Sunday, 26 October 2008

III tr. angariSi




TOT Workshop Organisation[1]



Workshop
Organization - 5 key aspects



  • Logistical
    aspects
      


  • Contextualization  


  • Making
    Dreams come True
      


  • The
    Professional Aspects
      


  • Drawing
    up the Agenda/Program









Logistical
Aspects





In
preparing for the Logistical aspects of a Workshop you have to think
about four things:






















Contracts



Negotiated
Terms of Reference



Administrative
Support



Timetabling;
Invitations; Purchasing Assistance



The
Venue



Utilities,
furniture, equipment



Materials
and Equipment



For
preparation & for workshops









Contracts


Someone
will have called for the training to be done. It is useful to know
what they are expecting of the trainer. Are they expecting research,
materials production, running workshops and/or follow up? What time
frame is being considered? How much money is available to produce
materials, pay for workshop costs and participants feeding and travel
costs and to pay the trainer?


It
is useful to negotiate the trainer's Terms of Reference (ToR) which
set out in some detail exactly what the trainer is expected to do
and/or produce, to what standard, by when, and at what cost.





Administrative
Support


If
the trainer is external to the organisation then she will need to
know how much administrative support she can expect.






  • Who
    can she call upon for day to day advice and support?


  • Who
    is responsible for setting the timetable of events and for sending
    invitations?


  • Who
    deals with feeding and accommodation and with reimbursing travelling
    expenses of participants?


  • Is
    clerical support available and if so how much and from whom eg
    stationery supplies, typing, photocopying, collating and binding,
    purchasing materials and equipment needed for workshops?






The
Venue


The
training will take place in a building. Some buildings are more
appropriate than others. Here is a checklist of things to
think about:










































Heating



does
it exist & who is responsible for turning it on?



Lighting



is
this adequate and are there blackout facilities if you need to
show a film?



Electricity



where
are the sockets, will you need an extension cable and adapter?



Furniture



are
there enough chairs and tables and is it OK to shift them around?



Walls



is
it OK to stick things on the walls or will you have to bring flip
chart stands?



Equipment



what
equipment is available, is it working, are there spare bulbs? TV
aerial?



Kitchen



can
food be prepared at the venue (are there cups etc) or will they
have to be brought in?



Toilets



do
they exist, are they clean, is there toilet paper, will they be
open?



Access



is
it easy to find or will participants need a map? Car
parking? Disabled access?









Materials
and Equipment


The
materials and equipment that you need will depend on the methods that
you use. Some will be needed for preparation (e.g. computer, printer
& photocopiers) and others during the workshop itself. No list of
these things would ever be complete but here are some ideas for
starters - you can brainstorm and categorize your own checklist!





















Equipment



Materials



Blackboard/
Whiteboard



Flip
Chart Stand



Overhead
projector



Film/
Slide projector



TV/
Video + remotes



Cassette/
CD Players



Sound
System + Mikes



Video
Camera


Minibus
+ Driver



Chalk
(white/coloured)



Felt pens (water/
spirit)



Flip Charts



Sellotape/ masking
tape



Blutak



Drawing Pins


Post-it
pads



Pens/pencils



Rulers/ geometry sets



Calculators



Scissors



Stapler/ staples



Writing paper


Folders/
files



Overhead
Transparencies



Slides/ videos/
cassettes



Storage boxes



Attendance register


Expense
claim forms









Contextualisation


Contextualisation
is a fancy word for the process of making sure that your training
programme blends easily and effortlessly into the local situation.


No
two groups of trainees are ever exactly the same so, even if you have
dealt with the topic many times before, your materials will probably
need fine tuning - if only to the extent of being able to give local
illustrative examples. The more that you can demonstrate knowledge
and understanding of the details of the local situation the more the
trainees are likely to value what you say.


You
may also discover that what the organizers want is not the same as
what the trainees want or what you feel that they really need - so
you might have to act as go-between/ advisor as part of the process
of negotiating your Terms of Reference.


If
you have good answers to each of the following questions then you can
be confident that you are well contextualized.


