How to Coach Yourself and Others How To Perform On The Job Coaching | Page 118
8.13 Unit 5: Coaching Practice
This unit gives participants a chance to practice using coaching skills.
They will develop a short training outline and use it to teach the skill to another participant.
Provide a list of jobs from which the groups can choose. Examples: setting up an extension ladder,
using a fire extinguisher, taking gas readings, installing a fence, baking cookies.
You may want to have props available related to the jobs. Give the groups about 1 hour before
bringing the class back together to discuss their experiences as coaches/trainees/observers.
The goal is to emphasize that not all trainees start at the same level of knowledge and experience
and the coach should assess each trainee to determine the appropriate starting point and level for
training.
This activity depends on your skill at role-play. Be sure to vary “your” level of expertise with the
different coaches.
8.14 Unit 6: Wrap-up
This unit is a workshop summary and an opportunity to let participants know what kind of
organizational support they can expect as coaches.
Taking the day’s agenda as basis, lead a brief discussion of each major topic.
Have a few participants tell one important concept from each unit and/or one new thing
they learned that will improve their OJT sessions.
Remind participants that this workshop is just a step in learning/improving coaching skills.
Now they will have to practice.
Be prepared to give participants a name they can contact after the workshop to ask
questions or discuss coaching-related issues and sources of additional information about
coaching.
Emphasize the notion that coaching skills are learned and improved over time.
Have each trainee list some things he or she plans to do after the workshop to improve his
or her coaching skills.
Examples: read about coaching, observe other coaches, practice by teaching a new skill to
my son, ask for feedback about my communication skills from someone I have taught in the
past, …
Have each participant complete the self assessment
Ask them not to look at the one they filled out at the start of the workshop until they have
finished. When everyone has competed the form and compared it with the form they filled
out at the start of the workshop, ask them if their answers changed and if so why.
Suggest participants may want to use this form again in a few months to re-assess their
skills.
Ask participants to review the expectations that they expressed at the start of the workshop.
If important expectations were not met, discuss ways they could be covered outside of the
workshop.
Ask trainees to complete the workshop evaluation and turn it in so the information can be
used to improve future workshops.
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