Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ WomensLearningStudio
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

How To Develop New Skills & Progress In Your Career | Your Training Edge ® - 0 views

  • The internet has also played a big role in the more uncertain fate for modern employees as it much easier for businesses to outsource which enables them to get the best value for their money
  • constantly improving your skills to keep up with the ever-increasing demands of the modern employee.
  • Identify The Skills You Need
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Online Courses
  • In House Training
  •  
    article by Bryant Nielson on how to develop new skills--online courses, study LinkedIn for certifications held by people in youer field. 
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

PKM in 34 pieces - 0 views

  •  
    Jarche from 2013 on sense making and other parts of PKM
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

IBM cuts pay by 10% for workers picked for training | Computerworld - 0 views

  •  
    very interesting article on IBM's decision to cut some workers' pay by 10% while they are engaged in a catch-up learning program 1 day a week for six months. Different speculation on why IBM chose to couple pay cut with +performance requirements. From Fall 2014.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

IBM100 - A Commitment to Employee Education - 0 views

  • Encouraged by Watson Sr. and his executive team, employees often formed their own study groups. One, known as the Owl Club, allowed employees to study any subject they wanted at company expense. Such programs evolved into adult learning classes, and eventually into grants for employees to pursue college credits and degrees
  • Today, industry specialists around the world in IBM Global Business Services use an array of e-learning tools—including podcasts and Twitter—customer on-site classes, and IBM conferences and classrooms to educate customers on everything from the use of social media and cloud computing, to how to build a smarter rail system. And IBM employees worldwide take advantage of their networked community to draw upon each other’s skills day and night to solve customer problems and develop the capabilities clients value most.
  •  
    interesting history of employee education at IBM including an early commitment to train college educated women in the 1920s
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Employee Training Isn't What It Used To Be - IBM - The Atlantic Sponsor Content - 0 views

  • In Axonify’s platform, assessment and training are directly tied together. Because many employees use Axonify regularly, the platform is able to constantly track employee knowledge and intelligently provide the information needed to close an employee’s individual knowledge gap, says Leaman. The app also leverages learning research to optimize retention by repeating the questions in specific time intervals. Even after an employee “graduates” out of a specific topic, the questions will still be revisited about seven months later to help lock in the knowledge.
  • Tin Can, on the other hand allows companies and employees to record more common learning events: attending a session at a conference, say, or researching and writing a company blog post. “Companies are starting to recognize how employees actually learn and allowing them to do it the way they wish to, rather than forcing them into a draconian system,” Martin says.
  • more open environments.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • integrated social collaboration tools into their talent management and learning system
  • IBM has found that employees learn and retain more when they’re working socially.
  • “The opportunity is not to use analytics to control but to give employees meaningful data about the way they’re operating within an organization so that they themselves can do things to improve their working lives and their performance,” he says.
  •  
    great article in the Atlantic on how employee training has evolved to include much more self-directed, outside-in kinds of learning
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Learning on the Fly: Rapid Tech Shift Requires a New Type of Thinker - Millennial CEO - 0 views

  • Keeping Your Skill Set Current Can Be Key to Keeping Your Job Small and midsize companies can’t afford to not keep up with technology, and neither can enterprise-level companies. This past fall, IBM notified employees, who it had determined needed additional training, they were required to step up their technological game, and that they would receive only 90% of their salary while embarking upon this additional training. Talk about an incentive to stay on top of changes in technology ! According to the article in the New York Times covering this move, some IBM workers received an email letting them know that an assessment had determined certain members of the team had “not kept pace with acquiring the skills and expertise needed to address changing client needs, technology and market requirements.” While some criticized the move, the reality is that employees can no longer be complacent when it comes to their grasp of technology and how to use it to help their businesses grow. That’s something to keep in mind, for sure, whether you’re just embarking on a career or whether you’re already in the workforce and want to make sure you have the skills you need to stay marketable.
  • The Modern Worker Needs to Be Constantly Learning
  •  
    blog post by Daniel Newman, author of Millennial CEO on need to learn continuously and quickly.  Find the reference to IBM asking employees to acquire tech skills.  could be reference in ECO Byte #1. 
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Smarter Nonprofit Networking: Building a Professional Network That Works for You | Guid... - 0 views

  • professional networking, strategic and serendipitous. The strategic approach encourages you to analyze your network, find alignment for making connections, and have purpose-driven meetings. The serendipitous approach is a more casual encounter, walking or coffee meetings, or doing favors for contacts that don’t seem to have the capacity to help you now.
  •  
    very good blog post on building networks both strategically and serendipitously, October 27, 2015
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Why There Aren't More Women in Tech, and Why It Matters, in One Graphic - 0 views

  •  
    beautiful infograph on disparities in technical fields between women and men--men are hired almost twice as often as women, Melanie Pinola, lifehacker
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

What's a Good Faith Effort? - 0 views

  • One of the reasons I wanted to post on this topic was that my thinking about the grading process has been fuzzy, and I knew that the effort required to get a post together would help clarify my thinking. Students, on the other hand, see learning as good when it happens easily, without any struggle.
Lisa Levinson

Sharing, Gifting, and the Moral Evolution of the Social Web - Medium - 0 views

  •  
    got to this through Stephen Downes's Daily. This blog by Tim Rayner makes a distinction between sharing and gifting on social networks. He considers gifting as sharing with a purpose. Mindful sharing as opposed to sharing for sharing's sake. His argument is that gifting is the real power of social networks.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

