Second Australian EvidenceBased Coaching Conference 2005 Fostering Crossdisciplinary Dialogue - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 47
About This Presentation
Title:

Second Australian EvidenceBased Coaching Conference 2005 Fostering Crossdisciplinary Dialogue

Description:

Second Australian. Evidence-Based Coaching Conference 2005 ' ... Huge research base in every area of human endeavour that seems to work (at least sometimes) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:20
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 48
Provided by: gled9
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Second Australian EvidenceBased Coaching Conference 2005 Fostering Crossdisciplinary Dialogue


1
Second Australian Evidence-Based Coaching
Conference 2005Fostering Cross-disciplinary
Dialogue
  • Hosted by
  • The Coaching Psychology Unit,
  • School of Psychology, University of Sydney

2
The role of expert knowledge in coaching
  • Michael Cavanagh PhD
  • Coaching Psychology Unit,
  • School of Psychology,
  • University of Sydney

3
Background to the topic
  • Ray Elliots paper on leadership coaching.
  • SF coaching states that the solution is in the
    coachee
  • the coach facilitates the coachee in discovering
    the answer.
  • Leads to the Ask dont tell tension.

4
A niggling question.
  • What happens when the client simply does not have
    access to what they need to know, and no amount
    of questioning will change that?
  • Solution
  • There are some times when it is OK to tell
  • Wheres Wally style of coaching.
  • But, SF school of surgery?

5
Some other niggling worries
  • It can lead to endlessly reinventing the wheel by
    failing to build on what has gone before.
  • Solution Past solutions for current problems
  • Potentially invalidates the coaches experience
    training and knowledge.
  • Solution Process experts guides on the side.

6
Why the avoidance?
  • One of the most popular coaching approaches.
  • Client-centric
  • Deeply respectful of the clients knowledge.
  • Perhaps helps us manage our anxiety over
    responsibility?
  • It also seems to work!

7
The expert approach.
  • Huge research base in every area of human
    endeavour that seems to work (at least
    sometimes).
  • The Arnold Palmer factor
  • The more I practiced, the luckier I got
  • Expertise seems to breed success.

8
The Expert Approach
  • Fits easily with the evidence based approach.
  • Fundamental assumption
  • reality can be accessed via scientifically
    validated knowledge.
  • but, the scientific method cannot validate
    knowledge.

9
Rational Linear Approach
  • Based on linear, cause and effect conception of
    the world.
  • Predictable chains of cause and effect
  • But the world is not linear.

10
Problems with expert approach
  • Expert-centric
  • Authority, knowledge and expertise reside in the
    coach or in the client.
  • Privileges rational knowledge over emotion.
  • Reifies the world
  • Objectifies knowledge and takes it out of its
    context.

11
  • Scientific evidence does not predict individual
    cases by definition!
  • When we impose our answer it often does not work
  • Tends to elicit resistance or passivity or
    dependence.

12
More niggles
  • Research shows
  • Most theoretical approaches have about the same
    efficacy
  • The helping relationship may be more important
    than the theoretical approach

13
So, how should we work.
  • Top down or bottom up?
  • Either/or vs both/and

14
But what if..
  • .the opposite of either/or
  • is not both/and?
  • What is my experience.

15
Time for some reality testing
  • Experience supervising students and other coaches

16
Problematic experience.
  • Not actually what we do
  • We select, interpret, adapt, reframe, and suggest
    based on our mental models.
  • Case conceptualisation
  • We use our expert knowledge all the time.
  • So being solution focused is not really
    atheoretical
  • it just does not articulate the theories in play.

17
2
Client
1
3
Coach
The three reflective spaces
18
The Three Reflective Spaces model
1
The coaching space is created by both coach and
client.
All three reflective spaces are complex adaptive
systems.
19
What is a complex adaptive system
  • A group of elements that functions as a whole and
    maintains its existence through the
    interdependent and adaptive action of its parts.
    (OConnor and McDermott 1997)
  • e.g. The human body.
  • A community
  • A family
  • A coaching relationship?

20
Characteristics of CAS
  • Whole is greater than sum of parts
  • Nested /embedded in other systems
  • Permeable Boundaries
  • Multiple goals
  • Interdependence non linear feedback
  • Sensitivity to initial conditions
  • Emergence

21
Emergence
  • The spontaneous coming into existence of a
    property of a system through the interaction of
    the system parts.
  • Eg. Water, ice, snow, and steam.
  • It is radically unpredictable!

