Week 4: Trends & Issues in IDT
Part A. Chapter in Section V- Chapters 18, 19, 20, 21, 22
(Trends & Issues in Various Settings)
Upon the conclusion of my readings I decided to address IDT
in the context of business and industry, military, and post-secondary
education. Making a comparison and to contrast
these three IDT approaches an understanding of each works best. In the business
and industry areas the role of IDT is to help businesses to design a sales team
that is organizationally strong to produce a product that is sellable in the
world markets. The breakdown of roles is vital to the industry’s ability to do
this so the IDT must put together a team of experts so roles are clearly
defined. The Organizational Project Manager (OPM) task is the work closely with
the ID to create a team of organizational leaders who will see that the project
is completed in a timely fashion, and close to on or below budget as possible. (Shrikhande,
2014)
This team of expert’s work closely together to see to it that the project or
projects are coordinated in such a way as it will be mutually beneficial to the
company. Of the three types of teams that can be developed there can be a
virtual team, cross-functional team and a contractor-led team. In that team, the responsibilities are
divided into the Portfolio Manager, who works to achieve a strategic set of
objectives. Then there is the program
manager, who manages the team project manager(s). The Project Manager is the
backbone to ensure that all projects, trainings, and compliances are in order.
The unique thing about reading this whole section is that all
these strategies hits close to home for me.
My daughter has been a PMP (Professional Manager Projects) for more than
ten years and she works as a part of a PMO (Project Management Office); which I
did not clearly understand until I started reading these chapters from the text. All the dinner table conversations went over
my head though I thought I understood, but until I read the break down in
simple terms from the text I did not have an “ah, ha” moment. Suddenly, the
conversations of years began to make sense. Such things as creating a detailed
operational plan of all steps in any given process made sense. I recall of her conversations how things fall
apart if each step in a process is not properly and sufficiently documented and
how difficult it is to make the company and their staff understand the value of
documentation. The value of operational templates, and responsibilities of all
end users must be clearly outlined in the whole process or there will be chaos
and the cost to the company can be astonishing.
There are roles that must be performed and this team must make sure that
the company understands the value of detailed documents to all task so that it
can be easily reproducible.
The main reason I chose these three contexts is I can relate
it to real life and how it has impact my family as the workers who must help
make the process happen from planning, to follow through to employee training.
This family has a long history of military service and several of my family
member where high-ranking officers. They talked about following military
protocol and the value and need to have training that is concise and
quick. All the men and women involved in
the military must learn a task fast and be ready for the next step in any
procedure. The military has a history of encouraging its personnel to maintain
and improve so that they can have a strong workforce that must be ready to do
double duty for country and themselves.
After W.W.II the military offered veterans an opportunity to
get educational training after service. This was a part of The Servicemen’s Readjustment
Act of 1944 (GI Bill), which had many very good components to it, but the main component
was to train a new workforce for the coming highly technological new era. After
the war, many Business Colleges sprang up offering education and training for
the new GI veteran. My own mother worked as a director of one of those private
business schools that trained ex-military men for the modern changing world.
The skills offered back them where considered the cutting edge for the time. It
gave veterans an opportunity to go for jobs that they never could have gotten
before their military service and with the help of the GI Bill. The beauty of this
was the government was paying them to do so. Millions of benefits where paid
out during that period that made a difference in many young men and women’s
lives, especially men of color. With
this training, they could apply and get better paying jobs that required skills
that they would never have earned had it not been for the GI Bill (History.com,
2017) .
My mother left working for the business school later to become a keypunch operator
for the civilian workforce of the Air Force. She worked with Fortran data
systems when computers were as large as rooms and had to be kept extremely
cool.
My youngest son works as a financial reporting analyst that
analyzes financial data and puts it in a usable format for management decisions
and runs detailed financial reports using specialized programs and computers. This is another clog in the business machine
that helps it run effectively to produce their product whatever that product
might be. A protocol is required for financial matters for that part of the
business to operate. My other son is at the operational/trainer level where he
trains new employees the best practices and most cost-effective way to do the
job after having done the job without incident for more than 13 years. He falls in the category as the military
trainer who is skilled at the job and is trained by the company to follow their
practices to teach all new hires for that field. I work with college professors
to train new geology students about meteorites. This is a part of their freshman
science class which is important for all students who are going into geology or some
area of science where they have a knowledge of rocks and minerals. In this case
the prescribed information that they need to learn is spelled out in the
teachers plans which are directed by the department of curriculum. The roles
have different titles but they function the same. There’s the professor, the AP
(Associate Professor), lecturer, and TA (teacher assistant), who conducts all
the labs. The alignments are the same even if they are called by differing
names. The final analysis is training the end users to use the technology and
understand how it works in producing the final product that is to be sold. Be it a goods or services.
The differences are subtle but the organizational layout are
relatively the same. Each one of these have technological skills that must be
mastered to do the task and do it efficiently and cost-effectively.
Part B. Chapters VI – Chapters 23, 24, 25 (Global Trends
& Issues)
Questions to ponder: 1. How
can we prepare our youth to address the problems of living in a world with 9 billion
people when the earth’s resources cannot sustain that many? Sometimes you
just cut to the base line and say they must learn new ways of production in
order to meet this change that is obviously going to happen. We need to have ideas and plans in place to
address the issue of feeding that many people on the planet and making sure agriculture
can keep up, therefore industry must find unique ways to address these concerns. (National Geographic Magazine, 2014)
2. Does our current
educational system, curriculum, and instructional practices help learners
foster the complex problem-solving skills necessary to tackle these issues?
We are trying to help young learners to
obtain the skills through the work of IDT professionals who see the problems
and are trying to address it through innovative ideas in how industry perceives
our academic needs to meet the demands of the world markets. Through their
efforts a solution can be obtained but as I stated earlier it is sometimes
difficult to make industry see the whole big picture when their immediate
concern is how much money, now!
