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Monday, May 16, 2011

Can Passion Fit Into Training?

In my mind the word ‘training’ is firmly linked in meaning to bending of wills – the imposing of a set of rules of behaviour upon another, reluctant-or-otherwise human. It pre-supposes that the person who is doing the training is superior in knowledge to the person receiving the training.

In my opinion, ‘training’ sets up a dynamic that does nothing to further knowledge. It might improve consistency in some process where an identical end result must be created, but it doesn’t draw the trainee into ownership of the process and pride in outcome. To achieve that state, far more than mere transfer of information and repetition of process is required. I believe the missing ingredient is passion. And passion is an emotion born from within or ‘caught’ from another.

Passion implies a total absorption in the topic; the overriding desire to become better and learn more. It drives people to broaden the horizons of the topic so that everyone learns more and new possibilities are born. Ask your friends which class they enjoyed most as a child or adult; then ask them about the teacher or tutor of the class. I’d bet a penny to a pound that the explanation will have all the hallmarks of a person passionate about their subject. The tutor’s passion will have fired up the interest of many of those they taught.

It might seem strange to be encouraging tutors to bring passion into their delivery when they are trying to teach young men how to properly adjust a planer to produce quality joinery. What is there to get enthused about? But bring in a perfectly crafted chair and ask them to run their hands over the curves of the back, ask them to observe the perfect symmetry of the legs, and test the tightness of the joints. Ask them to identify for themselves what makes it a quality product. Then tell them none of that is possible without the precision of the planer and the jointer ... that’s when an understanding of context gives birth to passion. Passion give rise to a commitment to quality. It pushes people to think beyond the completion of the task. They start to wonder: ‘If we did this would that happen?’ And that’s when innovation happens.

If we are content to train so that the same knowledge is passed on, knowledge can’t expand. It’s only when people learn to be passionate about what they do that knowledge will expand. The challenge is to bring that feeling of passion into the training you undertake.

Best regards
Heather Sylvawood
Director
Edutech KM Ltd
(Nelson Office)
Ph: 64-3-525-7073
Mob: .021-251-2141