • Old neural pathway
  • New skill is hard work
  • Effort is conscious, concentrated
  • After Ingraining
  • New neural pathway
  • New skill feels like second nature
  • Automatic and efficient

12
The learning brain and changing behavior
  • Interaction Skills
  • Mostly learned in life, ingrained for decades
  • Old patterns compete with new learning
  • New patterns feel awkwardlearners fall back on
    comfortable old patterns
  • Technical Skills
  • Mostly learned at work
  • Few old patterns to compete with new technical
    skills
  • With repetition, new technical skills become
    ingrained habits

13
The learning brain and changing behavior
  • Without extensive reinforcement, new neural
    pathways wont establish themselves.
  • Without new neural pathways, new behaviors wont
    become comfortable and habitual.
  • If new behaviors dont become comfortable and
    habitual, people will fall back on old behaviors.
  • If people fall back on old behaviors, the new
    skills wont be ingrained or used in the
    workplace.

14
The learning brain and changing behavior
  • After being told to change behavior or die of
    heart disease, 90 fail to change. Fast Company
    (May 2005)
  • They must make changes to live, but they
    cant seem to do it. Dr. Edward Miller (Dean of
    Medical School at John Hopkins University)
  • Knowing what to do isnt enough. Using
    weekly reinforcement group meetings, 77 changed
    behavior. Dr. Dean Ornish (Founder -
    Preventative Medicine Research Institute)

15
The learning brain and changing behavior
  • At the beginning of 2004, Tiger Woods made
    several changes in his swing to improve his game.
  • But in 2004 he struggled, winning only one
    tournament and finishing fourth in total
    winnings.
  • Finally in 2005 he won his fourth Masters,
    placed second in the U.S. Open and won the
    British Open.
  • It took a full year of persistent practice to
    ingrain the new patterns.

16
The learning brain and changing behavior
  • It takes months of reinforcement to ingrain
    interaction skills, which are more complex than
    golf skills.
  • Assessment or a training event by themselves
    arent enough to create permanent changes in
    behavior.
  • But assessment and training followed by a
    structured program of reinforcement can ingrain
    new workplace behavior.

17
The traditional approach
The learning brain and changing behavior
Performance Problem
Development Program
Improved Performance
Why doesnt this model deliver the intended
results?
18
What it takes to improve performance
A reinforcement-centered way to achieve
permanent, measurable improvements in workplace
performance
19

What it takes to improve performance
  • Make learning an ongoing process, not an event
  • Begin with up-front assessment
  • Implement training that is integrated with the
    assessment and provides tools for reinforcement
  • Include reinforcement after training to ingrain
    behavior
  • Involve direct managers as performance coaches

20

What it takes to improve performance
When these critical elements are integrated and
managers are involved
This result is achieved
On-the-job Behavior Change
Reinforcement
Training

Assessment
21
What it takes to improve performance
The Learning Triangle
22
What it takes to improve performance
  • Assessment
  • Direct managers set the priority, focus and tone
  • Pre-assessment identifies strengths and
    weaknesses, focuses learner for training
  • Post-assessment measures improvement, providing
    accountability and motivating learner to change

23
What it takes to improve performance
  • Training
  • Direct managers support learners during training
  • The power of training is multiplied when
    integrated with assessment
  • The training is behavior-based and concentrates
    on what to do,why to do it, and how to do it
  • The training is reinforcement-centered,
    introducing reinforcement resources
  • The training is efficient and effective as
    blended, combining E-learning and workshop

24
What it takes to improve performance
  • Reinforcement
  • Direct managers ensure that reinforcement is a
    priority and is implemented
  • Coaching is provided by direct managers to guide
    learner reinforcement
  • Continued learning is available to refresh skills
  • Ongoing assessments measure performance,
    improvement and ROI
  • Accountability means managers, learners and
    trainers are responsible for improved performance

25
What it takes to improve performance
  • COMMITMENT
  • Support follow-up reinforcement
  • COACHING
  • Prepare direct managers for their staff
    development role
  • FOLLOW-UP
  • Integrate program of reinforcement with
    assessment and training programs
  • ACCOUNTABILITY
  • Measure performance improvement and calculate
    ROI

26
What it takes to improve performance
  • TRAINING FOR TRANSFER
  • Incorporate learning strategies that promote
    application and reinforcement of skills
  • LEARNING NETWORKS
  • Coordinate support for reinforcement
  • FOCUS
  • Target training needs that will have a
    positive impact on business results
  • CULTURE
  • Align organizations policies and practices
    to support performance improvement

27
Three actions to begin making a difference
  • Acquire integrated assessment and training
    technologies
  • Involve direct managers in the learning process
  • Measure performance improvement
  • Then build on the foundation of these successes
    by optimizing the eight critical areas

28
Three actions to begin making a difference
When these critical elements are integrated, and
direct managers are involved
This result is achieved
On-the-job Behavior Change
Reinforcement
Training

Assessment
29
  • The Learning Brain and Changing Behavior

What it takes to create permanent, measurable
improvements in performance
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