Volume 13 Number 1 • 2000
Best Practice :
Systematic Instruction
by Mike Flaherty, The Rural Institute
Last May, Ravalli Services in Hamilton, Montana hosted a Systematic
Instruction seminar as part of its Montana Rural Employment Initiative
project. Roger Shelley and I, Organization Consultants with the
Rural Institute, conducted the workshop in this Best Practice
employment and training technique. What the training participants
learned was that Systematic Instruction, by definition and in
practice, is a remarkable tool.
Values and Application
Systematic Instruction is the brainchild of Marc Gold, a pioneer
in developing the "try another way" approach for teaching
people with disabilities. Marc Gold's values about people with
disabilities are at the heart of Systematic Instruction. He believed
that everyone is able to learn, although each of us acquires information
in a variety of ways. Our essential role as teachers or trainers
is to discover the ways that best convey information to the individual
learner. We began our seminar at Ravalli Services by emphasizing
these values. For Systematic Instruction to succeed, the teachers
must embrace the idea that everyone can learn and expect the learner
to succeed.
After discussing the values, we moved on to the application of
Systematic Instruction methods. The training participants were
the Ravalli Services's staff members who were learning how to be
the "teachers." In order to give the teachers a chance
to actually practice Systematic Instruction methods, we hired eight
people with disabilities to be "consultant learners" for
the workshop. The consultant learners were people receiving services
from Ravalli Services. The job of the teachers was to teach the
learners a specific task. In this case our demonstration task was
assembling a Bendyx bicycle coaster brake. Assembling a bicycle
brake is a complex task that involves a clear sequence of steps
that can be systematically organized. There is only one correct
way to assemble the brake in order for it to work. The teacher's
role is first to discover how the learner learners best and then
to teach the steps involved in the task.
How Learners Learn
A key element of Systematic Instruction training is teaching the
teachers how to recognize which cues or prompts best help the individual
learner complete the complex task. Discovering which cues work,
in the least invasive way, requires teachers to remain attentive,
flexible, accepting, persistent, and gentle. Each learner may respond
to different cues. For example persons with visual impairments
may respond to auditory prompts while a person with deafness will
use visual cues. There are a variety of types of cues/prompts to
choose from:
Demonstration-showing the person how to perform the task by doing
it yourself
Verbal-telling someone how to do a task
Gestures-pointing- motioning with your hands
Physical Assisting-using "hand on hand" approach, guiding
the individual through the job steps
Other-written symbols- instructions, audio tapes, physical adaptations
to the task.
(Guide for Employment Specialists, Condon/Hammis 1997)
Marc
Gold's values also drive the decision about which cues to use.
For Gold, natural is always best. Natural cues, therefore,
are preferred. Mike Callahan, President of Marc Gold Associates,
use the Seven Phase Sequence Guidelines that outline the most natural
and non-invasive ways to guide the learner through the task.
Prompting and redirection springs from the most natural methods
that occur in the workplace. The ultimate value of applying Systematic
Instruction is it allows the natural environment of the work place
to provide cues.
Seven Phase Sequence
# 1 Determine Natural Ways (Culture, Methods, Contents, Assisting
Relationships, Procedures)
# 2 Determine Natural Means (Training Approaches, Motivating Strategies,
Rules)
# 3 Identify & Enlist Natural People (Supervisors, Co-Workers,
Mentors)
# 4 Facilitate/Train (With Support From Job Trainer)
# 5 Support/Assist/Substitute For Natural People (Other Co-Workers,
Job Facilitator)
# 6 Reconsider Natural Means (Determine Approaches Work Best,
Are Some Motivating Strategies Working Better Than Others?)
# 7 Adapt/Modify/Change Natural Ways (What Works, What Needs
Adaptation) (Callahan & Garner, 1997).
Ultimately this relies on the efforts of teachers to diligently
and consistently strive to uncover ("trying another way")
the best teaching methods. "Trying another way" keeps
options open and allows teachers to explore opportunities that
might have never been utilized.
The teachers need to recognize that as they use prompts/cues to
teach the learners and guide them through new skills, they also
need to start planning on how to fade those cues to maximize the
learner's independence and minimize dependence on the teacher/trainer.
The learner focuses on the work task itself, not on the teacher
or on the relationship with the teacher. The principle benefit
to professionals using Systematic Instruction is it reduces training
and fading time.
Results of the Seminar
The most remarkable element of this training was the interaction
of teachers and learners. Perhaps the most important by-product
of successfully learning new skills was the growth of pride and
self-reliance in each of the consultant learners. This demonstration
seminar afforded the consultant learners the opportunity to learn
a complex task in a brief amount of time. The brake assembly exercise
also proved to enlighten the teacher/staff members to the untapped
learning potential of all the consultant learners participating
in the exercises. Consultant learners demonstrated their newly
learned skills with justifiable pride to both staff and their peers.
Once again Systematic Instruction proved to be a Best Practice
training technique.
Systematic Instruction is the most effective tool we have for
teaching complex tasks. For training on Systematic Instruction,
contact the Rural Institute Training Department at (877) 243-2476,
toll free or Marc Gold Associates, Mike Callahan, President at(228)
497-6999 or micallahan@aol.com.
References
Callahan, M.& Garner, J. (1997) Keys to the workplace. Baltimore:
Brooks Publishing.
Condon, E., Griffin, and Hammis, D. (2000) Guide for employment
specialists. Missoula, MT: The Rural Institute/The University of
Montana.