How To Empower Your Learners With Self-Directed Learning – Featuring 7 Strategies

How To Empower Your Learners With Self-Directed Learning

How To Empower Your Learners With Self-Directed Learning

Why Should You Invest In Self-Directed Learning (SDL)?

There is a multitude of reasons why employers should seriously consider investing in self-directed learning. However, the front-runners for why SDL is a must-have strategy include the following.

1. Learner Perspective

Today, learners wish to be more autonomous in when, what, where, and how they learn. A recent LinkedIn Workplace Learning Report concluded that more than 40% of gen Z, and a similar percentage of millennial employees, preferred self-directed workplace learning. For gen X and boomers, that percentage was 33%. As work shifts from the “work primarily at the office” model to the “work from anywhere” (a.k.a. “work from home,” WFH) paradigm, hybrid learners can only succeed in a self-directed learning environment. That’s because, like self-regulated hybrid working—where employees regulate their own work schedules based on organizational priorities—SDL empowers learners to set their own learning goals and craft a logical path to accomplish them.

2. L&D Team Perspective

With training budgets under constant review, L&D teams are continually looking to bring value-add to their services. SDL is a way for training teams to move away from mundane, micromanaging learning while enabling them to focus on vision, strategy, and learning effectiveness.

3. Organizational Perspective

Self-directed learning is imperative in the new hybrid workplace. To respond to dynamically changing business environments, businesses need a learning strategy focused on continuous learning and rapid and effective reskilling or upskilling. SDL delivers that objective.

In the new hybrid work paradigm, employers should not underestimate the importance of learner autonomy. Because employees embracing the WFH model are now more self-reliant in when and how they work, they expect similar levels of flexibility in workplace learning. In delivering those objectives, self-directed Learning increases motivation, improves performance, and fosters talent retention.

And there’s science behind why employers must invest in SDL too. The payback for making such an investment may be summed up in one word: motivation. Human motivation expert Daniel Pink advances a theory highlighting three aspects of motivation; autonomy, mastery, and purpose, which workplace SDL programs could potentially leverage.

 

Inspiration: Daniel Pink, Drive The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us & Lars Kollind, Jacob Bøtter, Unboss

There are several strategies of self-directed learning that cement it as a learning modality that delivers all three of those motivational aspects. It does so by:

Unlike strictly regulated learning, self-directed learning delivers on all three aspects of Pink’s motivational model.

What Is The Value Of Self-Directed Learning?

The new hybrid work environment changes many of the traditional employer-employee dynamics. Because work—and, by extension, work-related learning—occurs in a decentralized (off-premises, remote, virtual) setting today, SDL offers a multi-value proposition for learners, L&D teams, and businesses.

Value For The Learners

Depending on the models and strategies of self-directed learning that businesses embrace, SDL typically delivers better learning experiences, which result in more fulfilling learning for learners. At the end of the day, a more knowledgeable learner is a more productive employee!

Value For L&D Teams

Value For The Business

By strategically emulating successful strategies of self-directed learning, businesses ensure better learning outcomes from their investment dollars. This leads to better ROI from SDL programs.

How Do You Empower Your Learners With Self-Directed Learning?

A successful organizational SDL program requires implementing a multi-part strategy.

Part 1: Get The Basics Right

Successful SDL depends on three pillars that provide a strong foundation for all other elements of the strategy:

Part 2: Provide For Learning, Practice, And Ongoing Performance Support

Part 3: Checkpoint For Feedback And Evaluation

7 Strategies To Drive Self-Directed Learning

There is no one-size-fits-all strategy for implementing a successful organization-wide SDL program. Businesses must customize their strategies according to organizational culture and tailor their strategy for the best fit. However, here are some strategies of self-directed learning that you should consider:

1. Content Curation

Rather than casting a broad net of content, consider the use of AI-enabled tools to make learning recommendations, and for content curation.

2. Digital Learning Assistants

Use chatbots, voice bots, and Machine Learning digital assistants to nudge, remind, and steer learners on their path to self-directed learning.

3. Learning Awareness

Use targeted and timed mailer notices, info sessions, and push notifications—including email, text, and IM—to publicize learning opportunities.

4. Communities And Forums

Create online forums and communities (both moderated and self-moderated) of learners to share experiences, exchange ideas, and propose learning pathways to members.

5. Learning Portals

Establish an online (cloud-based) learning portal where learners may access relevant, curated, and up-to-date content and learning resources 24/7. It’s essential to continuously enhance and refresh the portal so learners keep coming back for more.

6. Enriched Content

In addition to internal content, use a wide variety of other third-party resources to deliver high-quality learning experiences. Some strategies of self-directed learning content resources include YouTube, TEDx, HBR, and popular microblogging sites related to your specific industry.

7. Learner-Driven Approach

Leverage social media platforms, such as Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn, as part of your SDL strategy. This approach must also include member-organized/hosted learning events and encouraging learner-generated content to stimulate peer-learning opportunities.

The best SDL programs are ones that learners across the organization fully embrace. And for that to happen, your approach to self-directed learning must include constant encouragement and rewards for those who make use of your SDL investment.

Parting Thoughts

Traditional Instructor-Led Training or self-regulated (mandated by organizations but managed by individual learners) learning models fall short in today’s hybrid work environment. Today, self-directed learning—where learners chart, discover, and fulfill their own learning destiny—is the best approach to learning effectiveness. It delivers real-world benefits to learners, L&D teams, and businesses at every level.

I hope the strategies discussed in this article will help you design and implement your own SDL programs.

Meanwhile, if you have any specific queries, do contact me or leave a comment below.

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