What
does the Organisation want?


If
there are no official terms of reference are you as the trainer clear
about what is expected of you? If not ask. (See Workshop
Organisation -
the
Logistical Aspects
)





What
Administrative Support and Materials are already available?


Are
you on your own or are there people who can help you?




What
do the trainees know?



  • Has
    a needs analysis already been done (eg an output from a previous
    workshop)?


  • Can
    you visit some trainees in their workplace to get a better feel for
    their self defined training needs? What about their customers? Is
    serious research required here?


  • Is
    there a need to brainstorm and conceptually map at the beginning of
    the workshop?






What
does the trainer know?



  • What
    is the trainer's conceptual map before preparing for the
    workshop?


  • What
    reference materials are to be consulted? (Local and National)


  • Are
    there previous workshop agendas/outputs or research findings?


  • What
    literature should be addressed? (Written/Electronic; published/grey)


  • What
    videos & resource materials etc might be consulted


  • What
    materials are already available within the organization?


  • Which
    local 'experts' might be usefully consulted?


  • What
    is the trainer's conceptual map after preparing for the
    workshop?






What
are the aims and objectives of the workshop in terms of:



  • the
    desired changes in knowledge, skills and attitudes of the
    participants, and how will we know if we have been successful?


  • the
    concepts developed and recorded and materials produced for use at
    future workshops and/or as circulars, exemplars, Newsletter or
    Journal articles etc






Have
the logistics been attended to?



  • Work
    your way systematically through the logistical aspects at an early
    stage.


  • Leaving
    things to the last minute can be very stressful. 









The
Effective Trainer - making dreams come true


You
gotta have a dream



There
is an old Arabic saying that
if you
do not know where you are going then any road will take you there
.



A
good trainer is clear in her mind about
what
needs to be done
and she knows that she
will be
doing the right thing.



This
means that she will have thought about her
aims
and objectives
and will have written
them down. Sometimes these will have been given to her (for example
if she is leading people towards an SVQ qualification) and sometime
she will have to decide for herself what they are. Even when they are
given, however, there is always the possibility of fine tuning them
and sharing them with the learners so that there can be agreement on
exactly what a particular course is trying to achieve.


Note
that she will have three different types of objectives:






















Head



Hand



Heart



Thinking



Doing



Feeling



Knowledge



Skills



Attitudes



How
you gonna make the dream come true?



Being
clear about aims and objectives means being clear about the dream.
The next task is to figure out how to make the dream come true. She
is
doing the right thing
but is she going to
do it right?


Muddling
through by the seat of your pants might achieve the results sometimes
but it is not a professional way of working. Would you trust a
plumber or a brain surgeon that pottered about unsystematically?


Action
planning for a trainer means being systematic about the content, the
methods and the monitoring and assessment techniques that will be
used to achieve the aims and objectives.



There
are three things to think about regarding content:


















Scope



How
broad and how deep are you going to go during this course - is it
for pre-school or for university? Who are the learners and what is
their level of experience of the topic?



Sequence



Where
to begin and where to go to next?



Pace



How
fast will you move through the content?




There
are thousands of possible methods but it is useful to think of
them as falling into two broad types:






















Teacher
centred



Learner
centred



Didactic



Participatory



Passive
student



Active
student



eg
the Lecture



eg
project work




When
assessment is used
to 'grade'
students
it is a political tool. When
assessment is used
to give feedback to
the student
(or the tutor) on the extent
to which the objectives are being achieved so that she can improve
her performance - then it is a training tool.


All
good trainers ensure that learners get a lot of feedback during the
course of their learning - many small but detailed corrections along
the way are more useful than one big and generalised judgement at the
end!






