Have you noticed
anything different recently in the training classroom? Decades ago, newspapers,
crossword puzzles, and stale coffee in Styrofoam cups littered the room. Scan
the modern-day class and witness the change. Specialty caffeine shots in white
cups with green lettering adorn each row of tables. Behind the piping-hot shot
of life-sustaining nectar sits a student hopelessly addicted to more than just
the java jolt. The Generation Y classroom reeks of an electronic dependency
ultimately resulting in a distracting learning environment.
For instructors and
agencies there are two responses to this electronic impairment—they can ignore
the influence of the devices in the classroom or they can embrace them. Either
way, it is incumbent upon the instructor and the agency to develop a comfort
level with the changing classroom landscape—and to develop a consistent policy
that is communicated upfront—if the learning environment is to be preserved.
Many of today’s law
enforcement instructors are classroom veterans. Instructors who began their
training career ages ago remember a classroom with a completely different vibe
than exists today. Decades ago, the grizzled police veteran arrived to the ‘80s
in-service classroom in his blue jeans and Member’s Only jacket (and of course,
uniform shoes), armed with the local newspaper to read the sports section and
tackle the daily crossword.
Training participation
was the last thing on the veteran cop’s agenda that day. Instructors of that
generation knew if you wanted the officer to retain any information from the
course, it was necessary to prepare and distribute an outline, as very few
veterans arrived to training equipped with a writing instrument.
Fast forward to the
present-day classroom; tables are filled with laptops, iPads, smart-phones and
other electronic devices with wireless capability. Connecting cords, extension
cords and multiple outlets are strewn all over the tables and floors like a
multi-legged sea creature and creating an OSHA nightmare. No need to bring the
sports section of the paper or the daily crossword to today’s training—who has
the time—with e-mail, Twitter, text messaging, Candy Crush and other
distractions needing constant attention?
While most blame the
Generation Y-Millennial generation (born after 1980) for this electronic
boondoggle, it was actually the late-phase Baby Boomers (born 1956 to 1965) who
jump-started the portable device craze. It was in the mid- to late-1970s when
Pong and other pinball and arcade games were the rage. Soon Mattel and Sega and
other electronics companies developed home and portable sports and arcade
versions.
Portability spread to
other electronic products like the Sony Walkman and soon all the Boomers had
one. In 1983, IBM produced the portable computer and the generation that became
hooked was the generation now closest to retirement—not the easy-to-indict
Millennials. This revelation is further supported by observation that the
technology virus that initially infected Boomers as teens—and eventually spread
to Generation X and Y—has returned to re-infect the Boomers even as they
ridicule Gen Y for their reliance on technology.
Scan the classroom.
Sitting next to the 25-year-old wunderkind posting to his Twitter account is
the paunchy 55-year-old lifting his cheaters to scan his messages and tap his
one-finger reply.
The effect of
portability is evident in the unique distractions technology brings to the law
enforcement classroom. A veteran police instructor recently presented a class
on officer mental health and wellness to recruits and later to veteran
officers. The instructor was sympathetic to the reality that two hours of “how
officers fail during their careers” was probably not the most enjoyable topic
and was expecting to experience some distractions.
During recruit training,
the recruits (who were allowed to utilize laptops with the power-point
pre-loaded) were regimented and frightened enough to not do anything too
distracting, i.e., messaging. The recruits knew the material would show up at
some later date in the form of an exam so other than a few seconds of nodding
off, the recruits mostly paid attention.
Veteran in-service was
an entirely different encounter. Veterans loathe training. Training pros will
tell you if veteran cops aren’t interested in the training topic, they will
tune out. If they don’t respect the instructor, they will tune out. If they are
interested in the topic and/or do respect the instructor, they will still most
likely tune out at some point during the training.
Veteran cops don’t want
to be stuck in a classroom. Where tuning out used to mean the crossword puzzle,
now it means the iPhone. Even tech novices will habitually check their phone
every few minutes. The need to be constantly entertained and distracted has
become a societal addiction.
So how do agencies
respond to the challenge of keeping officers engaged? Other than adding a
budget line for specialty coffee as an inducement, what could agencies do to
effectively accomplish training in this age of technological distraction?
First, agencies should acknowledge that there are legitimate reasons to approve
the use of a table-top device or phone while in the training environment.
Electronic outlines save gobs of paper and allow for the instructor or the
academy to update materials on the fly.
