Upskill, Reskill, Thrive: Optimizing Learning and Development in the Workplace
By James McKenna and Kendra Grant
()
About this ebook
Upskill, Reskill,Thrive: Optimizing Learning and Development in the Workplace offers readers an accessible guide to understanding and applying Universal Design for Learning (UDL) to the workplace. Universal Design for Learning is a framework to improve and optimize teaching and l
James McKenna
James McKenna loves to learn and help others learn and improve. He supports organizations to develop, sustain, and leverage inclusive learning and working ecosystems so that individuals and teams can learn, innovate, and thrive. He is a leader, instructional designer, trainer, and facilitator.James serves as the assistant director of Professional Learning and Leadership Development at the California Collaborative for Educational Excellence and is the founder of McKenna Learning, a learning and development consultancy. He is a regular speaker at national conferences and leads the development of digital resources to support inclusive learning at scale. Previously, James was a consultant, administrator, and special education teacher for the Los Angeles County Office of Education, a musician, a nightclub doorman, and veteran of the United States Navy. In short, he's worn a lot of hats.He received a BA in music from the University of Massachusetts - Boston, an MA in education from the University of Phoenix, and an EdD in education leadership with a focus on education psychology from the University of Southern California. He is also certified as a master instructional designer by the Association for Talent Development (ATD). A native of Revere, Massachusetts, James currently lives in the Los Angeles area with his wife, Janine, and his children, Juliet and Jack.
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Upskill, Reskill, Thrive - James McKenna
UPSKILL, RESKILL, THRIVE
OPTIMIZING LEARNING AND DEVELOPMENT IN THE WORKPLACE
by
James McKenna, EdD
© 2023 CAST, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior permission of the publisher.
ISBN (paperback) 978-1-930583-96-2
ISBN (ebook) 978-1-930583-97-9
Library of Congress Control Number: 2022944716
Cover design by Martha Kennedy
Book design and production by Westchester Education Services
Published by CAST Professional Publishing, an imprint of CAST, Inc., Wakefield, Massachusetts, USA
For information about special discounts for bulk purchases, please email [email protected] or visit publishing.cast.org.
Dedication
For my wife, who has always seen more in me than I have in myself and who gave me the space and grace to write, learn, and grow. This is all your fault.
For my children, who loved me enough to let me write in peace, without complaint. You can do anything if you are willing to work hard, listen to sound advice, and admit when you have more work to do. McKennas never give up!
For the McKennas and the Fosters, who wonder what it is I actually do and patiently listen as I prattle on about science, design, and behavior change. I hope this helps fill in the gaps!
Table of Contents
Foreword: Making the UDL Journey by Kendra Grant
Introduction: A New Approach to Learning and Development
1. Learning in the Modern World
2. Know Your Learners
3. Know Your Environment
4. Align Your Mind
5. Make an Emotional Connection
6. Make an Intellectual Connection
7. Make a Strategic Connection
8. Put Your Learning to Work
Appendix A – Using the UDL Guidelines in the Workplace
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
FOREWORD
MAKING THE UDL JOURNEY
It’s my honor to introduce to you James McKenna’s insightful and practical book that explores the application of Universal Design for Learning (UDL) to the learning and development (L&D) field. While UDL has its roots in the K–12 environment, James recognizes the value of UDL to help guide L&D practices to better meet the diverse needs of today’s workforce. You hold in your hands the means to intentionally create equitable, accessible learning environments filled with expert learners. Imagine an empowered workforce that is purposefully driven to learn, share, and improve.
Based on research into the brain and learning, UDL is both a framework that addresses the why, what, and how of learning and a heuristic process to help you enhance and accelerate learning in your workplace. UDL recognizes the variability of learners and the physical, emotional, and cognitive barriers that exist in today’s corporate environment and provides clear guidelines on how to overcome them. UDL recognizes the potential of people by actively removing barriers, making the hidden aspects of learning explicit, and empowering learners to better understand themselves while taking ownership of their learning. Its implementation involves a mindset shift—a culture change—that challenges your assumptions and beliefs about learners and learning. As such, UDL isn’t a lockstep program. It isn’t a to-do list. Just as each learner is unique, so too is your UDL journey.
My UDL journey began in 2004, as a K–12 educator and later as a professional development (PD) provider across North America and the president of the Inclusive Learning Network of the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE). It was clear that UDL could positively affect instructional design, course design, and adult professional learning, moving far beyond its K–12 roots. This led me to incorporate Universal Design for Learning when I was senior manager of learning design and delivery at Walmart. There, my team designed learning for 90,000 associates across Canada. Together, we focused on employees’ existing skills and abilities and targeted simpler (and faster) ways for them to learn. We also recognized the aspects of UDL we were already including, such as hands-on activities, interactive problem solving, and providing options and choice in how we take in information or perform tasks.. Over time, we acknowledged that many of the problems we saw (such as lack of engagement, lack of retention, and so on) were internal to the design, not external to the learner.
