Cammy Bean’s Learning Visions: ATD Core 4 – July 24-26, 2023

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Cammy Bean’s Learning Visions: ATD Core 4 – July 24-26, 2023

OK – so it’s been a few minutes since I got back from ATD
Core 4 in DC, July 24-26.  Better late
than never, so here are my notes and insights from a packed couple of days.

ATD Core 4 – What’s Up with That?

Association for Talent Development (ATD) hosts huge conferences
with 10,000 people plus. This is not one of those. Core 4 (Foundations in
Talent Development) is an intimate conference format with about 400 attendees.
Core 4 is held in different place once or twice a year. With four core tracks –
Evaluating Impact, Instructional Design, Learning Technologies, Training
Delivery & Facilitation – there’s a little something for everyone, provided
at a FOUNDATIONAL level.

During the opening keynote session, a raise of hands
indicated that a huge percentage – maybe more than 80%? – of attendees were
attending their first ATD conference ever, and for many it was also their first
conference EVER.

If you’re new to the industry or a seasoned practitioner
looking to widen your knowledge, this is a great conference to attend.

Session Summaries & Notes

MONDAY

Opening Keynote: Megan Torrance, Torrance
Learning – “Full Speed Ahead: Thriving in a Rapidly Changing Learning Tech Environment”


“Even if tech isn’t our job, it’s kind of everywhere and
we need to be processing it.”
> Megan reminds us that talent development
and training does not exist without technology anymore. If you’ve been hesitant
to better understand tech, it’s time to get past your hesitancy and get grounded
in the basics.

Megan’s fun opening session took us through the 30 year adoption
cycles for new technologies (see Paul
Saffo, The 30 Year Rule from 1992
) – there’s the early hype days of a tech
and then 30 years later it might become the norm. Megan put this into the
context of xAPI which is 10 years in market, still with low-spread adoption (in
the room, 2 people raised their hands to say they were doing something with xAPI!)

I loved her race care metaphor – who do you want in your car
as you navigate the technical terrain? Who’s on your team? You’re going to need
a whole crew:

·       
Driver: At the wheel

·       
Scanner: “What are all the cool things out there
that we should be aware of and checking out?”

·       
Navigator: “How are we going to get there?”

·       
Doer: “Let’s do this!”

·       
Challenger: “Have we thought of….?”

·       
Damage Control: fixes it when things go wrong, “I’m
giving you all she’s got!”

·       
Supporter: “You’ve got this!”

·       
Sharer: “Wanna see how?” – this guy is the hype
wo/man.

·       
Business Partner: “Let’s see some results.”

Megan Torrance is the author of Data
& Analytics for Instructional Designers
. Check it out.

Cammy Bean, From Accidental to Intentional: Building and
Instructional Design Career with Purpose and Passion

My session! If you’ve seen or heard me speak before, I
talked about Learning Pie and getting grounded in the whole pie that is
L&D: Learning, Creativity, Technology, Business. Finding your sweet spot
and leaning into your weakness. Also, knowing that one person really can’t do
it all – in spite of popular opinion that a one-stop-shop-training-department
can be all things to the enterprise.

I was blown away by the engagement from this crowd. Again,
turns out most attendees were at their very first conference ever. A lot of
people new to instructional design and corporate L&D, along with seasoned
veterans 27+ years into their careers looking for that elusive “what’s next for
me?” moment. It was truly an honor and a privilege to share my experience with
you all.

Be sure to pick up your copy of my second edition of The
Accidental Instructional Designer: Learning Design for the Digital Age
! (I
thank you with all my heart. Truly.)

TUESDAY

Keynote: Sardek
Love
, “The Science of Participant Engagement”

I arrived about 10 minutes late to this one and it was like entering
a huge party. Sardek was running people through a wild activity that had the
room in a full on roar. Talk about audience engagement. This was complete
audience engagement.

Sardek threaded his laws of attention and engagement through
this session, with lots of application and demonstrations, including getting a
room full of adults to suck on some really sour candy to demonstrate our perceptions
to change….

ENGAGEMENT:

  • The Law of Attention – attention goes
    where curiosity grows; attention increases with novelty. Be different. And make
    people laugh. Laughter releases dopamine and erases boredom.
  • The Law of Connection: we grow together
    where we go together. Build trust. Release oxytocin through connection – we feel
    good when we’re part of a group.
  • InterACTION: interaction = people doing something
    with EACH OTHER.

If you’re into facilitation and general rules of engagement,
be sure to look into Sardek Love’s Presentation
Essentials.




Cara
North
, “Building an L&D Control Tower for Metrics”

Six months into a new job where Cara had been focusing on
getting good training assets out for a semiconductor manufacturing company, her
boss asked her, “So, how do you go from being reactive to being proactive?”
Oof. Right? No more order taker – get out there and help us solve the problems
that need solving!

Cara shared her journey of working with her org’s business
units to better understand their goals and metrics so she could focus and target
her L&D activities to support those people. She says to understand “how
does my organization make money?” and “What are the critical tasks to get there?”

She took us through her process of building a data CONTROL
TOWER – which was a dashboard of the business, so they could see the sum of all
parts. Then be able to look at the biz data to see trends, gaps, and where we’re
going. These are the metrics that your operational partners are already
tracking.

