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2006 NACDEP Conference
February 13-16
San Antonio, Texas
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Appreciative Learning and Organizational Change: Overcoming Barriers
and Resistance
Success Story
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Speakers:
Kelsey Gray and Nicholas P. Lovrich
509-358-7960
grayk@wsu.edu
Washington State University |
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WSU Extension has initiated an Appreciative
Learning process that builds upon a base of organizational change,
institutional systems, and community participation. Local government
officials, police organizations and non-profits participate in moving
the community to a place where change is embraced as a positive
mechanism to enhance the community and organizations.
Conventional problem solving assumptions imply that organizations
have problems to be solved. Appreciative Learning views organizations
as collaborative opportunities to be explored. When organizational
change processes focus on problem solving as a mechanism to ensure
organizational and behavioral change, this often results in fear,
denial, and resistance. Traditional improvement steps often result
in conflicting groups; one fighting to maintain the status quo,
the other to force change. This scenario is played out within city
councils, police organizations, community non-profits, as well as
volunteer systems. Appreciative Learning is a mechanism to design
change, manage conflict and build team strategies, rather than focusing
on the problem, which often creates images of deficit. Appreciative
Learning looks for what is going right within the organizational
functioning and moves the system in that direction; understanding
that the greatest value comes from embracing what works, rather
than using a traditional pathology oriented focus.
This workshop will explore differences between Appreciative Inquiry
and traditional organizational change processes. The workshop will
explain the four step process, which will be shared along with basic
theory, and initial research and results from pilot Appreciative
Learning sites. Participants will gain an awareness of appreciative
inquiry, application skills, and organizational change models.
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Click here to return to the Agenda.
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For more information about the conference, contact the
conference co-chairs: Cindy Bigger, cbigger@umn.edu,
(888) 241-0843, or Rick Maurer, richard.maurer@uky.edu,
(859) 257-7582.
For questions, comments or concerns about the 2006 NACDEP
Conference website, contact emilye@srdc.msstate.edu.
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