Intervision: Dialogue Methods in Action Learning
By Monique Bellersen and Inez Kohlmann
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Intervision - Monique Bellersen
instructions
DEEL 1
Intervision:
dialogue methods in action learning
1What is intervision?
2Intervision and change
3Intervision, personal and organizational development
4Intervision in a nutshell
5Phases in the intervision process
6Prerequisites
7Roles
8Case and case question
9What questions should you ask?
10Pitfalls
11Reflection
12Method selector
CHAPTER 1
What is intervision?
People are not disturbed by things, but by the view they take of them.
EPICTETUS, ANCIENT GREECE
Intervision is a form of expertise development in which professionals call on their colleagues, fellow professionals or peers to help them gain insight into the problems they have at work. A group of five to eight participants unravels a problem submitted by one participant, the case provider, by asking questions in one or another intervision method. The participants try not to come up with solutions, but by asking questions, encourage the case provider to think up his own answers. The questions should help the case provider develop new ways of thinking, gain insight into his own case and through these insights, develop new and alternative ways of behaving. Following the selected intervision method, the facilitator guides the discussion of the case.
Intervision is about dealing with your own issues on the job, your working style and the personal or professional views that influence it. So intervision is always connected to everyday practices, professionalization, learning and self-improvement.
Intervision makes you aware of your individual style and personal views of your work. These play a crucial role in the way you handle your job and thus also affect your organization. We call them hidden drivers: your own implicit beliefs that drive you in your work. At intervision sessions you help each other to uncover and clarify your hidden drivers, so that you can find and make improvements. You first have to see what drives you to have the problem, before you can do something about it.
The aim of intervision is to help you work more effectively. Intervision means enhancing professionalism, gaining insight into your own role, behavior and working style, as well as your own views and beliefs which affect your work, often subconsciously.
Action learning and intervision
Action learning focuses on everyday reality by using real-life cases. The idea behind action learning is that learning and working go hand in hand so that knowledge becomes directly applicable. The method was originally developed in the 1940s by Reg Revans (1907-2003) in response to the ever-increasing changes in the (working) environment. Groups are encouraged to share their daily work experiences and, by asking questions, to reflect continually. This helps to intensify learning and ensures that participants gain new insights and find their own, directly applicable solutions.
In action learning, learning and working go hand in hand and the immediate surroundings play a big role. This makes it different from traditional learning. Revans translated his theory into a formula that describes how people gain insight into what they experience, see and feel: L=P+Q. In this formula L stands for learning, P stands for programmed knowledge, based on previously gained or embedded knowledge, and Q stands for questioning insight, where assumptions and thoughts are investigated by asking questions and by listening and learning carefully.
Questioning insight focuses on double-loop learning (described by Argyris and Schön) which pays more attention to the cause of the issues and where solutions can be contrary to the thoughts and norms followed either by individuals or their organizations. In double-loop learning, no changes happen within the existing system frameworks, it is those frameworks that actually change.
In action learning, you learn individually but also as a group, working on a real issue and reflecting on actual behavior. Michael Marquardt suggested extending the formula to guarantee the value of good reflection: L=P+Q+R. The R refers to reflection.
The action learning process can take a long time. It includes the following important elements:
•a challenging real-life project or problem;
•a varied group of (5-8) people who are connected to each other through their functions (e.g. project members, managers, clients);
•a process focused on reflection, questioning and listening;
•a focus on learning;
•commitment to act;
•a process supervisor.
Like intervision, action learning ties into daily practice. The intervision methods described in this book can be of help when reflecting in-depth on real-life cases. These methods provide many tools for investigating your own assumptions and norms. The varied approaches make it possible to choose the right method for a case (question), because different issues ask for different ways of questioning.
In both action learning and intervision the key is the individual’s ongoing reflection and their job in the organization. This leads to continuous learning that contributes to the development of the organization.
Other terms
When we talk about the professionalization of an individual or organization, several terms are used in practice. Let us clarify some of these terms to highlight how they differ from intervision.
Peer consultation
Peer consultations are usually for groups of colleagues in one field or multidisciplinary groups of professionals. The goal is to increase a person’s professionalism by discussing their own experiences and issues with regard to their profession/job and to review these against the views of the other participants or the professional standards. It’s often about reviewing a person’s knowledge and skills, behavior and decision-making.
It is also possible – if it involves colleagues – to compare a person’s actions with the norms and guidelines of others in the same field. Especially professional expertise, professional ways of acting and professional views will be discussed.
Peer review consultation differs from intervision because of its evaluating, judgmental character. The latter is absent in intervision because it is aimed at discovering your own style and views on the job.
Coaching
Coaching is a form of personal guidance based on a one-to-one relationship. In coaching the emphasis is on support in a specific situation or to complete a specific task. This relationship is hierarchical because the coachee learns from the discussion and the coach supports and guides them through their issues. This is a confidential journey between coach and coachee.
In intervision hierarchy is completely absent; the key point is the equality of the participants and learning from each other. That is why intervision always takes place in a group.
