Leadership Essentials: Learning
Learning can be defined as a measurable and relatively permanent change in behaviour through experience, instruction, study, or being taught. There are many ways of learning at work, each with their own advantages and disadvantages. People can use almost any kind of relevant experience as a learning opportunity to gain knowledge or learn new skills or new behaviours. Opportunities vary from formal to informal, structured to self-directed, and on-the-job to off-the-job experiences.
‘Leadership Essentials: Learning’ provides an overview of why learning is essential for leadership capability and includes ‘Top Tips’ on how learning can help you become a better leader.
The Essentials leaflet is supported by three Spotlights that look at learning in more detail to help you improve your leadership skills:
- Learning Styles
- Personal Development Planning
- Formal and Informal Learning
Spotlights
Spotlight on Personal Development Planning
"Self-development is personal development, with the person taking primary responsibility for their own learning and for choosing the means to achieve this. Ultimately it is about increasing your capacity and willingness to take control over, and be responsible for, events."
Pedler et al. (2013)
Spotlight on Formal and Informal Learning
Spotlight on Learning Styles
“In 1979, researchers Walter Burke Barbe and Raymond H. Swassing identified different learning styles in what they called the VAK Model for Learning. They theorized that people learn in three ways: visually, auditorily or kinesthetically.”
Green, S. (2019)