The
Professional Aspects


In
preparing for the professional aspects of a Workshop you have to
think about three things:


















What
you intend to do



Aims
& Objectives



How
your are going to do it



Content,
Methods and Materials



How
you will know if you have succeeded



Monitoring
and Evaluation







































AIMS



A
statement of the overall broad goal(s)



OBJECTIVES



A
list of SMART* objectives pointing to the expected outputs from
the workshop - these might involve altered knowledge, skills or
attitudes amongst the participants, and/or specific products



CONTENT



METHODS



MATERIALS



A
sequenced list of topics to be covered with an indication of the
amount of time to be spent on each



A
parallel list of methods to be used in covering the content topics



A
parallel list of materials and services that will be required for
each topic given the number of participants



As
an aid to systematic planning it is useful to set out the
contents, methods and materials in parallel rows as shown above.


Note
that the pattern of content and of methods should be designed so
as to add variety and interest over the period of the Workshop



MONITORING
& EVALUATION



Determine
the extent to which the Workshop is/was successful in achieving
its objectives and goals.



The
pattern of monitoring and evaluation may take several forms eg
formal v informal; open response v directed questionnaire; during,
at the end or some time after the Workshop. There are theoretical
and practical pros and cons related to each of the options.



*
= Specific, Measurable, Agreed, Relevant, Timed



As
in most other human affairs,
motivation
makes a difference. It is generally believed that participation
helps to promote ownership and thus motivation. Wherever
possible and appropriate the

participants should be consulted
about
the aims and objectives and also possibly on the contents and
methods, and the monitoring and evaluation strategies.


When
participants are well motivated it is easier to get them to engage in
pre-Workshop activities by way of preparing themselves to make
optimum contributions to the Workshop, and in post-Workshop
activities for consolidation and elaboration.







Drawing
up the Agenda/Program










People
stop paying attention when they feel uninterested, bored, tired or
ignored. Your task is to draw up the training agenda or programme
so that none of these things happen.



Ideally the trainees
will be all eyes and ears and eager to learn. They will be
heedful, mindful, alert, on the ball, and missing nothing. Barring
serious medical problems (see opposite)) your trainees can be like
this if you



Frame1We
have looked at aims and objectives and learning styles elsewhere
so here we will focus on the idea of building variety into the
programme.



The completely wrong
way of doing things would be for the trainer to sit rigid in a
chair and talk for four hours in a monotonous and unexcited voice.


Variety
can be added by changing the types of activity and by
changing the social arrangements.



attention
deficit hyperactivity disorder,
(ADHD), chronic,
neurologically based syndrome characterised by any or all of three
types of behaviour:



Frame2Unlike
similar behaviours caused by emotional problems or anxiety, ADHD
does not fluctuate with emotional states. Often diagnosed when a
child begins school, ADHD is usually accompanied by learning
difficulties and social inappropriateness.



Treatment
may include medication such as methylphenidate hydrochloride
(Ritalin), which corrects neuro-chemical imbalances in the brain;
sugar intake is no longer considered to be a factor.


Symptoms
may decrease after adolescence, although adults can also have
ADHD.



Changing
the Social Arrangements


Trainees
can be asked to work on their own for one activity and then in small
groups for another and as part of a whole class discussion after
that.


If
the members of a small group work well together you can let them get
together for all small group activities. On the other hand you might
find it more useful to regroup the individuals each time there is a
small group activity so that everyone gets a chance to get to know
everyone else. A variation on this is to change the group sizes -
some activities might require groups of three and others require
groups of five - or whatever.


Sometimes
it is useful to ask groups to have a structure eg chairperson,
secretary and rapporteur. You could then make it a rule that
individuals are not allowed to occupy the same role twice in
succession. This has the advantage of 'stretching' individuals ie of
forcing them out of the sorts of role in which they feel most
comfortable.


Three
types of Action


Three
types of action relate to the three types of objectives which can be
set:



























Thinking



Doing



Feeling



Knowledge



Skills



Attitudes



Head



Hand



Heart



Thinking
involves putting on your thinking cap and doing headwork. It
requires you to be rational and logical and to deal with the
facts. You will use your intelligence in a reasonable and sensible
manner such that you can be pragmatic. You might even have
to crunch numbers.



Doing
involves thinking on your feet and walking the talk. You will be
practising what you preach. This may involve being creative and
artistic so that you can make it look good and set a mood or so
that you can say it with pictures rather than with words. It may
involve using your social skills during activities such as games
and role plays. Or it may involve you in actually making things
from raw materials eg toys for your OOSCC Club.



