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Improving Climate from Where You Are Right Now

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Title: Improving Climate from Where You Are Right Now


1
Improving Climate from Where You Are Right Now
  • Don Schutt, Director,Office of Human Resource
    Development (OHRD)
  • And
  • Kathleen Paris, Sr. Consultant
  • Office of Quality Improvement, UW-Madison
  • 2002

2
What do we mean by climate?
  • Prevailing atmosphere of civility and mutual
    respect
  • Measured by how it feels to people who work and
    learn here.
  • Created by day-to-day behaviors of everyone

3

Circle of Concern
Circle of Influence
Focus Your Energy on Those Things You Can
Influence1
4

Circle of Concern
Circle of Influence
If you focus on things you can do something
about, the positive energy and effort tends to
enlarge your Circle of Influence.1
5
Ideas for Improving Climate
  • Six Questions to ask your Staff
  • Operating Principles
  • Dialogue
  • Critical Friends Exercise
  • Appreciative Inquiry
  • Community-building events
  • Six Questions to ask your Staff
  • Monitor climate around your desk or workstation
  • Campus Learning Opportunities

6
Six Questions to Ask
7
Six Questions to Ask
  • Do I know what is expected of me at work?
  • Do I have the materials and equipment I need to
    do my work right?
  • At work, do I have the opportunity to do what I
    do best every day?

8
4. In the last seven days, have I received
recognition or praise for doing good work? 5.
Does my supervisor, or someone at work seem to
care about me as a person? 6. Is there someone at
work who encourages my development? From
Buckingham and Coffman6
9
Do Not
  • Survey unless you have intention to act
  • Rely soley on the numbers
  • Identify anyone individually
  • Survey for what you already see7

10
Operating Principles
11
Operating Principles
  • Statements that define how things are done in a
    department or office including what is valued and
    how members related to each other and those they
    serve

12
OHRD Operating Principles
  • Principles of Practice
  • The Office of Human Resource Development at
    UW-Madison strives to advance these principles in
    our daily interactions with others.
  • Principle 1 Community through Respect
    Civility
  • It is critical to promote respect and the
    practice of civility in the workplace community.
  • Principle 2 Excellence through Diversity
  • Diversity of gender, ethnicity, disability,
    religion, sexual orientation, culture, position,
    job function, and years of service are crucial
    components in the pursuit of excellence.
  • Principle 3 Success through Learning
  • Continuous professional development is vital to
    individual and organizational success.

13
One Offices Operating Principle
  • If we cant help people who come through our
    door, they always leave with a phone number and a
    name.

14
Uses for Operating Principles
  • Brochures, strategic plan, Web site for your
    department, unit, office
  • Have handy in staff meetings
  • Get out and review when faced with problems,
    issues to resolve
  • Remind yourself and others when actions are
    counter to principles

15
Focus Question
  • What values, beliefs, principles do we share in
    this department/office about the work we do, how
    we conduct business, how we treat each other and
    how we treat those we serve?

16
Seek a shorter list with strong consensus rather
than a laundry list without agreement.
17
Dialogue

18
Discussion vs. Dialogue
19
Discussion
  • Origin to break apart
  • Conversations where people highlight and defend
    their differences
  • Most common academic approach

20
Dialogue
  • THINKING TOGETHER
  • An inquiry that surfaces ideas, perceptions, and
    understanding that people do not already have
  • Effort is not to convince others, but to
    UNDERSTAND

21
Try this at a party or social event
  • Listen to a conversation where you have an
    opinion, but pretend to yourself that you dont
    have an opinion or assumptions about the topic.
    What do you learn or hear differently?

22
Necessary Conditions2
  • Participants must suspend their assumptions
  • Participants must view each other as colleagues
    or peers
  • A facilitator must be present, at least at first
  • not everyone agrees on the facilitator.

23
Also Important
  • People need to be clear about what is happening
    action is not the immediate purpose of dialogue
  • It is about the process of thought, not its
    products

24
Defining Qualities of Dialogue
  • Suspension of judgment
  • Release of the need for specific outcomes
  • An inquiry into and examination of underlying
    assumptions
  • Authenticity
  • Slower pace with silence between speakers
  • Listening deeply to self, others, and for
    collective meaning

25
I could imagine having a dialogue about
26
Critical Friends Groups
27
Process Built on Reflection
  • Focus on developing collegial relationships,
    encouraging reflective practice, and rethinking
    leadership
  • Critical is intended to mean important or key
    or necessary
  • Three occasions for reflection
  • (1) peer observations
  • (2) tuning a teaching artifact using the Tuning
    Process or
  • (3) consulting about an issue using the
    Consultancy Process

28
Consultancy Process Three Roles
  • Facilitator
  • Reviews the process, keeps time, keeps group on
    task, guides debriefing
  • Presenter
  • Prepares an issue for consultancy, sits outside
    the group, takes notes, responds to feedback
  • Discussant
  • Address the issue presented, follows protocol

29
Time, Six-Step Process
  • Step One Facilitator Overview (3 minutes)
  • Step Two Presenter Overview (5 minutes)
  • Step Three Probing or Clarifying Questions (5
    minutes)
  • Step Four Discussants Group Discussion (12
    minutes)
  • Step Five Presenter Response (5 minutes)
  • Step Six Debriefing (5 minutes)

30
Appreciative Inquiry
31
Assumptions of Appreciative Inquiry3
  • In every organization, something works
  • Change can be intentionally shaped by finding
    what works and recreating, duplicating, expanding
    the conditions that create the successes.