Pre-control tower, her L&D team was tracking course
completions and ratings. But “if we are true professionals, we need to keep
challenging best practices.”

So she could see on her newly built control tower that
turnover was really high and onboarding time was also really long. They worked
on creating better hiring training (she showed some cool examples of interview
scenarios made quickly with Synthesia an AI video tool). These microlearns were
a targeted, proactive training solution that resulted in better interviews,
better hires, and ultimately lower turnover. She could see the impact on her
control tower.

Cara’s got a new book that I picked up at the conference bookstore
and suggest you add to your reading list as well:
Learning Experience Design Essentials
.

Alaina Szlachta,
By Design Development Solutions – “Make Measurement Easier – Find the Simplest
Solution for Evaluating Your Learning Programs”

#1 challenge of Measurement & Evaluation (M&E) =
OVERWHELM. Because we don’t have strategy or alignment on that strategy (what
we’re doing and why).

Some data (with apologies for lack of proper citations; Alaina
did have everything noted but I didn’t capture it all!)

  • 20% of L&D professions use data to improve
    their L&D strategies (2022)
  • 38% professionals in the field say lack of
    organization focus and strategy is a big barrier to L&D
  • 50% measuring outcomes of L&D not a priority
    for senior leaders (Brandon Hall, 202)
  • 55% are unhappy with M&E efforts (CLO, 2017)

Strategy DOES NOT EQUAL Tactics

Strategy = the WHAT – what are you doing and why?

Tactics = the HOW – using the most appropriate measurement
model to get there.

To figure out what you want to measure, start with a HYPOTHESIS.

If X then Y then Zshort-term then ZLong-term

In other words, did we do what we said we’re going to do?)

Example:

  • Did people participate in program?
  • Did they change KSA (knowledge, skills, attitude)?
  • So what? (the short term outcome)
  • So what – because of the short term, what
    happened long term?

If people complete the leadership dev program, then they
improve their delegation skills which will reduced stress and increase optimism
(short term) which increases retention of new managers (long term).

Map out your hypothesis, then ask “what data do we need to prove
that?”

Next challenge: how do we get data to show short term and
long term outcomes?

This may be through a GROWTH REPORT – a self-reporting rubric
(e.g., for the leadership program example) or ask on an evaluation form “what
was the most impactful part of this program?”

She showed an example of using Typeform to ask questions
during training in real time – creates visual reports in real time.

Over relying on common models (e.g, LTEM, Kirkpatrick) may
be adding more complexity, cost, resources. You may not need to follow those models,
however, those models give you a way to think about data.

Kristin
Torrence
, Tailspin – “Learning Engineering 101: Applying Evidence-Based
Practices”

Like the title of this session says, Kristin took us on an
overview of learning engineering practices and processes – a lot covered in a
short time. Here are some of the highlights:

LEARNER PERSONAS – design decision support our learners?”
Embody WHO your learners are. Create an “empathy map” to document what they
think, feel, say, do (or what you want them to think, feel, say, do as a result
of your learning experience).

EVIDENCE-CENTERED DESIGN – what learners need to DO.

Create a Task Shell Canvas (document what people need to DO)

Conjecture Map – takes your HYPOTHESIS to EXPECTED OUTCOME

Communicate your design to stakeholders through wireframes,
prototypes, or an MVP (minimum viable product)

USER TESTING? Yes! Do it!

EVALUATE & MEASURE

Are learners transferring what they’ve learned on the job?

Did learners find the training beneficial?

ANALYZE THE DATA

  • Look for patterns/trends
  • Analyze data for statistical and practical
    signficance
  • Review the context/interpret results
  • Draw conclusions

Rance
Greene
, School of Story Design – “Story Design: A Foundationally Human
Approach to Instruction”

How do we humanize instruction? Why, with stories of course!
Rance runs a great session – his genius is getting the crowd to talk amongst
themselves for much of the time, asking probing questions that help us
collectively discover the storytelling framework. He shows videos of really
boring training and then at the end, transforms that same boring training
experience into something MUCH MORE HUMAN
.

So much of learning comes back to ATTITUDE – we want people to
feel/be enlightened, empowered, confident, changed as a results of our
training.

To humanize the learning experience, talk to YOU the
learner; make it conversational.

Belonging is about TELLING STORIES, having a CONVERSATION,
creating of feeling of YOU’RE NOT ALONE.

The elements of story = RELATABLE CHARACTERS + STRONG
CONFLICT (this crease a DESIRE FOR RESOLUTION)

Want to get more into Story Design? Be sure to pick up a
copy of Rance’s book: Instructional
Story Design: Develop Stories that Train
.

Wrap Up

All of that in one and a half days. I missed the final half
day, which included some enticing sessions like Kevin Yate’s L&D “Detective
Measurement Mysteries”
and Mark Sheppard’s “You
Want it When? Lessons Learned From a Short-Notice Gap Training Project”.

If you’re looking for a smaller conference setting that
doesn’t have a huge expo that you then feel compelled to walk through and
collect swag, this one is for you.

I’ve been a huge Core 4 fan since its inception and I’m sure
I’ll be back. Keep your eyes out for the next one!

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