Feeling
involves giving attention to your attitudes, opinions, beliefs and
values. Are you clear about your passions and phobias, your
prejudices and addictions. How are your points of view influenced
by your urges, itches, cravings and yens. What drives you into a
rage and makes you furious.



18
Categories of Activities


There
are three types of action and three basic kinds of social
arrangement. These can be lined up on a matrix to create 9 categories
of workshop activity:



































 



Type
of Action



Thinking



Doing



Feeling



Individual



1



2



3



Small
Group



4



5



6



Whole
Class



7



8



9




But
there is the concept of ETHOS - the idea of
co-operative
games where there are no losers
. There
is a difference between a debate which forces a win/lose outcome and
a discussion which leads to a win/win outcome. So there are nine
possible categories of competitive activities and nine possible
categories of co-operative activities - a total of 18 Categories of
Activities.











ACTIVITY:



Put on your creative
thinking cap and come up with examples to put in the eighteen
boxes - you can rake around in your experiential memory, look
through this handbook for prompts and/or look in books.


Here
are some examples to get you started.




  • If
    you ask other people to help you but do not tell them what you
    are doing and keep the list to yourself then this remains as a
    competitive individual thinking activity.


  • If
    you ask other people to help you, tell them what you are doing,
    and then share the results - it becomes a co-operative small
    group activity.


  • If
    you get the group organized for systematic research and to write
    up the findings for distribution to other people then it is a
    co-operative small group doing activity (and people will have
    feelings about it!)











The five main competencies of a
professional trainer


A
professional trainer is one who earns her living through training -
it is her business. As such it is not enough that she be a good
trainer, she must also have a good head for business, especially if
she is in business on her own. The five main competency areas are set
out with some elaborations in the following table:






























Competency
area



Elaboration



Business
skills



Budgeting,
bookeeping, office procedures, time management, job pricing,
contract negotiation



Self
Development



Keeping
up with specific content and evolving training methods. Ensuring
her own Personal Formation and Professional Development on all
fronts.



Materials
Production



Writing
skills, word processing, graphics, editing and layouts,
reprographics, binding



Workshop
Organisation



Logistical
and Professional considerations



Workplace
visiting



This
might be for support/ facilitation/ counselling and/or for
appraisal/ assessment/ evaluation.










A
Trainer's Study Skills


The
professional trainer will practice what she preaches - she will have
learned how to learn. She will thus be adept in:



  • Systematically
    reflecting on practice (individually or in a group context)


  • Experimenting
    and researching (treats all professional actions as 'experiments')


  • Addressing
    the literature (written and electronic, published and grey)


  • Networking
    - to keep abreast of ongoing developments












1







Monday, 20 October 2008

About Education for Transformation


ganaTlebis
komponenti









ganviTareba
SeuZlebelia, Tu sazogadoebaSi ar arsebobs solidarobis,
urTierTTanadgomisa da daucvel fenebze mzrunvelobis gancda. es gancda
rom arsebobdes, amisaTvis saWiroa, sazogadoeba TviTon iyos
ganmsWvaluli RirebulebaTa Sesabamisi
sistemiT. RirebulebaTa es sistema ki mxolod mizanmimarTuli aRzrdisa
da ganaTlebis
Sedegad SeiZleba Camoyalibdes (amis
gareSe SeuZlebelia?)
. amitomac, Cveni sazogadoebis
ganviTarebisa da transformaciisaTvis aucilebelia srulfasovani
ganaTleba. amgvari ganaTleba ara mxolod codnisa (ra
aris codna?)
da informaciis, aramed, upirveles yovlisa, _
RirebulebaTa sistemis gadacemas gulisxmobs.



