Elaboration On Shadowing

Yesterday I wrote that learning must be done through action, not solely observance.

My dining experience today resonated this philosophy and made me question why they call it “job shadowing.”

Last time I watched my shadow, it moved when I moved, did what I did, messed up when I did. My shadow didn’t hover behind me, it didn’t lean over my shoulder, it didn’t just follow me, it made all the same moves I did.

The waitress introduced herself and the trainee trailed right behind her the entire afternoon, from table to table. Her cheeks had to hurt because beside walking, all that she was doing was smiling. There was no conversation, no getting drinks, no effort. Not her fault at all. It’s the fault of society’s misconception of training people.

Can she get by and meet the needs of the restaurant by shadowing this way – sure. But that comes with externalities.

Those being poorer experiences for the consumer, the “teacher,” and the shadower.

 

Stay Positive & It’s Not “What Did You Learn Today,” It’s “What Did You Do?”

Garth E. Beyer

 

Here To Help

shadow

I’ve argued for some time that showing up isn’t even half the battle. Showing up to learn something, attending seminars, job shadowing and the alike are overrated and misunderstood. And quite frankly, a waste of a professional’s or an employer’s time.

Professionals don’t want you near them to just watch and learn anymore, people want you there to help. The learning happens along the way.

If you’re asking what you can watch, what you can observe, what you can listen to or read up on, then you’re asking the wrong questions.

Better to ask how you can help, what you can create, who needs assistance?

Seeing adds to memory. Doing adds to experience.

Guess which is more valuable when it comes to employment?

 

Stay Positive & Yes, It Is Harder, But More Worth It Too

Garth E. Beyer

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