Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Being Generational Savvy ASCD Conference Sharing Maggie Guggenheimer and Kathy Roney In education, as many as four generations work side by side teaching, and that means countless chances for crossed wires, miscommunication, and perhaps even mistrust. To assist you in supervising, coaching, teaching, and supporting adult learners of all generations. How educators can look past their own generational filters to reap the benefits of seeing through a new lens. Focusing on the major contexts in which generational differences play out—including recruitment, coaching, professional learning, and succession planning— you can gain tools and recommendations for collaborating, evaluating, and engaging in professional learning that meets multigenerational needs. It must be said that individuals, regardless of generation, bring their styles, influences, and particular perspectives and an identification with class, gender, race, region, family, religion and more. And, some broad generalizations are possible about those born in approximately the same years. Choose the color of your generation Millennials (1982-2005) Age 20-33 Gen Xers (1965-1981) Age 32-50 Boomers (1944-1964) Age 51-71 Traditionalists (1922-1943) Age 72 + 2005 2000 1995 1990 1985 1980 1975 1970 1965 1960 1955 1950 1945 1940 1935 1930 1925 Share “AH-HA” moments after reviewing the matrix Graduate students: Generation X & Baby Boomers Undergraduate students: Millennials What does this generation exemplify in their characteristics, needs, technology ? What does this tell you about your teaching expectations? • A coach who is easy with email communication • A coach who is open to just in time, relevant support and access to materials when needed • A coach who acknowledges smarts in 20 somethings and doesn’t patronize • A coach who praises the present and sees a speedy path for the coachee’s growth • A coach who is willing to take as much feedback as is giving it • A coach who is willing to collaborate and change (think co-creation) • A coach who acknowledges the whole life of the coachee and isn’t bitter when the coachee has a life and will be moving on • A coach for whom constant face to face interaction isn’t needed • A coach who understands and believes in the life-work balance • A coach who gets the need to affiliate, but not totally commit to work • A coach who isn’t afraid to answer the question “Why?” • A coach who doesn’t take it personally when someone is blunt • A coach who can be clear and discuss consequences honestly • A coach who is comfortable with transparency • A coach who is ok with not a lot of schmoozing and getting to business • A coach who understands and doesn’t judge when someone just ‘does the work’ to ‘get it done’ and that there are other priorities • A coach who has high expectations for you and for them – for ‘us’ • A coach who connects with the deep values around education • A coach who acknowledges prior experience and values it • A coach who understands personal connection matters • A coach who thinks in ‘affiliation’ to a greater goal – thinking ‘we’ • A coach who is mindful of language and respect given through language • A coach who gives of him or herself – willing to do something additional • A coach who understands it is jolting to be on the bottom of the pecking order again and the difficulty of being a “rookie” or paying one’s dues and proving one’s self all over again • A coach who can acknowledge the challenges of a 2nd career person seeing this system as strange because it is experienced based vs. performance based • A coach who is very clear and understanding of the need for clarity of protocols AND knows that the coachee can also ‘read between the lines’ A Boomer took over as principal and immediately decided to ban computers from her leadership team meetings. Instead, she purchased journals for all team members. She believed computers distracted users from 'the work.' Most team members, who were under the age of 40, found the switch unreasonable. They used their computers to communicate, send files to one another and note the tasks discussed in the meeting. A Millennial first-year teacher arrived at his first teacher team meeting with colleagues who all taught the same subject in his high school. The experienced teachers were prepared to share their resources and unit plans with him, particularly on a student research paper they had historically all taught during the fall semester. The new teacher, feeling on equal footing, said he had a different approach to the research unit assessment that he felt would be more engaging and stated he would move in a different direction. His 'announcement' didn't go over well with his veteran colleagues. Prefer in-person to on-line interaction Eager to be cut loose Curious and driven Mix of ethnicities, …