I’ve been on my UDL journey, committed to celebrating diversity, building equity, and empowering learners, for almost 20 years. The UDL Guidelines—a detailed, research-based resource for implementing the framework—are both the foundation and the heart of that journey. And I’m still learning. Reading James’ book, I had many a-ha!
moments when my prior understanding shifted, connections were made, and my understanding grew. Here is a snapshot of ideas that resonated with me. You will no doubt find many more of your own.
Barriers: James asks you to consider the barriers in your current learning environment through the creation of journey maps
, which consider in depth the learner's perspective when designing a learning experience. At Walmart, we collaboratively developed routines and subsequent training through the inclusion of personas and a day in the life
activities. Journey maps go deeper by bringing a variety of points of view together (including, when possible, that of the actual learner) to review the existing learning assets, experiences, technologies, and spaces to find and address the barriers and opportunities that exist.
Learner Expertise: James explains the importance of creating a company culture based on developing learner expertise, during which learners actively seek out new learning rather than passively complete the bare minimum to meet training requirements. As you work toward the goal of learner expertise, make it a priority to share what you are doing and why. Help all leaders understand UDL. Help them make the connection to their learning and development. Although change won’t happen overnight, the importance of continuously sharing the concept of UDL is as important as designing with UDL. This focus is vital if UDL is to become part of your learning culture.
UDL Layers: The richness of UDL is often overlooked because of its checklist
appearance (columns and rows). Often, when one is new to UDL, one focuses solely on the vertical, the actions that are instructor
led and owned. James expertly leads you through the vertical guidelines and checkpoints and then moves to the horizontal layers (access, build, internalize), making each aspect of UDL understandable. In the Appendix (the most useful appendix ever!), James then provides you with practical suggestions of what UDL might look like for each checkpoint by asking questions through the L&D lens. Essentially, James provides you with the why, what, and how to help you start your UDL journey.
Safety: UDL explicitly asks educators to foster a safe place to learn and take risks
(Checkpoint 7.3). James does a brilliant job of describing how to create psychological safety and then provide active and ongoing support for people as they take risks from speaking publicly, to challenging assumptions, to pursuing a new career. To use a swimming analogy, many learning organizations equate safety with staying in the shallow end of the pool, rather than providing swimmers with a variety of paths for learning to swim, various supports (including each other) to keep afloat, and consistent modeling, reflection, and reinforcement so everyone can learn to swim in the deep end safely and with confidence.
Next Steps: No matter where you are in your UDL journey, from novice to expert, this book will support you as you shift the focus from problems to people. James’ unique framing (and explanation) of UDL within the L&D context and his use of personal stories and thoughtful questions and examples will not overwhelm you (or make you feel guilty), but will encourage you to make changes to your corporate learning structure, one countermeasure at a time.
In whatever way you came to this book (and UDL), and indeed, however you access it, use it, and engage with it, you hold both a framework and a heuristic guide that will help you create within your organization a robust learning community that recognizes, celebrates, and leverages the diversity of today’s workforce.
—Kendra Grant
INTRODUCTION
A NEW APPROACH TO LEARNING AND DEVELOPMENT
Welcome to the journey into a new way for learning and development professionals to support learning. We’re at a crucial stage here because I have only a short time to convince you that you’re in the right place. You have a problem, and your search for solutions has brought you here, but now, I need to assure you that you’re on the right path and that this is the next step in your journey.
My guess is that you’re here to learn how better to foster learning in individuals, teams, and organizations. Maybe you’re new to learning and development (L&D for short), or maybe you’re a seasoned pro who has banked years of encouraging and supporting all sorts of workers across many different sectors, industries, and types of organizations. Maybe you’re somewhere in between. In any case, in this time of seismic social and economic change, you’re more than likely looking to take your practice to a new, more impactful level and want to make learning more meaningful, informative, and actionable. You may also want to make sure that all your learners can grow in their work and take pride and ownership in their own improvement and that their supervisors will see the value in the support you’ve provided.
But I have no doubt that, like all of us in the L&D field, you’ve been running into some obstacles. This is to be expected. Deep, meaningful learning can be hard, and supporting it is equally so. Just as all gardeners know they can’t make a flower grow, only create the conditions that promote growth, we know that we can’t make people learn. However, if we understand how people learn, why they learn, and the variability that exists within those spaces, we can begin to create the conditions in which learning thrives. In this way, we acknowledge that learning is done by people, not to them.
