Friday, 12 May 2017

Battling the 'Always On' Culture


I have had a terrible start to the term regarding disconnecting and looking after my well-being. I am particularly frustrated as I felt I had begun to create a decent balance of work and family. 

The article has really reminded me that I need to be more conscious of disconnecting on the weekend. I need to create a definitive time of disconnection, whether it be an entire day or separate my leadership reading to a Saturday - which, interestingly,  I particularly enjoy and not see that is a necessary disconnect? Is that wrong in regards of disconnecting? Is all of it purposeful?

As Shotover, thankfully, does not have an Email culture - my 'addiction' is SLACK, Twitter, Facebook regarding education. I have myself wasting time wandering in and out of articles without any real purpose when there is a lot more things I should be getting on with.  I have been pleased with how I have cut out Twitter, I feel a lot better and more focused and productive - but I can do better. 

Cognitive Overload can lead to becoming distracted and be drawn to things that we prefer for a short fix, rather than putting our time into more productive areas. I have definitely find myself avoiding deeper thinking work and justifying work with simpler tasks. I have found myself doing a lot more housework? :) It is a distraction as an avoidance of a deeper thinking work.

"But people prefer reading an email to thinking about a problem more deeply. We don’t have the reflex anymore to spend three of four hours on one project. It is a constant distraction.”

In most cases, we are in the position to be able to manage our work schedule, but can teachers manage this successfully without any support? Teaching in a flexible learning environment is incredibly complex and there is a lot more to contend with than teaching in a single cell. Scheduling 'technical' tasks requires management skills which can be taught and develop quickly, 'adaptive' tasks are the opposite. Every adaptive problem requires a new solution and an approach, as much as we try to find one, we can not deal with it in an efficient systematic way. You can have a framework with questions etc, but they are totally dependent on knowing people and background etc. Ultimately, they always take time and it will have unknown variable (s) and can be incredibly frustrating. This adds another variable of frustration which leads people to not want to deal with the problem in an efficient way ie give it the time to be fully dealt with. In our environment we have to deal with both issues of dealing with management work as well as relationship work. Tony Burkin described it as 'relentless' and he is spot on, particularly in relation to the daily 'adaptive' problems we have.

As a team leader, it is essential the management side of our habitat is totally sorted and under control for all mentors. It is something we can manage and ensure its one thing less to worry due to the daily 'adaptive' problems. If you add to problems that are already there it can lead to cognitive overload and mentors becoming stuck. 

Action: Spend more meeting time on the management problems ie Communicating Learning and gathering data for OTJ's.

Action: Teaming skills will be dealt with during mentor meetings and a short time in our team meeting too.




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