A short film from across the pond – with hat tip to @johnpopham.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T6MhAwQ64c0]
Thoughts?
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A short film from across the pond – with hat tip to @johnpopham.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T6MhAwQ64c0]
Thoughts?
by admin
Our chief want is someone who will inspire us to be what we know we could be
Ralph Waldo Emerson
I think this offers us some powerful, but largely ignored, clues as to how we should design our enterprise development services. We need to offer a service that helps people to seek, find and, crucially, act on their inspiration.
Their inspiration – not our policy goals.
Their inspiration – not ‘our’ desire to get ‘them’ off benefits or back into work.
Their inspiration – not our idea of ‘opportunities’ designed to meet employer demands.
Because the reality is that MOST enterprise development services are not designed to inspire. They are designed to teach people how to commoditise themselves. How to ‘fit in’ with the needs of the economy.
Take a good, honest look at your services. Are they really designed to develop the users agenda – or to channel them into ours?
Perhaps this is why we are continually engaging ‘inspirational’ speakers in the false hope that we can somehow put back into our service a missing essence. An essence that will always be missing until we change the assumptions around which our enteprise services are built.
The cornerstone of a service based on the hunger for inspiration would be a relationship in which users can be open and honest about their hopes and aspirations. A relationship, not a workshop, or a series of workshops or advice. A relationship.
A relationship that recognises that development takes time. That it will feature highs and lows, lapses and relapses.
Because it is only in a relationship, characterised by compassion, competence, respect, belief, optimism, commitment and skill that people will be open and honest about their hopes and dreams and start to get in touch with what inspires them. It is only in such a supportive relationship that people will really dare to dream and act. It is I believe only through a relationship that people can really find inspiration and the resources for transformation.
But the big question that always gets asked here is about affordability. A genuinely personalised service. Delivered primarily through 121 conversations – isn’t that ridiculously expensive? Well no its not. The numbers stack up well in comparison to competing services.
The real challenge here is changing the mindset of service suppliers and commissioners. Helping them to recognise that our communities are not full of the feckless and ignorant who need to be fixed.
They are full of people seeking inspiration and the power to act effectively on it.
Full of people who would love to become the kind of person that they know they could be.
As soon as we start designing our services around these assumptions we might get some much more positive results.
Interested?
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My eldest daughter came home from school last week with something like 10kg of university prospectuses. She spent much of the week-end browsing the frightening range of courses available.
And it got me thinking about whether the compulsory education that she has experienced so far, all 13 years of it, have really provided her with an excellent platform for wealth and fulfillment in her adult life. And the result of my pondering was:
Perhaps consideration of these statements might just help us to realise ‘the end of (enterprise) education’.
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When I did my teacher training back in 1986 I remember having my world rocked by a book called ‘Teaching as a Subversive Activity’ by Neil Postman and Charles Weingartner. They make reference to a piece by Carl Rogers in ‘On Becoming a Person’.
“Rogers concludes:
- My experience has been that I cannot teach another person how to teach.
- It seems to me that anything that can be taught to another is relatively inconsequential, and has little or no significant impact on behavior.
- I realize increasingly that I am only interested in learnings which significantly influence behavior
- I have come to feel that the only learning which significantly influences behavior is self-discovered, self appropriated learning.
- Such self-discovered, truth that has been personally appropriated and assimilated in experience, cannot be directly communicated to another.
- As a consequence I have realised that I have lost interest in being a teacher
Rogers goes on to state that the outcomes of trying to teach are either unimportant or hurtful and that he is only interested in being a learner. Some of our students react to this statement snidely, claiming that Rogers feels this way because he is a bad teacher. Honest, but bad. Others seem deeply disturbed by it and seek clarification on what Rogers means by ‘significant learning’. We then produce Roger’s definition of the term, which is stated in the form of specific behaviours. They include:
The person comes to see himself differently.
He accepts himself and his feelings more fully.
He becomes more self-confident and self directing.
He becomes more the person he would like to be.
He becomes more flexible, less rigid in his perceptions.
He adopts more realistic goals for himself.
He behaves in a more mature fashion.
He becomes more open to the evidence, both of what is going on outside of himself and what is going on inside of himself.”
Powerful stuff. What Rogers seems to be saying is that what we can teach, in the traditional sense is more or less trivial. However what the student can learn from the process is potentially transformational.
I think Rogers was onto something here, something that is particularlypowerful for those of us charges with ‘teaching enterprise’. If we really want to develop more enterprising students then perhaps we should focus less on classes about marketing, branding, cash flow and taxation and more on providing and reviewing experiences that are designed to develop ‘Significant Learning’.
Because Rogers’ definition of ‘Significant Learning’ looks a lot like ‘more enterprising’ to me.