Fostering learning may seem daunting, but we have one huge advantage: People want to learn. In fact, they’re wired for it, and when they fail to learn, it’s because something is getting in the way. There’s a barrier, maybe more than one. Our job is to identify those barriers—whatever’s getting in the way of learning—and either remove them or help the learners address them. I like to think of this challenge to remove obstacles as providing countermeasures—options and supports that address barriers to learning—and teach the learners to use such tools and techniques in order to take ownership of their learning. That’s right, the most effective L&D professional is one who not only helps folks learn content but also teaches them how to learn: strategically, efficiently, and effectively.
When people know how to learn, they own their improvements and we become their partners. Learning becomes what they do rather than something done to them. In our roles as L&D professionals, we support and guide these efforts. The impact of such partnership cannot be overstated; it has the power to allow people to become their best selves in their work, thereby lifting individual, team, and organizational performance to new heights.
This idea of partnership runs contrary to traditional performance improvement; indeed, the inertia of tradition and how it’s always been done
can be hard to overcome. The thing is, the pandemic overcame it for us. Though the ills of COVID-19 are numerous and, in many cases, tragic, a line of demarcation has been drawn. Just as historical events—World War II, the advent of the internet, and 9/11—forever changed our social and economic landscapes, the COVID-19 pandemic will forever be coupled with a shift in how we all conduct business. One day, we will describe many of our practices and systems as How we did things before COVID
and What we decided to do after COVID.
For me, this reality presents us with a huge opportunity: We can finally unshackle ourselves from a top-down, one-size-fits-all model of professional learning and chart a new path, one that is collaborative rather than directive. We can move on from supporting learning from the inside out—designing supports in contexts that are often removed from where the learning is most needed—and focus on learning from the edges, where the work happens.
Since I began writing this book, the world, including the world of work, has changed immensely, forcing individuals and organizations to adapt in order to survive. We in L&D can’t support that change alone. The pace and scope of learning that’s necessary for organizations to survive, let alone thrive, is too great to be driven from the inside out. Learning can’t be an abstract endeavor; people increasingly need support for learning in the flow of work. We need to partner with those closest to the work to bring forward the problems, identify and seek out the necessary knowledge and skills to address the workplace challenges, and guide the development of novel solutions. In short, we need to empower workers and inspire them to become expert learners.
You might be wondering about the term expert learners.
I’ve embraced the definition put forth by Harvard-affiliated neuropsychologist David Rose, who cofounded the innovative education research organization CAST. Rose and his cofounder, Anne Meyer, define expert learners as those who know why they must learn, what they should learn next, and how they learn most effectively.¹ Expert learners assess their own capabilities (both strengths and weaknesses) and make plans to improve. They know where to find sources of needed information and guidance, as well as supports to make sense of new information. They can connect new knowledge to their own context and the greater goals of their teams and organization. They share information effectively, and they strategically apply their learning to make measurable improvements in their performance.
How does helping develop expert learners benefit you, the L&D professional? By developing expert learners, we are better business partners, able to support learning where it’s happening most often and likely at the most impactful times. Expert learners are more engaged, with a clear sense of purpose, and they are able to sustain high levels of effort and persistence when work and learning get hard. Expert learners are more efficient because they know where to find what they need in order to do what they have to do. Finally, expert learners are effective because they can think and act strategically and adjust as needed to get hard things done and done well.² How’s that for a return on investment?
Further, by understanding the role of the environment in fostering and sustaining learning, we can design better learning experiences. We can leverage the insights and experiences of our learners to make our designs more relevant, inclusive, and impactful. Finally, we can transition from an us-them
paradigm to a united we,
a partnership in performance improvement and organizational success.
I promise, although I am offering you a new approach to your work, it’s not an approach that requires a lot more work on your part. Indeed, it requires more of a shift in how you think about your role and approaching how you can help your people own their own learning. I’ll share strategies and resources to support this shift and show you how to cultivate the necessary buy-in to galvanize individuals, teams, departments, and organizations. Just like on a path, we’ll take it one step at a time, and at times, we’ll pause to look back at how far we’ve come and the opportunities still waiting ahead.
This journey can help you to reinvent what learning looks like—for yourself and for your people. To begin, we’re going to examine what the full sequence of learning looks like in the modern world of work: know your learners, know your environment, make an emotional connection, make an intellectual connection, make a strategic connection, and put your learning to work (see Figure In.1). We’ll look at how the pace of change as well as the need for increased personalization are making plain the inadequacy of the traditional, top-down, inside-out model of learning. We’ll look at the characteristics of the modern adult learner and see how, in the process of becoming expert learners, you can leverage the collective power of your people and empower them to innovate and thrive.
From there, I’m going to show you how empowering your people to become expert learners not only motivates them to adapt, upskill, reskill, and actually enjoy learning, but