Students who have
recently experienced academic curricula are likely to be more comfortable
taking notes electronically rather than in written form. Veterans, who still
cannot remember to bring a pen to training, could voice record or jot class
notes on their smartphone. With classroom Internet capability, students who
need clarification on a particular topic or want to research a specific
citation or a quote, find information is readily available electronically.
Students who learn at a
faster pace might be intrigued or engaged enough to use the device to expand on
the instruction, while other students might just be more comfortable looking up
a word or topic on a search engine rather than raising their hand and risk
looking foolish. Keep in mind while Gen Y is communication-challenged when it
comes to face-to-face encounters, they have unparalleled skill in utilizing
electronic devices to gather information.
The downside to having
classrooms populated with electronics is some students bring devices to class
under the guise of being more productive or to have an electronic advantage,
but fall into the lure of the more entertaining distraction of messaging or
games over the tedium of training. As addressed earlier, even the dinosaurs of
the Boomer generation cannot go a few minutes without habitually checking their
devices.
To the instructor, the
classroom landscape eventually looks like an unrehearsed electronic ballet; in
the pocket/out of the pocket, up from the desk and back on the desk, tapping
the keyboard, sending and receiving, vibrating and yes, sometimes actually
ringing in class.
The best defense against
this electronic invasion is to review the rules with the class prior to
instruction. Do you allow electronic devices and if so, to what extent? Should
students follow your course outline on their device? Are students who follow
you on their laptops allowed to also be checking e-mails, messaging or playing
games? Would you prefer students to step outside the class if they need to use
their phones? Is the temporary disruption better than them taking a moment to
check or answer, but remaining seated?
If you are easily
offended, you might want to restrict electronic devices. Another remedy would
be to use the time-tested veteran instructor tool of making an example of a
student who is otherwise distracted and asking him/her a question relative to
current instruction material. Another option is to hold students responsible
for the material in the form of an exam at the end of the training and yes,
this can work with police veterans.
Many successful veteran
instructors use the following classroom methodology. First, they review the
rules prior to instructing. They don’t restrict devices, but they make it clear
they will deal with any individual creating a distraction. Dealing individually
rather than collectively earns the respect of police veterans quicker than many
other types of supervisory techniques.
During the review,
veteran instructors should authorize students to briefly check and respond to
messages as long as it is not disruptive or lengthy. Students are advised to
exit the classroom quietly if they have an emergency or situation requiring a
lengthy response.
As for the e-mail, text
messaging, Sudoku, Candy Crush or Angry Birds addicted officer, who seemingly
cannot be extracted from his/her device, it is imperative the officer be
instructed to immediately put the device away and pay attention. A procedure
should be in place to remove the officer from training and to contact the
officer’s training supervisor if necessary.
As a final note to
instructors, not all classroom distractions are intentional or meant to be
disrespectful. In the example given earlier, it was discovered that some of the
students who appeared to be distracted during the police wellness training
later contacted the instructor for additional information. The lesson here is
some students might be uncomfortable with a training topic and appear aloof.
While the “tough love”
approach is appropriate for the student misusing his device, one suggestion
might be to take note of the distracted student and intervene during breaks or
after the training. The instructor of the wellness course reported later
intervening with officers with undiagnosed addictive issues, medical issues,
anxiety and other behavioral issues, and relationship and financial crisis,
discovered only as a result of a quick glance around the classroom.
Of course, even some
officers who appreciate training cannot overcome their attachment to their
devices. The numbers of these distracted students can be mitigated by
presenting interesting material, having a passion for your topic, and having a
delivery that doesn’t seem rote or robotic. For example, avoid starting out
your course of instruction by stating you are a substitute instructor called in
at the last minute and this is not your material. Insert material that is
specific to the agency being trained.
Review training policy
and class rules prior to instructing. Remember to scan the room and note who
seems distracted as opposed to students who are distracting. Address
distracting students immediately. Try to make a connection later with
distracted students as there might be a good reason for their inattention. And
good luck. Generation Z and a spate of new smart devices and apps are just
around the corner!
Brian Nanavaty is a 30-year veteran of law enforcement, Director
of Curriculum and Training for Safe Call Now® and former adjunct faculty at
Indiana and Purdue Universities. Nanavaty is currently an instructor for the
Legal and Liability Risk Management Institute at the Public Agency Training
Council and instructs at ILEETA and other various leadership academies and
conferences on police topics. Contact him at policeresiliency@gmail.com.
Published in Law and Order, Mar 2014
No comments:
Post a Comment