3. Are there methods
and practices used in European and Asian countries that we should use here in
the US? Why or why not? The
United States has pictured itself as global academic leader until one day they
looked up and other countries such as Asia and Europe were out educating their
students for the new global world and the US was grossly behind. What a shock? Our students were low-performing
in the areas of basic proficiency in reading, mathematics and science. We had fallen behind, we were no longer global
leaders. The statistics are scattering and embarrassing for the US; according
to the OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) we had
fallen below the average of 64 countries in these key areas (OECD, 2017) . We fell far below
the average major industrialized countries. Our students have consistently
fallen below in those key STEM (Science Technology, Engineer, and Mathematics) subjects
along with reading for more than twenty years and the gap is getting wider instead of
smaller.
So what is the problem according to an article written just
one year ago that states “in the American system, as students start to fall
behind, they find it harder and harder to comprehend what is going on in class
and fall even farther behind as they go through the years.” Their morale sinks,
their embarrassment rises, they stop coming to school, and then they drop out.” (Tucker, 2016) . The author of this
article goes on to say what the East Asian countries do is stop the momentum before it
starts its downward drop by believing that "all
students can and will meet the high standards that they set as they progress
through their years of education." What they know is if “students are
allowed to fall behind, failure will feed on itself.” We need to be of that
same mind set. We can’t afford to let them fail!
While in European countries their emphasis is on “critical
thinking and reasoning” skills is their main focus that helps them to remain on
top of their game. The key components of their education there is a) not
memorizing the definition, but getting the concept right; b) results are a very
private thing; c) less hierarchical system within their school districts; and d)
more available resources to create high-tech classrooms. (Shawon, 2014) (Schleicher,
2014)
America can definitely learn from other countries methods
but will they swallow their pride and if they do it so remains to be seen.
References
History.com. (2017, June). G.I. Bill - Worl War
II. Retrieved from History. com:
http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/gi-bill
National Geographic Magazine. (2014, June). The
Future of Food: A Five-step Plan to Feed the World. Retrieved from
National Geographic Magazine online:
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/foodfeatures/feeding-9-billion/
OECD. (2017, June). OECD Policy Outlook.
Retrieved from OECD: http://www.oecd.org/education/policyoutlook.htm
Schleicher, A. (2014, February 3). Opinion: What
Asian schools can teach the rest of the world. Retrieved from CNN-:
http://www.cnn.com/2013/12/03/opinion/education-rankings-commentary-schleicher/
Shawon, S. R. (2014, November 21). Differences in
education systems of Europe and South Asia. Retrieved from Wordpress.com:
https://epiinside.wordpress.com/2014/11/21/differences-in-the-education-systems-of-europe-and-south-asia/
Shrikhande, N. (2014, May 16). Instructional
Designer Vs Project manage - 5 Tips to Manage This Crucial Relationship.
Retrieved from Jilbee.com: http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/gi-bill
Tucker, M. (2016, February 29). Asian Countries
Take the U.S. to School. Retrieved from The Atlantic.com:
https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2016/02/us-asia-education-differences/471564/
“East Asian countries stop the momentum before it starts its downward drop by believing that "all students can and will meet the high standards that they set as they progress through their years of education." What they know is if “students are allowed to fall behind, failure will feed on itself.”
ReplyDeleteIf you believe you can, you will; if you believe you can’t, you won’t; either way you were right to begin with. We must build our student’s confidence up, help them to believe in their own potential and then help them to achieve it. Mutual trust and respect are the fundamental building block on which I build a rapport with my class; it is the means by which we develop a shared sense of community and sense of belonging. As educators we must maintain high expectations for all of our students; believe that all children are capable of learning, and challenge them daily to discover their inner greatness, to maximize their potential, to harness their innate abilities, and to shun their mediocrity. I enjoyed reading over your blog post for this week, thank you for sharing.
I haven't visited your blog yet this summer, I love the baby blue background. I suggest maybe switching up the order of your posts so the most recent blog appears first and maybe making the font larger. I am glad that I am not the only that connect with these readings. I am glad you had your lightbulb moment! Schema makes a difference in so many aspects of life. "America can definitely learn from other countries methods but will they swallow their pride and if they do it so remains to be seen." I love that you mention this because it is the truth. Education systems in other countries are different than ours but different is always a bad thing. I enjoyed your post!
ReplyDeleteSome of the problems that you mentioned about education in the U.S. (like how students are allowed to fall behind and our scores are not as high) might be part of a bigger issue, or issues. We should not, for example, allow our students to fall behind... and we SHOULD do what it takes to help get them where they need to be. Do we have the funding for that? Or the resources?
ReplyDeleteMany of the countries that we compare ourselves to look at education differently. The text mentioned how educators are respected in Japan. Are we respected here?
In some countries, education is a priviledge, not a right. That means that the students who "just aren't good at school" or "don't really want to be there" or "do not have the capacity for learning" aren't counted in their statistics. We teach all kinds, and expect them all to achieve the same things. Is that really possible or realistic?
Comparing education internationally is similar to comparing technology internationally. We are using the same words (education or technology), but we may not be doing the same things or have the same goals. We are teaching our students to inquire and explore, but in some countries that is unacceptable. How can we compete with that? And do we really want to?
I feel like we have similar issues within our borders as well. A school that barely has the funding to run, much less obtain instructional materials will certainly offer a different education than one with all of the "bells and whistles". Is the charter school student in a classroom with 30 students receiving the same education as the student at a local district with 17 students?
There are just so many things... I'm not sure we are really comparing apples to apples. I do think, as you said, we can certainly learn from other countries. :)