The Real Education Gap

Chief Learning Officer’s January 2012 issue contained a relevant article on “The Real Education Gap”.  The article describes the lack of communication, collaboration, creativity and critical thinking skills present in today’s workforce.  The article suggests that “82% of American schools fail to teach curricula that imbue students with the skills leadership demands.”  One could argue that school should (and are) teaching students reading, writing and math.  The challenge lies in the need for other skills to excel in today’s modern workplace and global arena.

The 2010 American Management Association (AMA) Critical Skills Survey uncovered the need for the “Four C’s”:

  • Critical thinking and problem solving
  • Effective communication
  • Collaboration and team building
  • Creativity and innovation. 

The most important of the “4C’s” is communication, which includes thinking clearly, figuring out what information is most important and then communicating back clearly.  Given my experience in training and education, I believe it would be fairly simple to practice these skills, even with existing content.  Revising content so that is culminates in real-life, practical application would be an easy fix for organizations. 

Ultimately, if practitioners ask the question “How does this training change behavior?” it is more likely the content will have some practice and skill development built into the design.  The article concludes with “organizations that develop their people have more success across all performance metrics.”  I think this is an obvious insight because as the old adage goes:  Don’t worry about training people that then might leave, instead worry about not training employees and having them stay! 

No One is Here Except All of Us

I read a lot of books.  At any given month, I lumber through at least seven books.  With my book reviews for Portland Book Review and Elle, and books that I have read reviews about, I always have a long list of books to read.  Often friends tell me I should blog about all the books I read.  It is a great suggestion, but not one that I find I am able to do consistently.  But today, I found the discipline to write about a book I am currently reading called “No One is Here Except All of Us” by Ramona Ausubel.  She is an accomplished writer, as far as I can tell from the book jacket, but it appears this is her first novel.

I have a particular interest in books centered around WWII, especially the Holocaust.  I think my interest centers around how such a horrific event could happen…how could perfectly normal people become such vicious monsters to their neighbors?  It really is mind-boggling.  Ausubel writes with such beauty.  Some of her passages are just incredible.  Of course, now that I want to share them, I cannot find them in the book.  I need to start marking my books when I find an especially tantalizing group of words!

Ausubel’s story surrounds a Garden of Eden of sorts.  There is a community of about 100 people tucked away by a river.  They are virtually untouched.  They have not been affected by the war at all.  One day a stranger arrives and although she integrates into the community, as the reader, you know this entry will be the catalyst for change in  the peaceful, tranquil community.  The stranger and narrator (a twelve year old girl) reason to the group, that they can start the world over again…and so this book is a bit mystical, too.  Alas, the “real” world does not stop or allow the imagined world to reign, and so the story progresses into the depths of reality during war-driven times.  Read on to find out what happens.

The Paris Wife

Just started reading The Paris Wife last night.  I can usually tell immediately if I am going to like a book and this book appears to be a winner!  It reminds me of Loving Frank, which was an excellent book.  McLain’s writing is beautiful…simple yet expressive.  I feel like I am sitting at the table with Ernest and Hadley, his first wife.  I don’t know much about Hemingway so I look forward to being entertained and learning a little, too!

1Q84

I finished 1Q84 yesterday.  There were times I loved the book and other times I asked myself,  “Why am I reading this?!”   Oftentimes, my head was spinning while I was trying to keep track of all the details…details that were excruciatingly painful at the beginning of the book. It took me about 300 pages before I was hooked  by the combination of mystery, fantasy and surprising love story of sorts.    Below is a  synopsis of the story.  I have submitted my review to Portland Book Review and the editor will take it from there.

Murakami’s book opens with Aomame walking down an emergency exit on a busy Tokyo expressway.  This unusual exit leads her to a parallel world that is not immediately evident until she notices some strange events, including two moons in the sky.  1984 becomes 1Q84 (with the Q signifying Question).  Aomame is a sports instructor by day but a one night stand, crazed assassin by night. Aomame is financially supported by a reclusive, rich dowager with her own need for revenge.  The story also introduces us to Tengo, a math instructor and part-time fiction writer.  Tengo experiences his own oddities when he works with a 17 year old that runs away from a cult that her parents lead.  Tension and danger builds as Tengo and the 17 year old write and publish a novel that reveals too much for the cult’s comfort.  Mysteriously, Aomame and Tengo are linked from the fifth grade and must meet again to return to 1984.

Recent Great Books

I love to read!  I read about 100-150 pages a night after I put the girls to bed.  I have always been a voracious reader.  Since I did not grow up with a television,  I never gained the habit of mindlessly sitting in front of the tv every night.   I review books (fiction and nonfiction) for Elle Magazine and a variety of genres for Portland Book Review.  People always ask me “What good books have you read lately?”  So I am posting a few of my recent favorites.

Hotel at the Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie Ford

The Odds by Stewart O’Nan

The Story of Beautiful Girl byRachel Simon

Long Drive Home by Will Allison

22 Britannia Lane  by Amanda Hodgkinson

Faith by Jennifer Haigh

The Condition by Jennifer Haigh

Pictures of You by  Caroline Leavitt

Next to Love  by Ellen Feldman

The Girl Who Fell from the Sky  by Heidi Durrow

The Secret Language of Flowers  by Vanessa Diffenbaugh

The Island by Victoria Hislop

The Violets of March by Sarah Jio

The Buddha in the Attic by Julie Otsuka

The Beautiful Life by Helen Schulman

Send me some of your recent favorites.  As soon as I finish reading and reviewing IQ84 (925 pages!), I will have time to read since I am not writing any reviews December 16-January 16.