In the Future of Work, Learning Is Beautiful
- Keith Keating
- April 22, 2020
I have seen the future, and I want to tell you about it.
For the last few years, I have been one of many researching, identifying, and sharing approaches to ready our workforce for the future. As a learning and development (L&D) professional, my passion drives me toward encouraging and empowering our workforce to take control over their future by preparing for it today. The L&D models created for this future are sound in design, and the requisite skills are practical, human-centered, and intuitive in their approach.
The date for when the future of work would arrive has been shrouded in ambiguity. It is simply referred to as “the future.” Estimates by many I have engaged with ranged from 10 to 15 years—and for some, as little as five—but no one could forecast the exact date our future predictions would come to fruition. No one predicted it would happen in a matter of days. No one predicted the entire world would evolve on the same timeline, but we have. We are experiencing a collective global disaster that has catapulted us years into the future, accelerating the state of remote work.
The future is now, literally.
Future of Learning
Learning and development is a cornerstone strategy used to prepare our workforce for the future. The debate has been ongoing over the most effective modalities for learning: instructor-led, virtual-led, eLearning, hybrid, etc. Some have argued that we are using a 20th-century model (instructor-led, classroom-based learning) for 21st-century learners. The call-to-action has pushed the L&D industry toward expeditiously exploring opportunities to evolve. In learning (as in nature), evolution is gradual. The abrupt shift in our work lives compressed an evolution of years to a matter of days. Over the last few months, my focus of research included predictions of the ways L&D would need to evolve in the next five years to meet the needs of our learners. The underlying needs of learners illustrated a move away from a fixed, top-down learning model toward a shared community of practice and other significant changes: The pivot and transformation accelerant for L&D does not stop here. Speed, not perfection, is what our learners need, along with performance and workflow support, not training. Now, more than ever before, our learners will be relying on one another for support. It is our responsibility to help them develop and maintain connections with people and information, encouraging networked learning. Now is our time to execute all of the theories, methodologies, and approaches we’ve been studying. Workplace learning is the new UI/UX testing. Now is the time to innovate and apply new technologies—and to mine existing content repositories across our organizations to facilitate workplace learning. Now is the time to dismantle the barriers to content access and ease of navigation and create environments that make learning easier and quicker by putting the content within the flow of work for the learner. We need to remove as many “number of clicks” it takes for our learners as possible, enabling them to access the information required quickly. Now is our time to practice empathy, put ourselves in the shoes of our learners, and ask, “what do they need to know and how can we get them access as quickly and easily as possible?” For example, frontline medical teams are too overwhelmed to access the Learning Management Systems (LMS) where, historically, training information may be stored. They can, however, plug earbuds into their smartphone and listen to audio for their need-to-know information—so we pivot to podcasts. We are learning that simply lifting and shifting instructor-led classroom sessions into virtual-based online sessions is not enough. We have gone from “Zoom excitement” to “Zoom exhaustion” in a matter of weeks. Virtual learning needs to be creative, collaborative, and supportive—and let’s not forget the importance of pedagogy with behavioral, emotional, and cognitive components in learning initiatives. The more inspired and engaged learners are, the stronger the learning experience.We have gone from “Zoom excitement” to “Zoom exhaustion” in a matter of weeks. – Keith KeatingThese caveats are not new. We did not know we would need to take years of theory and apply it overnight. Admittedly, some of our current attempts are clunky, but we are learning and evolving quickly, and we will get there. We’ve sustained, after all, a shock to our learning ecosystem. Our new reality marks an experiential shift for our learners. Their learning must focus on their needs—not our nice-to-haves. The result will be a model of lean learning. The future of learning is now.