Adult Learners’ Week

 

For those of you who didn’t know, next week is Adult Learners’ Week (20th-26th May)

Adult Learners’ Week is the UK’s largest celebration of
learning. It promotes education and training for adults, provides access to
information and guidance, motivates more and different adults to participate in
learning and celebrates the learning achievements of adults.

Co-ordinated
by NIACE, the National Institute of Adult Continuing Education, the Week is
supported by the Department for Education and Skills and the European Social
Fund with additional support from learndirect and Ofcom.

Adult Learners’
Week is an opportunity for all organisations that offer any form of adult
learning activity to either present a special promotional activity, or to label
their existing learning activities as ‘Adult Learners Week’
activities.

The Adult Learners’ Week planning guide gives you all you
need to know about making your event a success, and can be downloaded from www.alw.org.uk.

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Edge Upstarts….and Enterprising Solutions

SSE was at the Edge Upstarts Awards in London last night. Congratulations to all the winners and nominees: an impressive line-up, and some very well-deserved recognition. You can see the full list of winners here. Big winners on the night were Training for Life which was ‘Social Enterprise of the Year’, and their Hoxton Apprentice restaurant was named ‘Social Enterprise Team of the Year’. Their chief executive Gordon D’Silva missed out on a clean sweep (the ‘Social Entrepreneur of the Year’ went to Safia Minney, the founder of fair trade fashion outfit, People Tree ) but, as I put it to him, in Oscar terms, Best Picture and Best Cast (OK, work with me here) was a good return, even if Best Director wasn’t forthcoming…richard mille replica

Ed Miliband also made his first appearance as Minister for the Third Sector, and spoke well, particularly (as he acknowledged), it was only his third full day in the job. Full marks also to the team from the Edge Foundation, several of whom were there last night. Not only were the Upstarts Awards a rousing success, but they have also backed London for the WorldSkills games in 2011, which has indeed been won for the capital (and announced in a front-page ad in the Guardian this morning). SSE left filled with optimism at their determination to promote practical learning and skills, which mirrors our own belief in the importance of action learning / learning-by-doing.

Finally, just to mention that, as we move from one set of awards to the next, the Enterprising Solutions Awards are now accepting nominations….

 

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Action learning: useful links

The SSE was the first organisation in its field to recognise that ‘action learning’, both as a general approach and a particular methodology, was most appropriate to the development and support of social entrepreneurs. There is a lengthy-ish explanation of why this is the case here, but what it boils down to is the following:

that entrepreneurs prefer action to reflection: they want to get on with it. They are willing to explore their environment for opportunities and resources, and to take risks. They are “people” people. They aren’t interested in learning programmes that don’t seem relevant to them, and they often move straight into action without any educational preparation. They learn as they go.”

So learning by doing,replique montre action learning, fits best with the ways they work and the lives they lead. Action learning is also a specific process, as well as a more general approach, and was originally coined and introduced by Professor Reg Revans in the UK mining industry in the 1940s. He described action learning with the formula L = P + Q, where
Learning (L) occurs through Programmed knowledge (P) and insightful
Questioning (Q).

Action learning has now been taken up by other organisations in the field of social entrepreneurship, and more widely in the voluntary sector. Indeed, the new spangly Workforce Development Hub are looking at reviving what was a successful scheme for managers in the voluntary sector….see the Action Learning Matters website for more details.

And if you wish to become an uber-geek on action learning all in, then check out the following links:

12 Manage on Action Learning (good intro)
Action Learning Associates (general info)
What is Action Learning (including photo of Reg Revans himself)
Action Learning: Research and Practice (academic journal)
The International Foundation for Action Learning and others
Action Learning by Krystyna Weinstein (practical handbook; available from SSE library ;0) )
ABC of Action Learning by Reg Revans himself…

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Online leadership for sector CEOs

ACEVO, the erstwhile Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary Organisations, have developed what they are calling a tailored learning programme, which is mostly online: the Advanced Leadership Development Process, developed in partnership with Ashridge Business School, aims to help chief execs who have been in post for a few years and need a ‘refresh’ amongst a network of peers. Or, as they put it:

"Ashridge and acevo have developed this new programme to help third
sector leaders develop the skills they need to meet the challenges
facing them at an individual and organisational level. The programme
allows each participant to draw directly on their own experiences in
the workplace and reflect their priorities for personal development."

7 month programme, with 6.5 days of face time. £2500….

Interesting overlaps between ACEVO and SSE: at what point does a social entrepreneur become a chief executive of their organisation? how much of the SSE programme is community/entrepreneurial leadership? etc….

As I recently pointed out in Third Sector magazine, our students (see the most recent cohort in London here, and the soon to be most recent additions to the Fellowship in Fife here) are the chief execs of tomorrow, bringing (hopefully) some much-needed dynamism, youth and diversity to the public, private, volutnary and social enterprise sectors….

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