1 / 18

Facilitating Intelligent Career Conversations: Insights from the Bath MBA

Facilitating Intelligent Career Conversations: Insights from the Bath MBA. Objective To share insights about intensive MBA career development and use of the Intelligent Career Card Sort (ICCS). s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu. Schedule

haru
Download Presentation

Facilitating Intelligent Career Conversations: Insights from the Bath MBA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Facilitating Intelligent Career Conversations:Insights from the Bath MBA

  2. Objective To share insights about intensive MBA career development and use of the Intelligent Career Card Sort (ICCS). s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  3. Schedule • Background of the ‘Intelligent Career’ Svenja Tamsperspective and integration within Bath MBA • How are students making use of Clare StottCareer Development and the Intelligent Career Card Sort? • How could the Intelligent Career perspective Discussion(& the ICCS) contribute to your existing career development activities? • Using the ICCS as part of online teaching Michael Arthur • Resources s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  4. Intelligent Career Perspective What career investments can strengthen individuals’ career resilience in dynamic and uncertain labour markets? How can ‘intelligent career conversations’ — as a constructive process of exploring and working with what is — enable a more proactive, adaptable and meaningful engagement with one’s career? s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  5. Interdisciplinary Career Development Knowing Why … we work Identity, Values, Meaning, Adaptability Knowing How ... we work Job-related Competences, Expertise Skills Knowing Whom … we work with Social capital Networks Supportive relationships s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  6. Integrating this on the Bath MBA Personal Leadership & Careers • Introductory 2-day workshop • 1 day on ‘Self-directed & relational career development’ • Students develop their own learning agenda (assessed by Learning Review) • Follow up activities (1 year) • Careers coaching & focused careers seminars (1-2 days) • Leadership development workshops (1-2 days) • ALS & peer coaching groups • Tutorials s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  7. Within organizations Knowing How • Job-related competencies • Interpersonal effectiveness & influence • Managing new roles Knowing Why • Values, norms, stories & language of the organization • What gets rewarded around here Knowing Whom • Strategic/operational/personal networking for resources, status & support s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  8. Beyond organizations Knowing How • Positioning for future employment • Signaling expertise • What experiences will enhance mobility to new projects? Knowing Why • Personal priorities, history & growth • Values, norms, stories & language of the wider field – eg industry and occupational community • Ability to continuously update and morph into new professional identities Knowing Whom • Networking for social capital, project-opportunities and collaboration s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  9. Facilitating conversational learning Instead of occupational assessment, we adopt a constructivist approach to develop career meta-competences: • MBTI • 15 statements exercise • Life-line exercise • Reuters case study • Action inquiry (Fisher, Rooke, & Torbert, 2003) • Developmental network map • Self-awareness through self-assessment • Intelligent Career Card Sort (ICCS) s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  10. Why Activity: In groups of 3 • To reflect on your own “intelligent career” • To help someone else reflect on his or her “intelligent career” • Use active listening, peer-coaching approach Whom How s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  11. Why Activity: In groups of 3 Speaker • 8-10 minutes to explain why he or she has selected the seven ‘knowing why’and‘knowing how’ statements. Witness • Practicing active listening • Asking questions that aim at deepening the understanding behind the selection of these statements. Observer • Note taking – using the speaker’s own words. Observe patterns. • At end of debriefing, summarize key themes that you heard emerge during the conversation. Swap roles Whom How s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  12. Why Whom How Career Learning on the Bath MBA • Evidence, from student coursework, of how students have taken on intelligent career ideas in their own work and career • Questions raised and issues to consider s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  13. Case Study One: Male, 34 “…a major factor in embarking on the course was to enhance my future career prospects…” “…tentative and incremental adjustments over time…” “…the start of a lifelong process of self development with the objective of unlocking and fulfilling my potential…” “…a change in the way I operate within my organisation…” s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  14. Case Study Two: Male, 35 “…my experience of this module has made a positive contribution to my development and my CV, in spite of a rocky start…” “…the learning from the ICCS, MBTI, and objectives from the module from the outset, have placed more emphasis on my personal development…” “…a long list of tools I have utilised to increase my self awareness and define actions to develop my managerial competencies…” s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  15. Case Study Three: Female, 31 “…reflection has been essential for me to understand my career choices and ambitions…” “…never fully grasped what the catalyst behind this belief was until I engaged in this exercise…” “…it has made me set new career expectations of myself…it has led me to build a personal development plan based on the theories which underpin the ICCS model” s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  16. Observations and Insights • Influence of ICCS often implicit rather than explicit • Provides language and vocabulary • Complementary processes • Horses for courses • Different ‘entry points’ • From resistance to appreciation s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  17. Why Whom How ‘Buzz groups’ (6 min) • How could the Intelligent Career perspective (and the ICCS) contribute to your existing career development activities? • Given the issues we raised, what could you do to maximise learning benefits and outcomes for students? s.tams@bath.ac.uk - c.b.stott@bath.ac.uk - marthur@suffolk.edu

  18. For further information …

More Related