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T H E H I N D U O P P O R T U N I T I E S A Guide to Better Positions and Better Performance Wednesday, June 04, 2003 |
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WORKING TRENDZ Simulations Stimulate learning!
AN AIRBUS A-320 suddenly flies into an electric storm and loses
contact with Air Traffic Control. The pilot tries to manoeuvre
through the turbulence and clouds to restore communication. To
add to his worries, the `Fuel Low' indicator flashes on. The
onboard computer warns him that the starboard elevator has been
struck by lightning and the aircraft is about to stall. Already
the plane is shuddering in mid-flight and its nose is dipping at
an alarming angle. The lives of three hundred passengers hang in
the balance. Fortunately for everybody, the pilot, his hapless
and panicked passengers and the airline, nothing is lost except a
few hairs off the worried pilot's head! The whole scenario was a
simulation, designed to help the pilot hone his skills in crisis
and disaster control.
The genus airline pilot undergoes extensive simulator training
before he is entrusted with the lives of passengers and multi-
million dollar aircraft. Similarly, organisations that value
customers and undertake mission-critical projects may run the
risk of training initiatives falling flat, merely because the
theory is so different from the practice. Simulating real-time
situations can improve the effectiveness of any training.
Understanding the concept
Simulations have three attributes. They:
Imitate something real
Are not real and
Can be altered by the user to be more difficult or less as needs
be
Simulation training is based on the assumption that human beings
learn best from their mistakes. Children naturally stumble and
fall when learning to walk.
With the first success, the feeling of failure is replaced with a
sense of accomplishment. Initially, failure results in descending
sharply on his rear, as he grows older the consequences of
failure increase exponentially--client displeasure and loss of
business replaces a sore bottom- the price of a mistake! It is
important that a learner actually needs to fail so that he can
learn.
Organisations are faced with the dilemma of training their people
without letting their several mistakes negatively influence their
image or bottom line. The idea is to let the trainee make all the
mistakes he wants to in a `safe' though `real' situation without
chasing away customers. Once he masters the several simulations
the chances of making a mess in the real world is virtually nil!
Simulated scenarios are a safe place to fail. As Anne Laures,
corporate manager says, "The real benefit of a simulation is that
the learner gets to fail in private." When trainers simulate a
necessary risk of failure in the learning environment it produces
properly trained employees. Such employees add value to the
organisation. Its not unlike a dress rehearsal of a play. The
scene is enacted ad lib, and if the player makes a mistake, he
can redo it till he gets it right. In a real-life scenario, he
won't get that chance! "Ah-ha!"
Cognitive psychology professor Salvatore Soraci believes that
people remember things they learn better after a mental struggle.
There is an "ah-ha!" that comes after a learner generates his own
hypothesis on how something works or when he discovers the
correct answer. This "ah-ha!" experience doesn't occur in a
passive classroom. It happens however, in simulation learning
when the learner practices and interacts dynamically with
concepts.
Simulations tend to force passive learners into a more active
learning. It makes a learner responsible for his learning.
Instead of depending on the trainer's charisma to motivate him to
learn new concepts the learner is self- motivated to achieve
simulation goals. Simulations are better than real experience
because they compress time and remove extraneous details.
Moreover, unlike real life experiences they can be tweaked for
learning. Above all, they cause no damage to the organisation or
to the customer!
A Harvard study for IBM revealed that while the majority of
respondents chose classroom learning over web-based e-learning
methods before the training, once they had undergone simulation
training they said, "(They) would never suffer in a traditional
face to face experience again having been taken through every
permutation and combination in the simulations!"
Simulations at IBM
Learning initiatives and technologies need to be justified. While
organisations use e-learning, web-based training and simulations
to save delivery and travel costs, the effectiveness of the
learning approach is what attracts IBM to use simulations. Nancy
Lewis director of advanced learning believes that adults learn
best by solving problems. That is why IBM included simulations in
its training programmes. Nancy says, "It's not that IBM doesn't
want to save delivery costs, but the only reason why we did this
(including simulation training) was to create a more effective
learning approach."
Simulating leadership
Poor leadership is the biggest risk organisations face.
Leadership skills normally come with years of experience. Can
simulation teach such skills? SimuLearn's "Virtual Leader"
programme creates a learning environment for such skills. The
learner joins as the leader of a group of five animated
Artificial Intelligent (AI) characters with different
personalities, points of view and agendas. The leader is assigned
the task of making them work together towards a common business
goal. The learner as the leader of the pack needs to apply his
leadership skills to ascertain that the group focuses on the
assigned task. The learner's success or failure is reflected in
how the characters respond and react.
Coca-Cola is a user of "Virtual Leader". Mike Ulven, a senior
executive says, "It helps you appreciate the diversity of thought
in complex situations. The real challenge is to internalise the
concepts behind the leadership model. The simulation is a place
to practice this model before you use it in the real world." Most
training programmes are information based. It takes learners a
little under a year to forget what his certificate course taught
him! Simulation on the other hand is about behaviour change.
Ulven adds, "You practice what you have learned in a game
environment to the point that it becomes a part of your own
behaviour."
Another truism
"As you teach so should you test" is a training truism. Apart
from being powerful instructional tools, simulations provide
valuable assessment information. This minimises the risks of
inadequate learner skills, thereby eliminating damage. Multiple
choices, matching the answers and sequential assessment tools may
measure learner knowledge. However these tools are insufficient
to measure competencies in specific skills.
An individual can be placed in a simulated situation containing a
set of problems. The learner's new skills are now put to test.
His performance in this situation is a strong indicator of his
competency.
Dr.Peg Maddoks, Director Internet learning, Cisco systems,
laments; "Too many people were coming into our tests with memory
and recall information from a study guide that allowed them to
pass the test. What was lacking was a demonstration that they had
the understanding and skills."
Cisco now includes simulation assessments to gauge competencies.
Simulations also minimise malpractices. The story is so close to
what happens in several of our own competitive examinations, that
the application of simulation testing could be introduced at
these venues with profit!
The future of simulations
Training programmes are usually vulnerable to two types of
errors. One is accepting a false hypothesis as true. The trainer
wrongly assumes that the learner has the skills but the test
state otherwise. The second is accepting a true hypothesis as
false.
That is the learner does not have the skills but the test says he
does. Simulations minimise an organisation's exposure to the
risks and consequences of such errors.
Today's fast changing, high stake business world needs people who
can directly apply the skills they learn in training programmes.
In addition, the zeitgeist needs to be assured that their
employees actually possess the skills at the end of the training.
Simulations offer the best training bargain without diluting the
natural process of learning by mistakes!
ABHIMANYU ACHARYA
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