Thoughts?
by admin
I was approached by a young woman in the Holiday Inn in Garforth yesterday. She tugged gently at my trousers and asked me if I was interested in buying.
She was clutching a beetroot plant in a wonderfully hand painted plant pot, with a colourful and neatly laminated label saying ‘BEETROOT’. She must have been six or seven and barely reached waist height. She had a badge on her that gave me the name of her school and her job title in the social enterprise that they ran. She was the “Sales Executive”.
She was one of the students from Leeds taking part in a wonderful event called ‘Social Enterprise Takes Off’ organised by the brilliant team of Enterprise Ambassadors at Education Leeds, led with so much enthusiasm, energy and knowledge by Mike Cooper and Chris Marsden.
“Do you want to buy my beetroot?” she asked.
“I would love to” I said, “but tell me, what should I do with it when I go on holiday?”
“That’s not a problem – just put it in a bag and take it with you!”
“Ok. How much is your beetroot plant?” I asked sensing that she had not really grasped my holiday concerns.
“£1”
“And do you know how much profit you will make if I buy your plant for £1?”
“Yes, about 80p.”
Sold – in so many ways!
The event was wonderful – not withstanding the slightly tired and dated environs and buffet of the Holiday Inn. Some great speakers including Magic Man John Hotowka, Beermat Entrepreneur Mike Southon (“some people become entrepreneurs because no-one else will give them job – like my mate Mike Chitty over there” – thanks for that one Mike!), Make Your Mark Ambassador Sabirul Islam (check him out) and Nick Bowen inspirational head teacher of St Benet Biscop RC High school and advocate for Benet Enterprise – a school owned social enterprise into everything from professional theatre production (from scriptwriting to travelling productions) and event management to video making. They are tapping into the current (and I suspect temporary) rich veins of public funding for all things social enterprise and turning over hundred of thousands each year raising significant funds to improve facilities at the school. Apparently more skeptical members of staff ‘were soon won over when they saw the laptops and other kit that the ‘surpluses’ from Benet Enterprises were able to supply‘. Setting aside the issue of using unpaid pupils and adults paid by the state to compete with local businesses for a minute they are doing some remarkable work.
Mercifully not a Dragon, Failed Apprentice or (not so) Secret Millionaire in sight. (I have no problem if they bring real substance and experience and engage fully, ‘Yorkshire boy done good’ Carl Hopkins is a great example of this – it is when they just bring their ‘celebrity’ and a carefully honed sales pitch for their latest book/consultancy/educational board game/business development workshop that I struggle.)
But the star attractions were the students working (and I mean WORKING) an exhibition space that felt more like a Mediterranean souk than a fusty business exhibition. As soon as I got my wallet out to exchange my pound for my beetroot I was beset by passionate sales executives hawking fair trade chocolate, handmade wooden signs (“any design, any wood you like”) and glassware. Young people selling with energy and passion, plants, books, woodwork, plastics, ‘stone’ plant troughs made from polystyrene. Young people who clearly loved their businesses and their products. Contrast this with the (almost uniformly) sombre, conservative and impassionate business exhibitors at the Chartered Institute of Housing a few miles up the road in Harrogate.
I have no doubt that work of the Enterprise Ambassadors from Education Leeds and the hard working pupils and teachers who make these things happen will lead to a much more business literate generation in the future. And that matters.
However there is more to excellent ‘enterprise education’ than business literacy and great teamwork.
It is about understanding passion and potential whether that lies in ‘business’, ‘ballet’, ‘beatboxing’ or ‘beetroot’.
It is about belief in ‘self’ as an active agent in shaping the future and building a better life, society and world.
It is about the power of education and the development and realisation of potential in whatever Ken Robinson refers to as your ‘Element’. And the point of engagement for that, indeed the vehicle for the fulfillment of that, might not be ‘business’.
So it is time for a broader conception of the enterprising student. It is not about the next generation of entrepreneurs but about the next generation of cellists, authors, policemen and women, nurses, gardeners, mathematicians, politicians and bankers. About the next generation full stop.
Everyone should have the opportunity to become ‘business literate’ by the time they leave full time education. But primarily, fundamentally and at their very heart they need to be enterprising, creative, innovative, bold and self confident – and this might have little or nothing to do with entrepreneurship and business literacy.
As I write this sat at my kitchen table I am looking out the door at my beetroot plant in its brightly hand painted pot. There is a part of me wondering about their costings and worrying that, like so many social enterprises, they have missed or chosen to hide, some of their real costs of production.
But there is a much, much larger part of me that hopes and prays that the young ‘sales executive’ has learned much more than just how to spot opportunities to turn a profit. That she has learned more about herself and what she could become. About her self interest and her power to realise her potential and how she might really be able to make the difference that she wants to see in the world.
It is these lessons that we enterprise educators should be teaching.
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