1 / 13

David A Lane International Centre for the Study of Coaching Middlesex University

David A Lane International Centre for the Study of Coaching Middlesex University Professional Development Foundation (David.Lane@pdf.net) Building a Profession – challenges and opportunities. What does Business Coaching have to offer:

ula
Download Presentation

David A Lane International Centre for the Study of Coaching Middlesex University

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. David A Lane International Centre for the Study of Coaching Middlesex University Professional Development Foundation (David.Lane@pdf.net) Building a Profession – challenges and opportunities

  2. What does Business Coaching have to offer: • If a coach can take a three day course and apply tools that work, why do we need five years experience/training? (Full Membership) • What do we offer clients that justifies those years? • What about sports scientists, health visitors, management consultants, psychotherapists, psychologists, social workers or HR practitioners as coaches, what do they offer that we do not? • Perhaps what we offer, uniquely, is our commitment to professional practice as evidence based practitioners – are we? • Perhaps it is our competence in asking effective questions and interest in the results of asking them that makes a difference to our clients – do we? • Perhaps we offer a different lens, we have tools to combine the pictures our clients create, evaluate their qualities and design futures, that work – have we?

  3. What is a profession and do we want to be one? • Professions as designated carriers of rationality • Code of conduct, codified knowledge, client service, self regulation/guild • Professions in pursuit of social and economic prestige? • Agency of state and capital, market monopoly by state licence, exclusion • Professions as site of social identity? • Client relationship primary, context led and socially constructed

  4. Professions as a future construct • The future as a social construct • New forms of association, communities of practice • Associations of practice based on shared interests, do we want collaboration or conflict • What might be a different lens, how might we create new pictures, evaluate their qualities and design futures, that work.

  5. On what modes of knowledge do we build our professional practice? • Disciplinary – scientific, correct ways of gathering data, value free, setting free, • Technical rational – beyond setting, evidence based, divested of practice knowledge, • Dispositional/transdisciplinary – practice as deliberative action concerned with specific context and reflection, • Critical – to challenge existing discursive structures.

  6. What forms of knowledge are represented in coaching? • Is it a form of evidence based practice? • What sort of evidence do you draw upon as a practitioner? • Take a minute to reflect, note it down • Share with your neighbour • Reflect, are you drawing on different, or a similar knowledge base?

  7. What do you use in practice? • Disciplinary – scientific, when was the last time you applied a scientific finding to your practice? • Technical rational – when was the last time you followed, exactly, an evidence based manual? • Dispositional/transdisciplinary – when was the last time your practice was deliberative and concerned with a specific context and client? • Critical – when was the last time you challenged existing powerful (discursive) structures?

  8. Surely it depends on: • Our purpose – what we agree with our client • Our perspective – what informs our work • Our process – what happens when we work • OR - does it depend on our position on truth • Is it possible to say something is true (or probably so) on the basis of evidence, or • Does it always depend on context (relative)? • Are our questions propositional or implicational?

  9. Do we: • want to build a case for a distinct profession of business coach, (regulated as such)? • or as part of the broader area of coaching practice? • or as part of a different discipline, say business or psychology? • Could you: • Frame the case in terms of the specific needs of your organisation – link with business strategy • Consider all your stakeholders and make the case to them • Consider the organisational environment/culture that makes a distinct profession necessary • Persuade decision makers or become the deciders • Prepare for questions/scepticism/conflict/collaboration with others

  10. What form can distinct recognition take: • Recognition by a register or overarching registration council? • Recognition based on completion of a recognised course? • Recognition through individual application and demonstration of learning/competence/prior experience? • Issues of levels, competence, forms of training/development, standards? • None of the above – something different? • So what future do you want to create? • What should WABC do? • What are you prepared to do? • How might we create a future?

  11. WABC • The International Board – competencies • What it is • What it is doing • The Standards Project • What it is • What it is doing • The Ethics Committee • International Collaboration – GCC • WABC as part of many bodies working together

  12. What makes sense for you: • As a coach? • As a business coach? • As a business coach who is also a member of a related profession? • What form can your contribution take ? • As part of WABC? • Other bodies of which you are a member? • Through national roundtables? • Through international collaborations such as the Global Coaching Convention? (www.coachingconvention.org)

  13. So, thanks for listening, and where next? Reading: Lane DA and Corrie S The Modern Scientist Practitioner London Routledge Jarvis J Lane DA and Fillery-Travis A The Case for Coaching Wimbledon CIPD. Participation: Contact WABC for progress on their initiatives, contact www.coachingconvention.org for the global collaboration.

More Related