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Welcome
What goes up but never comes down?
Your age
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Welcome
What has to be broken before you can use it?
An egg
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UGC Development
Advanced Creative Learning Portfolio
Session will be recorded
This session is being recorded for accommodation purposes and not posted
By continuing to be in the session you are consenting to be recording and having the video available on SLATE
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Agenda
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Welcome & administrative updates
Gibbs Reflective Model
SMART Goals
Upcoming Deliverables
UGC Development Project
Recap from last week
Course Overview
Weekly Schedule | Questions
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Recap from last week |
Personal Identity
Intellectual Identity
(Learning & Growth)
Professional Identity
World – here I come!
Advanced Creative Learning Portfolio pulls together a story through reflections of your BBA Journey
Intentionally weaving Undergraduate Competencies throughout assignments & assessments
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Personal
Identity
Reflection – who am I now?
How have I developed/changed?
How can I give back as a Senior student?
How can I give back socially?
Giving Back
Intellectual Identity
Promoting my discipline
Incapsulating your academic learnings, deliver a workshop on educating others on what they should know abut your discipline: HR, Finance, Supply Chain, Marketing or Accounting
Discipline
Showcase
Professional Identity
Showcase (tradeshow style)
Online portfolio, interview ready presence
LinkedIn profile
Reflections and enhancements from co-op course
Networking
Professional
Professional Creative Learning Portfolio
Similar to CLP1 this course is about Competency and Identity development vs content development
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Capstone project
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How
In class activities
Reflections
Evidence of growth
Artifacts
Development of Undergraduate Competency
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Creative Learning Portfolio
Intellectual Identity
BBA Journey
Personal Brand
Professional
Identity
Personal Identity
My CLP
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Course overview |
UGC Discussion Post
UGC Workshop
UGC Plan
UGC Status Update
UGC Final Presentation
Personal Brand & CLP Draft
Personal & Professional Identity
Intellectual Identity
Intellectual Identity Workshop
UGC Development
Creative Learning Portfolio Workshop
UGC Development Content is added to the Final CLP
UGC Development (25%)
Final CLP (25%)
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What?
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Assignment | Weight |
UGC: (25%) Discussion post (Goal) Plan Status Update Final Presentation | 54412 |
CLP Draft | 5 |
Personal Brand Research | 10 |
Personal ID Reflection | 10 |
Professional ID Definition | 10 |
Intellectual ID (Showcase) | 15 |
Final Portfolio | 25 |
100 |
Submitted as 1 assignment
Submitted as 1 assignment
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Undergraduate Competency Development Project(UGC Development Project) |
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BBA Undergraduate Competencies (Review)
Why are UGC important?
The Future of Jobs: 2025 Outlook
Technology impact on job types
85 million jobs displaced/replaced by Artificial Intelligence
97 million new/replacement jobs will emerge that required adaptation
40% of core job skills will change
50% of all employees will need training on skills that don’t exist yet
These competencies are more important than the technical skills
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Source: http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_Future_of_Jobs_2020.pdf
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Get Let’s Discuss: Assignment #1(Discussion Post #1 – details on SLATE)
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Undergraduate Competency (UGC)Development Project con’t
Projects will require pre-approval
Use the sub-competencies to be specific and guide your S.M.A.R.T goal
Projects should be professional
Projects will not be approved that focus on these competencies:
Collaboration & Leadership
Oral & Written Communication
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Undergraduate Competency (UGC)Development Project con’t
Projects that will not be permitted:
Cooking or baking
Reading books
Professional Development Studying (certifications)
Going to the Gym
Losing weight
Puzzles
Learning a new Language
There is a research component to this assignment
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This project is about the development of your COMPETENCY not the completion of your project
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Behaviours (sub-competencies)
Competency
Focusing on the behaviours (sub-competencies)will help you focus your goal
Focus on ONE behaviour (sub competency)
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Development 101
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Link to video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ncjFqrXj0_Y
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Ingredients for Development and Growth
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Understand the Process
Failure is a Given!
Understand the Process
Failure is a Given!
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Ingredients for Development and Growth
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Activate a Growth Mindset
Get Gritty
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Ingredients for Development and Growth
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Fear
Aiming too Big
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Ingredients for Development and Growth
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Keep Records
Get Out of Your Comfort Zone
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Ingredients for Development and Growth
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Make Adjustments Along the Way
Get Some Help
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Ingredients for Development and Growth
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Find the Meaning
Connect the Dots
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Assignment Tip:
Incorporate assessments from CLP1 (Learning styles, MBTI, Grit/mindset)
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PART A from rubric
personalized and makes connections with other concepts discussed (example: Learning Styles)
linked to the development of the Undergraduate Competency
research of content to development of the competency
application of the Gibbs reflection model
evidence of development and has a critical analysis to the original plan created
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Using in your UGC Development Assignment-
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Gibbs Reflective Learning Cycle |
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Using this 6 step model should help to identify your strengths, areas for development and actions you can take to enhance your professional skills – specifically your Undergraduate Competency.
Steps 1 – 3 relate to what happened during the experience (your project)
Steps 4 – 6 focus on how you could improve on the experience and outcome in the future.
