Technical Training Doesn’t Have to Hurt
Technical audiences are wonderful. They'll sit through just about anything. Most of the time they'll even take notes feverishly. At worst, they'll quietly nap. But let's not take advantage of a good thing.
Technical Training Can Be Fun.
We've had lots of luck with two unique types of activities:
§ Colorforms presentations
§ Technobabble role plays
Colorforms Presentations
Smaller versions of these were very popular in the 50's as a kid’s toy. They're plastic sheets that are cut and drawn to represent anything you want (e.g., elements of a flow chart, system components). These cutouts easily stick to the white boards you see in most conference or training rooms. Don't limit yourself to having only instructors use them during presentations. Also let students use them in individual or group exercises to develop their own flow charts or network diagrams. Try them. You'll add a wonderful graphic dimension to your technical courses.
Technobabble Role Plays
We use these for training both sales and support audiences who interact with customers who may be more technical than themselves. Three people are involved in each role play: a customer, a sales/support person, and an evaluator. The customers job is to trip the sales/ support person by throwing around all the "technobabble" (e.g., names, abbreviations, and acronyms) they can to throw their opponent off-base. The sales/ support person's job is to use their knowledge and job tools provided in the training to translate what the customer said and not get thrown off-track. The evaluator measures how well each is doing.
Sound interesting? This technique also works well as an afternoon pick-me-up!
Copyright 2007, Joel Gendelman
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