22
What emerges.
  • Behaviour
  • Communication styles
  • Roles
  • Outcomes
  • Energy levels

23
Shaping emergence Attractors
  • An attractor is a set of forces which shape
    system behaviour.
  • It is 'space' or point to which a system
    behaviour is drawn.

24
Human systems are not linear
  • People adapt to circumstances in complex ways
  • What happens emerges from the relationships in
    the system.
  • Emergent behaviour cannot easily be predicted or
    controlled.

25
The Client as a Complex Adaptive System.
Client
26
The Coach as a Complex Adaptive System.
Coach
27
Genetics and History
  • Genetics
  • Nature
  • Raw potential
  • Sets some limits (but often less than we think)
  • History
  • Nurture
  • Experience through time learning machines
  • Sets some limits (but often less than we think)

28
Physiology
  • People are embodied!
  • What happens in our bodies affects us!
  • Illness, injury, aging
  • Emotions are embodied meaning

29
Skills and abilities
  • Cognitive skills IQ
  • Emotional skills EQ
  • Systems skills
  • Process skills knowing how to do things
  • Ability to learn.
  • Related to experience and mental models

30
Mental models and theories
  • The way we make meaning of the events in the
    world.
  • Both self-generated and learnt theories
  • Domain specific knowledge
  • Theres nothing so practical as a good theory

31
Personality
  • Pattern of relating to the world
  • Temperament (genetic component)
  • Baseline reactivity to the world
  • Character (learnt component)
  • Prosocial side

32
Habits and defenses
  • What we do automatically
  • Patterns of reaction to events in the persons
    world.
  • Habitual defence mechanisms
  • Related to experience, mental models and
    personality

33
Clients and coaches are part of wider systems
Systems are nested in other systems
34
Communication is critical!
  • Information from outside
  • Outcomes
  • PD
  • Homework
  • Appraisals
  • 360o feedback etc

1
  • Information from outside
  • Shadow coaching
  • Assessments
  • Interviews, etc
  • Supervision
  • PD

Open systems grow.
35
Systems are conversations
  • The quality of the conversation determines the
    quality of organisation.
  • See Stacey, R.(2000) Strategic management and
    organisational dynamics (3rd ed). London Pearson

36
Client 2
1
Wider Environment
Wider Environment
3 Coach
37
Client
2
1
Wider Environment
Wider Environment
3
Coach
38
Experts and Expertise
  • Expert
  • A person who has special skill or knowledge in
    some particular field specialist authority."
    (Websters Dictionary)
  • Expertise
  • Expertness skillfulness by virtue of possessing
    special knowledge (wordnet)

39
The potential for expertise emerges from the
complex interaction of these factors within the
individual.
40
The expression of expertise emerges from the
complex interaction between Coach and Client.
3
Shared Mental Model
Expert coaching is about the development of a
shared mental model which enables effective
action
41
So ..
  • Understanding emerges within the Coach and
    Coachee in the context of the interaction.
  • And .
  • It becomes expertise (the skillful use of
    knowledge) as it emerges in the coaching space
    (and in the wider world. It is only potential
    until it is created in the conversation.

42
Insight
  • Insight is typically an Aha phenomenon, not a
    step-by-step assembly of parts of the solution.
  • (Lewin and Regine, 2001)

43
Implications for coaching
  • The solution focused approach is like a story
    with every second word missing.
  • Expert knowledge helps us co-create the story.
  • Its not either/or and it is not both/and
  • It is a complex interactive together

44
Expertise in coaching is about developing fitness
for the conversations..
Coach
And the ongoing development of fitness to engage
in diverse of conversations
45
Evidence Based Practice
  • The best available knowledge
  • integrated with expertise
  • In the service of client and the context
  • Dianne Stober

46
Tensions remain
  • We often can predict within limits
  • Lots of evidence for the plausibility of
    complexity features
  • Physics
  • Biology
  • Meteorology Etc
  • But .
  • This is only analogue evidence
  • Research methodologies may need to be developed.

47
A final thought
  • We cannot make spontaneous coherence emerge
    according to our desire -
  • but we can seed it and nourish it

  • Vladimir Dimitrov 2000
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com