Using in your UGC Development Assignment-
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Gibbs Reflective Learning Cycle
One of the most famous cyclical models of reflection leading you through six stages exploring an experience: description, feelings, evaluation, analysis, conclusion and action plan.
Gibbs' Reflective Cycle was developed by Graham Gibbs in 1988 to give structure to learning from experiences. It offers a framework for examining experiences, and given its cyclic nature lends itself particularly well to repeated experiences, allowing you to learn and plan from things that either went well or didn’t go well. It covers 6 stages:
Description of the experience
Feelings and thoughts about the experience
Evaluation of the experience, both good and bad
Analysis to make sense of the situation
Conclusion about what you learned and what you could have done differently
Action plan for how you would deal with similar situations in the future, or general changes you might find appropriate.
This model is a good way to work through an experience. This can be either a stand-alone experience or a situation you go through frequently, for example meetings with a team you have to collaborate with. Gibbs originally advocated its use in repeated situations, but the stages and principles apply equally well for single experiences too. If done with a stand-alone experience, the action plan may become more general and look at how you can apply your conclusions in the future.
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SMART Goals(Review from CLP1) |
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What is a SMART Goal?
A SMART goal is a SINGLE SENTENCE statement that answer the questions
IS IT
Specific?
Measurable?
Action-Oriented?
Realistic?
Time-Bound?
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SMART Goal Development – Example
Goal Statement:
Join the BBA Council by Week 1 next semester
IS IT
Specific?
Measurable?
Action-Oriented?
Realistic?
Time-Bound?
It is NOT 5 sentences explaining what it is or the steps in achieving the goal
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Here are some examples of goals that are NOT SMART
S: I will get at least 80 on my Business law class.
M: The final mark will be showing on my grade report after this semester finished.
A: I will attend to the PAL session every week.
R: It is possible as long as I follow my study schedule.
T: Attending PAL session this Wednesday.
S: Develop Accessing and Analyzing Information competency by researching and analyzing a new topic of study each month.
M: I am able to measure my development by completing another self-assessment in a couple of months
A: I have the resources and mindset that make this goal attainable.
R: Regular research and analysis will help me achieve my main goal, which is the development of the Accessing and Analyzing Information competency.
T: I would like to achieve my goal by the end of the semester.
S: Improve Initiative/Entrepreneurship competency by opening up a small business for an idea that I have had for a long time.
M: Opening/Registering my small business will be a clear indication if I have achieved my goal.
A: I have studied and researched the associated risks and opportunities of opening up my small business, and my research suggests that this goal is attainable.
R: Opening my small business is relevant in achieving my main goal, which is to improve my Initiative and Entrepreneurship competency.
T: My small business should be registered by the end of this course.
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Include an action verb or steps to take to accomplish the goal
Do something concrete
Is the objective precise and well-defined?
Is it clear?
Can everyone understand it?
How will we know when the goal has been completed?
What evidence is needed to confirm it?
Have you stated how we’ll judge whether it’s been completed?
Is it possible to perform the goal
How sensible is the objective in the current business situation?
Does it fit into the overall company plan?
Is there a deadline?
Is it appropriate to do this work now?
Are there review dates?
ACTION-ORIENTED
REALISTIC
TIME-BOUND
SMART Goal Development
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M
A
R
T
SPECIFIC
MEASURABLE
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A SMART Goal is ONE sentence that incorporates all elements of the goal
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Improve my oral and written communication skills (Base Goal)
Improve my oral and written communication skills through the BBA Council, Enactus, and Toastmasters clubs
Improve my oral and written communication skills by joining the BBA Council, Enactus, and Toastmasters clubs
Join the BBA Council
Join the BBA Council by Week 1 next semester
Join the BBA Council, Enactus, and Toastmasters clubs
ACTION-ORIENTED
REALISTIC
TIME-BOUND
SMART Goal Development – Example
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M
A
R
T
SPECIFIC
MEASURABLE
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A SMART Goal is ONE sentence that incorporates all elements of the goal
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Sample 1
Goal: “I want a raise”.
Good SMART Goal: “By December 1st of 2022, I will have positioned myself to ask for a raise of a minimum of 10% of my salary by cutting my department’s budget by 10% and increasing my department’s sales by 10%.”
Sample 2
Goal: “I want to lose weight”
Good SMART Goal: “I want to lose 30 lbs by April 15th 2023. I will perform a half hour of cardio and half hour of strength training per day, 5 times a week and I will only eat starchy carbohydrates 3 times a week.”
Sample 3
Goal: “I want to write a book”.
Good SMART Goal: “I want to write a work book on “How to add 10 years to your life” that is at least 150 pages in length and get it completed by June 30th 2009. I will write at least 4 pages every weekday until I complete the book.”
Unacceptable submission example
S: Write a workbook
M: that is 150 pages
A: 4 pages every weekday
R: 4 pages every weekday
T: By June 30
Remember it is NOT 5 sentences explaining what it is or the steps in achieving the goal
Due this week
Upcoming Deliverables
Complete discussion post #1
Review instructions on SLATE as there are 2 components and due dates
Watch for feedback on your discussion post to confirm if you need to attend the UGC Workshop
Review feedback from post #1
This will provide you direction for next week
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Complete the Getting to know you Quiz on SLATE
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