Some books show you how to structure experiential learning. Other books give you a showcase of experiential initiatives. Few books have effectively combined experiential theory and practice. Until now! Ed Rose assembles a framework for learning-by-doing; then he gives you active, practical exercises you'll use right away.
Rose enables you to:
- Evaluate team-development needs
- Build an environment of trust and recognition
- Encourage adaptability and readiness for change
- Use simple and inexpensive props with maximum effect
- Conduct successful post-exercise debriefs . . . and much more!
"I was simply blown away by the usefulness of this book in providing a pathway to building effective teams. 50 Ways To Teach Your Learner is an absolute must-buy for anyone dealing with the issues of teams."CHarvey Robbins, coauthor, Why Teams Don't Work
"Another home run for Ed Rose. This book is a fresh presentation of genuinely useful team development activities."CTim Rumsey, president, Dynamic Learning; author, Not Just Games: Using Experiential Learning to Drive Business Results
"Battling for the attention of the adult learner is a war that [Rose] knows how to win. Between the covers of this book there are more than fifty things to be learned and experienced. Read, share, and celebrate."CRay Green, CEO, Paradigm Learning
"Get off your seat and get active! Use these low-risk, low-cost activities to energize, excite, and build your team."CSivasailam "Thiagi" Thiagarajan, editor, Thiagi GameLetter; president, Workshops by Thiagi.
In the past, you've had to struggle to encourage active participation. First, you stumbled through developing your own training design. Then you waded through game books to find one with suitably dynamic, practical exercises. Now everything you need is in a single source. An active framework complemented by active initiativesC50 Ways to Teach Your Learner has everything you need!
About the Author
Ed Rose is currently training manager at Harris Semiconductor. He is the author of Presenting and Training with Magic and numerous team-building activities. He has thirty-two years' experience in manufacturing, has served as quality examiner for the State of Florida, and has published numerous papers on the subject of self-directed work teams.