After the WASIS Ecstasy, the Laundry - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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After the WASIS Ecstasy, the Laundry

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The ecstasy: Where are you at? ... and the laundry: Where is the rest of ... your own cynicism, easy to get disillusioned; need something to bring you back up ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: After the WASIS Ecstasy, the Laundry


1
After the WASIS Ecstasy, the Laundry
  • Susanne C. Moser, Ph.D.
  • Institute for the Study of Society and
    Environment
  • NCAR
  • (smoser_at_ucar.edu)

WASIS Workshop Boulder, CO July 20, 2007
2
The Going Home Talk
  • The ecstasy Where are you at?
  • and the laundry
  • Where is the rest of the world?
  • Likely challenges of practicing WASIS at home
  • Some perspectives on change
  • Strategies for next Monday and for the long haul

3
After the WASIS Ecstasy
  • Where are you?
  • Excitement about what you learned and gained
  • New perspectives and knowledge (theory, concepts)
  • New tools (methods, approaches, skills)
  • New language
  • New friends and colleagues
  • New or renewed commitment to WASIS
  • Motivation and desire to do things differently
  • A little exhausted, a little worried maybe?

4
the WASIS Laundry
  • When you get back home, back to work
  • They werent here!
  • They did the laundry while you were gone (the
    kids, dishes, garbage the meetings, phone
    calls, never-ending to-do lists the way weve
    always done it)
  • Most of your fellow WASISers arent down the
    hall (but some may be)
  • The rest of the world probably isnt waiting to
    change its habits
  • thinking, behavior, incentives, job descriptions,
    institutions still the same

5
the WASIS Laundry (cont.)
  • In a week, a month from now
  • Youre alone
  • Isolated geographically, intellectually,
    institutionally
  • Limited resources
  • Never enough time
  • Wishing for greater depth or experience in
    knowledge, methods, communication skills
  • ? INTERDISCIPLINARY WORK IS MUCH HARDER THAN YOU
    THOUGHT IT IS

6
So
  • You changed -
  • You want to change something else -
  • What you want to change may well
    resist.
  • This is all NORMAL!
  • But how to deal with normal????

7
Becoming a Master Interdisciplinarian
  • From Directed Learner to
  • Independent Performer
  • Expert
  • Leader
  • Visionary

8
The Cycle of ChangeMotivation and Resistance
Source Lessons for Living (2006)
9
Creating Change
  • The two tasks of change agents
  • (1) Elevate motivation to change
  • (2) Lower resistance/barriers to change
  • Implications
  • Identify a vision and clear goals
  • Strategically assess
  • leverage points
  • windows of opportunity
  • key players
  • specific needs/resources
  • likely barriers
  • Take a realistic, but long-term view

Source Moser Dilling, 2007. Creating a Climate
for Change Communicating Climate Change and
Facilitating Social Change. Cambridge University
Press. See http//www.isse.ucar.edu/communicati
on/book/
10
Another Perspective on Change
low
Motivation Confidence
high
low
Competence/ability
Source K. Blanchard Co., Situational
Leadership, 2003
11
Creating Change (cont.)
Response to change
Why change projects fail
Source http//www.epmbook.com/orgchange.htm
(2006)
12
First-Order Strategies
  • Before you say anything else Check in on the
    laundry, thank them for doing it, do some
    yourself
  • Identify or create a receptive moment
  • Who are you talking to?
  • Tell them (only) what they need to know
  • Speak in their language
  • Help them see how what you bring will help them
  • Offer something to them
  • Only then ask for what you need to implement the
    change
  • Offer to check in regularly, report back
  • Do this with everyone who needs to be involved in
    the change

13
Support for Change Agents
  • Build your local team (because you cant do it
    alone and not all at once)
  • Skills, support, sharing the work, etc.
  • Establish clear rules, timeline, authority,
    responsibility, accountability
  • Communicate more than you think is needed
  • Plant the seeds, let it become everyones garden
  • Continue to build skills
  • Yours
  • Everyone elses
  • Make use of WASIS connections, resources,
    discussion list
  • Maybe a buddy system, mentoring,

14
Others need what you need and then some
low
Coaching
Supporting
Motivation Confidence
Directing
Delegating
high
low
Competence/ability
Source K. Blanchard Co., Situational
Leadership, 2003
15
What Else? Your Own Ideas
  • be aware of the resistors work around them
  • include them, make them part of the process,
    dont alienate them communicate a lot, meet face
    to face, ask them about their worries
  • Identify the believers, those who support you
  • Think of this as culture change, needs to be
    organic, people will respect that you are sincere
  • Dont step on peoples toes try to avoid going
    behind peoples backs
  • Understand the chain of command who is critical
    to involve in the change
  • Be aware of your own cynicism, easy to get
    disillusioned need something to bring you back
    up

16
More good ideas
  • Challenge your own internal barriers, thoughts
  • Dont forget to step back and reflect on whats
    going on, why youre doing it, what strategies
    will help
  • Also shut up and listen
  • Get champions on your team (people who can bring
    onboard others)
  • Dont forget freindship as a motivating factor
  • Give people credit for when they have made the
    change acknowledge effort and success THANK YOU
    goes a LONG way!
  • Recognize that you yourself may need to change
  • Be your own (gentle) critic beware of your own
    flawed thinking
  • You are learner and expert at once, sometimes all
    in one day
  • When is it right to toot your own horn, when is
    it just important to see that the change happens

17
Bread for the Journey
  • If you focus on results, you will never change.
  • If you focus on change, you will get results.
  • Jack Dixon

Good luck and stay in touch!
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