Supervision
Supervision is vocationally-oriented, on-the-job guidance, where a person systematically learns how to deal with specific issues they have in their work situation. It’s about reflecting on your (own) work experience to learn how to function better. In supervision the emphasis is not just on learning from the current situation but also from ones yet to come. Supervision is led by a supervisor, someone who has a different relationship to the person being guided, either because they know more about the issue or because they hold a higher hierarchical position. This is unlike intervision, where relationships are equal and where you work as a group.
Mediation
Mediation is a professional intervention that helps resolve a conflict between two or more people, parties or groups. The aim is to find a joint solution by talking with each other. The goal is not to find a solution that all parties are totally happy with, but to create a consensus that all can agree with and that meets their own interests acceptably. They are helped in this by the impartial third party, the mediator.
This book focuses on intervision.
CHAPTER 2
Intervision and change
The world around us is constantly changing. People and organizations are expected to respond to these changes. While responding to the questions and demands of the environment, people must focus on adding value to the products and services they deliver and to their changing environments and competitive positions. All of this calls for innovation and requires adaptability. Any change impacts on the organization and has implications for employees, such as in terms of existing work procedures, processes and services or other forms of teamwork.
Programs are often created with a view to organizational and leadership development; to learn how to deal with these changes. Relevant questions include: what does this change mean to my job or my team, how can I contribute to the results, what skills or competences can I develop, what exactly has to change, and how am I going to do this?
Practice shows that over the course of time, people settle into views and standards related to their work based on their professional experiences. Using such building blocks, everyone establishes their own style of working with their own personal, distinctive elements. In the daily routine, people hardly notice this process. Yet, being consciously aware of your own way of working gives you the ability to examine it closely, to develop it or even to change it entirely. Professionals are expected to be able to look at themselves critically and actively work on improving their own professional repertoire and development in order to perform better. Intervision can play an important part in this process.
To enable further study and development you should regularly contemplate your own behavior and its effects. This reflection has to take place systematically to increase the chance of sustained learning. Knowledge development, practical experience and self-analysis come together in intervision in a peerbased, action learning process.
Levels of intervision
We distinguish three levels of intervision in this book. These levels describe the degrees of depth that are achieved in a case discussion. When we talk about becoming more professional through intervision we mean being or becoming aware of your own role and your personal style of working as well as obtaining insight into your personal and professional views so as to arrive at new ways of functioning. These views can be seen as hidden drivers: subconscious ideas which steer someone’s behavior and their way of acting in their work. They can be tough to budge; you might know about them but not be able to change them yet.
Participants in the intervision group help the case provider discover and clarify their views in order to grow personally and professionally. The case provider is helped to inspect their own strategy, while maintaining a distance from the actual situation, to get to know their patterns of behavior. The case provider is encouraged to experiment with their newly formulated behavior in daily practice. The deeper the case provider reaches to uncover their underlying values and opinions, the more sustained the impact of the intervision will be on them in terms of change.
The three levels we identify are:
1Case level: specific issue
The case gets discussed in terms of the issue: what would be more effective? What could I do? What are my alternatives? What worked well and what could have gone better? This is where the content of the case is most important. The underlying case question and the reason for the topic are not discussed as much.
2Characteristic actions level: the approach
The case gets discussed in terms of the actions of the case provider in this specific situation. What is my working style and why did I choose it? Why did I go for this approach? What are the characteristics of my style of working? What do I normally take with me on assignments in terms of my working style or approach? The case provider comes first here. The search for deeper views is discussed less.
3Views level: hidden drivers
The case gets discussed in terms of the provider’s professional and personal views. What views underlie the diagnosis? How can I explain them? What do they mean and what is their effect on my situation in question? What assumptions about the profession, myself and others became clear in the case discussion? When did things become uncomfortable for me? The specific situation is a tool for learning how to recognize our hidden drivers. These drivers form the behavior that repeats itself in patterns and influences our way of thinking and acting without us noticing.
FIGURE 1 Levels of intervision (Bellersen, Kohlmann)
It can be challenging for intervision groups to leave the first, specific level behind and go down to a deeper level. Discussing the content of the case can seem very appealing, but talking about the characteristics or motives of the case provider is harder, more personal. It requires to focus on the role of the case provider instead of the case. Levels two and three have more of an effect on the possible changes the case provider wants to achieve. Becoming aware of these levels and focusing actively on the case provider, their case question and views, makes it possible to work down to level three one step at a time. At these depths the feelings of trust and safety in the group become really important.
While we were writing this book we applied current insights in the area of learning and change. In our view these theories form a solid basis for the concepts involved in action learning through intervision.
We used:
•the logical levels of learning by Bateson and Dilts;
•reflective learning and action by Donald Schön;
•single-, double- and triple-loop learning by Argyris and Schön.
Logical levels of learning – Bateson and Dilts
The anthropologist Gregory Bateson (1972, 1979) introduced the notion of logical levels. Robert Dilts further developed Bateson’s logical levels of learning in his unified field theory. The theory of logical levels of learning (also called logical levels of change and logical levels of