32
Assumption of Appreciative Inquiry
  • Organizations grow in the direction of what they
    repeatedly ask questions about and focus their
    attention on.
  • Thus, the questions we ask ourselves become very
    important

33
Usual vs. Appreciative
Inquiry Inquiry
  • What are our problems? What hasnt worked in the
    past?
  • Describe a time when things were really going
    well around here. What conditions, elements made
    those things happen? What could we do to have
    more of those conditions?

34
Another Assumption of Appreciative Inquiry
  • People have more confidence and comfort during
    times of change when they carry forward parts of
    the past.
  • If we carry parts of the past forward, they
    should be what is best about the past

35
An Appreciative Inquiry Tool The Interview
  • Describe a time when you felt the
    team/department/office performed really well.
    What were the circumstances?
  • Describe a time when you were proud to be a
    member of the team/department/office?
  • What do you value most about being a member of
    this team/department/office?
  • Share results What are the themes?

36
From themes, createProvocative Propositions
  • Present-tense statements of ideal
    circumstances that enable people to do more of
    what works
  • The information we need to answer students
    questions is at our fingertips
  • Faculty and staff who call us for help only
    have to speak to one person

37
How Might You UseAppreciative Inquiry?
  • At home?
  • On campus?
  • With organizations you belong to?

38
Community-Building
39
  • A characteristic of effective academic
    departments Effort is devoted to
  • department-building activities 4

40
Department-Building Activities
  • Seminars and special symposia
  • Faculty/staff meetings
  • Newsletters
  • Regular social events
  • Communal space (mail room, break room, etc.)
  • Others?

41
Taste of WCER
42
each year's cooking event produces a slightly
different lineup of cooks and a slightly
different set of guests. I would imagine that
some folks may meet for the first time at this
event Prof. Paul Baker, Wisconsin Center for
Education Research, UW-Madison
43
"People didn't come to this event because it's a
free lunch -- it's part of the culture here,"
says Lois Opalewski, a 28-year employee. "This is
a good place to work and to be, and our social
events are one reason that's true.5
44
Mentoring
  • Be a mentor or mentee

45
Mentoring Programs for Students
  • Students of color and underrepresented groups
    http//www.lssaa.wisc.edu/mentor/index.shtml
  • Undergraduate student research
  • http//www.lssaa.wisc.edu/urs/
  • Mentoring of current students by alumni (Physics,
    Bacteriology, Geology, School of Education,
    College of Engineering, etc.)
  • Partners for Success for graduate students of
    color
  • http//info.gradsch.wisc.edu/mp/partners/part
    nershome.html

46
Mentoring Programsfor Faculty and Staff
  • Non-represented Classified Staff Mentoring
    Program
  • Academic Staff Mentoring Program
  • Women Faculty Mentoring Program
  • Others?

47
What Is The Climate Around My Desk or Work
Station?
  • What message is conveyed by the physical space
    that I inhabit, decorate, work in?
  • What is communicated by what I have on my walls,
    on bulletin boards, on doors?

48

What Is The Climate Around My Desk or Work
Station? continued
  • How can people expect to be treated when they
    approach me?
  • Do I introduce myself to new people or do
    anything to welcome newcomers?
  • What do I do to create a more positive climate?

49

Campus Learning Opportunities
  • Leadership Institute contact
  • Seema Kapani, skapani_at_vc.wisc.edu
  • S.E.E.D. (Seeking Educational Equity and
    Diversity) contact Seema Kapani
  • Appreciative Inquiry Network contact Jay
    Ekleberry, jpeklebe_at_facstaff.wisc.edu

50
Campus Learning Opportunities, cont.
  • Managers Supervisors training through OHRDsee
    http//www.ohrd.wisc.edu/MSD/
  • Creating a Collaborative Learning Environmentsee
  • http//www.wisc.edu/provost/ccae/ccle/splash.html
  • Office of Human Resource Development see
    www.ohrd.wisc.edu

51
Watch For On-Line Learning and Professional
Development Transcript!
  • By Fall, 2002, an on-line transcript will show
    what courses, training, workshops you have
    completed at UW-Madison.

52
References
  • 1Covey, Steven. (1989) The 7 habits of highly
    effective people. New York Simon and Schuster.
  • 2Bohm, David, Factor, Donald Peter
    Garrett.(1991). DialogueA Proposal.
    http//www.muc.de/heuvel/dialogue/.
  • 3Hammond, Sue Annis. (1996).The thin book of
    appreciative inquiry. Plano, TX Thin Book
    Publishing Company.

53
References, continued
  • 4 Chabot, Brian. (March, 2002). Characteristics
    of excellent departments. Academic Leader A
    newsletter for academic deans and department
    chairs. Madison, WI Magna.
  • 5 Iseminger, Jeff. (November 18, 1998). A guy
    thingMen prepare parade of palate pleasers.
    Wisconsin Week. University of Wisconsin-Madison.
  • 6 Buckingham, Marcus and Coffman, Curt. (1999).
    First, Break All the Rules. New York
  • Simon and Schuster.

54
References, continued
  • 7Hafner, Kristine. (1998). Current Trends and
    Practices Partners for Performance.
    http//www.ucop.edu/ucophome/businit/
  • surveys/climate/sld001.htm.
  • Suggested Reading
  • Maister, David, H. (2001). Practice what you
    preach. New York The Free Press.

55
S\QUALITY\DEPT\A-CAMPUS MISSION AND
VISION\Campus Climate/Improving Climate From
Where You Are Right Now.8-8-02
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