David Lang: My underwater robot | TED Talk | TED.com - 0 views

  •  
    short video (about 6 minutes) showing underwater robot built under open source (publish and share all code online for others to adapt) in a garage. remote operated vehicle. 1,000 times cheaper than vehicle used to explore Titanic. Underwater vehicles used in oil exploration, construction, etc. set up website with discussion forums to bring in tips from others; slow at first, then hobbyists and professional ocean engineers started showing up; people wanted kits, they used Kickstarter to raise $20,000, raised over $100k in 2 hours, then had to start small manufacturing. now they have ocean explorers all over the globe.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

TED Talk on Open Source Ecology - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    Marcin Jakubowski speaks to open source development of farm hardware that can be replicated by others at low cost. "Newly relevant DIY maker culture"
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Meeting Zen: Boosting Attendees' Mental Well-Being: Associations Now - 0 views

  •  
    article by Samantha Whitehorne on October 23, 2015 on what associations are doing to ramp up the meditation, mindfulness, etc. at their meetings to help attendees boost their mental health
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Thinking about Teaching and Learning - 0 views

  • It’s learner-centered teaching—it’s those instructional strategies and approaches designed and used by teachers who want learners to be motivated, independent, and self-regulated.
  • We criticize students for their surface learning approaches and yet I see a lot of surface learning when it comes to teaching. Our infatuation with teaching techniques—the tips, tricks, and gimmicks that can make our teaching dance—yes, they’re important, but so are the assumptions and premises on which they rest. We quest for “right” answers to what we think are simple questions. “Should I call on students or let them volunteer?” The answer depends on a host of variables including; how you call on students, who you call on, when you call on them, and what’s the motivation behind calling on them. Thinking that good teaching results from having right answers trivializes the complexities that makes teaching endlessly fascinating.
  • learning about teaching. I have talked with teachers who admit they don’t do any pedagogical reading and others who don’t do any professional development activities. How can you expect to stay instructionally alive and well when you’re not taking actions that promote health? It’s not about needing to improve; it’s about wanting to grow. It’s about taking our love of learning and tackling teaching as a subject to be mastered, a skill to be developed.
  •  
    great blog post by Maryellen Weimer on why teachers need to think about learning, their own PD to start!
Lisa Levinson

Emerging Leaders Playbook - 0 views

  •  
    Beth Kanter's wonderful SlideShare on how to be an effective nonprofit leader.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The Nonprofit Leadership Development Deficit | Stanford Social Innovation Review - 0 views

  • too many nonprofit CEOs and their boards continue to miss the answer to succession planning sitting right under their noses—the homegrown leader.
  • leadership development deficit.
  • The sector’s C-suite leaders, frustrated at the lack of opportunities and mentoring, are not staying around long enough to move up. Even CEOs are exiting because their boards aren’t supporting them and helping them to grow.
  • ...20 more annotations...
  • 2006 study
  • Bridgespan predicted that there would be a huge need for top-notch nonprofit leaders, driven by the growth of the nonprofit sector and the looming retirement of baby boomers from leadership posts.
  • the need for C-suite leaders5 grew dramatically.
  • the majority of our survey respondents (57 percent) attributed their retention challenges at least partially to low compensation, an issue that can feel daunting to many nonprofits. Lack of development and growth opportunities ranked next, cited by half of respondents as a reason that leaders leave their organizations.
  • those jobs keep coming open.
  • Surprisingly, little is due to the wave of retirement we have all been expecting: only 6 percent of leaders actually retired in the past two years.6
  • major reason is turnover:
  • losing a star performer in a senior development role costs nine times her annual salary to replace.
  • supply grew with it. Organizations largely found leaders to fill the demand.
  • corporate CEOs dedicate 30 to 50 percent of their time and focus on cultivating talent within their organizations.1
  • lack of learning and growth
  • lack of mentorship and support
  • he number one reason CEOs say they would leave their current role, other than to retire, was difficulty with the board of directors.
  • respondents said that their organizations lacked the talent management processes required to develop staff, and that they had not made staff development a high priority
  • combination of learning through doing, learning through hearing or being coached, and learning through formal training.
  • skill development can compensate for lack of upward trajectory. Stretch opportunities abound in smaller organizations where a large number of responsibilities are divided among a small number of people.
  • found that staff members who feel their organizations are supporting their growth stay longer than those who don’t, because they trust that their organizations will continue to invest in them over time.1
  • “When you invest in developing talent, people are better at their jobs, people stay with their employers longer, and others will consider working for these organizations in the first place because they see growth potential.”
  • define the organization’s future leadership requirements, identify promising internal candidates, and provide the right doses of stretch assignments, mentoring, formal training, and performance assessment to grow their capabilities.
  • Addressing root causes may steer funders away from supporting traditional approaches, such as fellowships, training, and conferences, and toward helping grantees to build their internal leadership development capabilities, growing talent now and into the future across their portfolio of grantees.
  •  
    Really wonderful article on nonprofit leadership development and how the lack of it leads to much external executive hiring and high turnover in these roles
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

http://www.bridgespan.org/getattachment/6e859161-adb1-43dd-a3b8-2ddbb238cfa2/Plan-A-How... - 0 views

  •  
    nonprofit leadership development by Bridgespan, Executive Summary
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Group Work that Works (Even in Large Classes!) - ProfHacker - Blogs - The Chronicle of ... - 0 views

  •  
    good article, November 5, 2010, on group work to apply standards, concepts in case studies in class. Important to present significant problem, same problem, clear choice, and simultaneous reporting
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Women, repeat after Paul Ryan: 'I cannot and will not give up my family time.' - The Wa... - 0 views

  •  
    great article on using our power to change circumstances in the workplace
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Why What You Learned in Preschool Is Crucial at Work - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    article by Claire Cain Miller titled "Why What You Learned in PreSchool Plays Well with Others" or "The Best Jobs Require Social Skills" on how jobs require both socializing and thinking. Technical skills can be automated but social skills can't.
« First ‹ Previous 501 - 520 of 2249 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page