erT-erTi ZiriTadi
Rirebuleba adamianis pirovnuli sawyisis pativiscemaa
(+)
(ra vuyoT axvrebs?). moyvasis
siyvaruli Tavis umTavres mcnebad da imperativad klasikurma humanizmma
aqcia. swored pirovnebisadmi amgvari damokidebuleba gaxda klasikuri
humanisturi aRzrdisa da ganaTlebis safuZveli. klasikuri ganaTleba
gulisxmobs ara imdenad ZiriTadi kompetenciebis gamomuSavebas,
ramdenadac sruliad garkveuli principebis gaTavisebasa da cxovrebis
Sesabamis wess. es wesi araa garegnuli kanoni Tu adaTi, aramed _
Sinagani moTxovnileba da mowodeba.



aqedan gamomdinare, Cven migvaCnia, rom
Tanamedrove qarTul sazogadoebas klasikuri
humanisturi ganaTleba sWirdeba
. amgvari ganaTleba ar
gulisxmobs berZnuli, romauli, aRmosavluri, saSualo saukuneebisa Tu
axali drois kulturaTa oden Seswavlas. es aucilebeli, magram
arasakmarisi pirobaa. saWiroa, amasTanave, klasikuri humanizmis
sulierebasTan ziareba, romelmac, pirvel rigSi, Cveni Sinagani samyaro
unda daxvewos, xolo Cveni inteleqti ufro natifi unda gaxados.



amgvari aRzrda, cxadia adamianis uflebebisa da
sindisis Tavisuflebis aRiarebul principebs unda emyarebodes (?).
magram, amave dros, ar unda daviviwyoT yovelive klasikuri humanisuti
ganaTlebis safuZveli _ evropuli kulturis qristianuli fesvebi rogorc
Cveni identobis gamoxatuleba kulturaTa mudmiv da mSvidobian dialogSi.
mxolod amgvari identobis myari SegnebiTaa SesaZlebeli meore
adamianisadmi WeSmariti gaxsniloba da sxva kulturebTan dialogisaTvis
mudmivi mzadyofna _ dialogisaTvis, romelic iqneba ara morigi
politikur-ekonomikuri koniunqtura, aramed _ Sinagani aucilebloba.



yovelive zemoT aRniSnulidan gamomdinare,
migvaCnia, rom Cveni sazogadoebis
ganviTareba mTlianad ganaTlebis sferozea damokidebuli
.
klasikuri humanisturi ganaTleba unda gaxdes ganviTarebisa da
trnasformciis forposti.






Sunday, 19 October 2008

სკოლის გუნდების ნამუშევრები

Friday, 10 October 2008

gircha shelistvis

chemi ZaRlisaTvis sauketeso saTamaSo girchaa.
dasdevs, rogorc Tagvs.

Thursday, 9 October 2008

წიწვი

წიწვი არის მარადმწვანე წიწვოვანთა ფოთოლი.

”წიწვი” არ არის კაფე.

წიწვი წვეტიანია.

davaleba II kviris

ჩემს ეზოში ორი ფიჭვის ხე იყო.
როცა ჩუმად სიგარეტს მოვწევდი, წიწვებს ვწყვეტდი და კბილებით ვწიწკნიდი. მეგონა, რომ სუნს გაანეიტრალებდა.

ერთერთი ფიჭვის ტოტზე გვრიტმა ბუდე გაიკეთა. ორი ბუთქუნა ბარტყი გაიზარდა. ხელით ვწვდებოდი. სახლში გადმომყავდა, ვეფერებოდი და უკან ვსვამდი. დედამ ფრენა ასწავლა. ჰოდა, ადგნენ და გაფრინდნენ... ეს ფიჭვი ერთ-ერთ ლექსშიც ვახსენე. რამდენიმე წლის წინ მოჭრეს...

ფიჭვის როშა მიყვარს. საოცარი სურნელი იცის.

გირჩა


გირჩა არის ნამცხვარი.

იყო კაფე ”გირჩა”.

გირჩა არის წიწვოვანი ხეების ნაყოფი.

ის გემრიელი საკნატუნოა ციყვებისთვის.

სურათი 1. შეყვარებული გირჩები
გირჩის სახეობებია:
  1. ასეთი

  2. ისეთი

  3. ასეთ-ისეთი