Thursday, April 4, 2013

How you learn naturally can lead to working effortlessly














The way we learn most naturally can help us find and fit into a new job, sometimes a better job! For example, I can think of several clients who worked for many years in construction, then sustained physical injuries that prevented them from doing physical labor or operating equipment. But, they wanted to stay in the construction field because they enjoyed working with and around structures, tools, machinery and everything that goes with building, maintaining or repairing our physical world.

They needed to retrain in order to work again. However, they lacked confidence about educational upgrading due to poor performances in high school or college. In assessing their learning styles, I discovered that they learned well—but not through conventional book learning. Sure, they could force themselves to go back to a classroom setting and suffer through it. We’ can many things through sheer will and determination but there is always the risk that we will fail or not learn what we need to know in order to be competent on the job, thereby jeopardizing our chances for getting and
keeping a new career.

Learning new skills is always easier when we are motivated to learn, not driven to learn by the need for a new job, but motivated by tapping into our natural learning styles. For example, many of these clients learned more naturally through trying & doing, or by observing & examining, or by tinkering & experimenting. Sitting in a classroom studying & reading books, then memorizing and repeating what they read did not motivate them.

Retraining or upgrading skills then meant finding programs that matched their natural way of learning (such as construction-estimating) that emphasized a “hands-on” orientation versus a theoretical or academic one. In several cases, an assessment of their stories also revealed a natural aptitude for working with numbers and a knack for customer service, which matched up with jobs related to Construction Estimator, Quote Coordinator, Proposal Writer, Purchasing Manager, Builder Services Manager, Field Coordinator, and so on.

What is your innate pattern for learning?

When listening to your stories, I listen for clues to your natural talent for learning: what are you doing when you’re motivated to learn? To what depth and detail are you motivated to learn? What are the mechanisms through which you learn? What circumstances or conditions motivate you to learn?

Natural talents for learning correlate with different kinds of career situations. For example, someone who learns best by observing and examining—that is, someone who is motivated to learn by taking a careful first-hand look at the actual detail of an action—is probably better suited to an apprenticeship-type environment than someone who is motivated to learn by studying and reading (going over printed material, note-taking and underlining key phrases).

Perhaps you did better in college programs organized around listening and discussing activities than you did in high school, if the emphasis there was on memorizing and repeating of information. You are motivated to learn only when you are in a situation where you can hear the thoughts and ideas of others and express their own. Perhaps you never realized before that your favorite job was organized around frequent opportunities to brainstorm with others by hearing their ideas and bouncing your own off them.

Did your parents complain that you always asked too many questions? If they found it annoying, perhaps others noticed your knack for finding out things by asking people questions. You are more than just curious, you have a knack for probing and questioning others. You might thrive in jobs where that skill is a recognized and rewarded as a core duty, such as investigations, or assessing needs, or diagnosing problems.

Some talented and successful individuals get lousy grades in a classroom setting but turn out to be specialists or experts when they are left to their own devices to compile and collect information in their own way, at their own speed, in order to get a comprehensive picture of a situation to understand, explain, and predict certain principles, logic, philosophies, skills or techniques.

I’ve had some hi-tech clients that thrived in lab environments where they could experiment and tinker. They never read a book, and even failed certain college courses. Luckily, many of these individuals were able to find jobs in school helping a professor with certain research in order to pass. They could spend hours conducting trials or tests to find out about a subject phenomenon and see what happens. They easily fit into R&D work settings.

The real payoff understands why you learn and what the outcome of your learning is. Once we understand your innate pattern for learning, I can link it to specific jobs and careers that will reward you for what comes naturally and effortlessly to you. For More Information Please visit www.jobjoy.com

No comments:

Post a Comment