It’s time to let go of control
Thursday, July 16, 2009
-
by
ASTD Staff
Let's be honest, our profession is full of control
freaks, people who are not half as concerned about sharing data as
they are about protecting their data. The first question I get when
I give presentations at ASTD conferences is usually not "great, how
can we leverage social media, games and virtual worlds to improve
performance?" Instead, I get inane questions about: "How can I be
assured that our data is safe on an iPod?" or "How do you know that
no one is eaves-dropping on your conversation in Second Life?" or
"How can we keep people from wasting their time on a social
network?" Since when did the learning profession become an
extension of the IT security department?
I have to
resist the urge to jump up and down and scream: Don't you get it?
Your job is to let information free, not to
hoard it, your job is to UNshackle your employees not to shackle
them,youshould be concerned about obscurity instead of
security,you should bebreaking the rules instead of enforcing
them,you should be busybuilding communities of practice instead
of Berlin Walls. If you don't stand up for the new generation of
workers who will insist on learning from their peers, who
will?
T he hardest part about
next generation learning is giving up control. In comparison,
factors like "technology," "user adaptation," and even finding
money, are the easy parts of learning innovation. Getting training
professionals to loosen up and lighten up, that's a different
story. After all, we're asking people who make a living by talking
to shut up.We're telling youto get out of your faculty cloak, get
down from the stage, turn off the microphone, shut down the
projector, stop dumping meaningless trivia and
quizzingpeopleabout this nonsense ten mintues later, and shut
down that LMS, the ultimate instrument of control.
Instead,youneed to join the conversation and help people link new
insights to the their daily experiences through peer-to-peer
conversations. Even if that means letting people show up to a
virtual worlds businessmeeting as a fish, which you can do at IBM,
encouraging all employeesto write apublicblog, which Sun
Microsystems is doing, ordollingout free recording equipment to
anyone that wants to record their own podcasts, which Microsoft is
doing. It's time we all let go of control and begin trusting
people.
It’s time to let go of control
ASTD Staff
2009-07-16