Author Profile Picture

Emma Sue Prince

Unimenta

Director

Read more from Emma Sue Prince

googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1705321608055-0’); });

Training practitioners in delivering soft skills

default-16x9

There are loads of train the trainer qualifications out there in the L&D world - everything from coaching to being an accredited trainer for a particular specialism. So is there room for another one? Yes, I believe there is. Soft skills are a core part of most trainers' work, yet this is still a largely unregulated industry. Demand for soft skills (an umbrella term, I know!) is soaring - from Malaysia to Madrid, the UK to the USA, China to Canada, soft skills are desperately sought. Governments are investing in employability schemes (of which soft skills are always a key component) and individuals invest in this area of personal development, perhaps because they know that it is these skills which will ultimately give them the competitive edge in this crazy climate of economic uncertainty, fierce competition and rapid change.

Perhaps it is useful to define first what 's understood by soft skills before looking at a qualification for trainers. When I ask people to define soft skills for me, they will come out with things like working in a team, leadership, negotiation skills, communication styles, public speaking skills and many more. Dig deeper and they start to pull out more specific competences such as being resilient, curious, taking risks, being adaptable and creative. and many others. These are not skills that are taught consistently or well in most mainstream education systems, yet they are the very skills that will allow us to get ahead, work well and enable organisations and individuals to thrive.

In January this year we piloted a postgraduate certificate in delivering soft skills and experiential learning, fully validated by Roehampton University. The programme was challenging and incredibly demanding for both facilitators and the participants. The pilot participants came from a range of backgrounds with a wealth of experience and other  L&D qualifications  between them. They included a Church of England lay minister, seasoned corporate trainers and a lecturer in social media as well as a secondary school teacher. Several of them felt that the programme consolidatesdand affirmed all their experience and existing qualifications. All of them said that they have never been so challenged or stretched by any qualification.

As part of their assessment process all participants were required to try out new methodologies like applied improvisation, masks as metaphor, singing and many other experiential learning activities. I say 'new' methodologies because each participant is actively encouraged to stretch themselves and try out new things within their current training environments. The gold standard for the 'soft skills industry' comes from the academic robustness underpinning everything they do. This includes defining experiential learning and soft skills, designing needs analysis and training programmes (often with different client groups than the ones with which they normally work), best practice facilitation skills, how to get learners to reflect (key for building self-awareness as many experiential learning activities tend to focus on the activity without the necessary reflection part), measurement, coaching skills, assessment, evaluation. All of this is assessed through an extensive portfolio at Masters' level - this PG Cert earns 60 Masters' credits. And another important part of this programme is, of course, the participants' own personal development and reflection processes.

In future we hope to include APL (advance prior learning) on the course so that those with coaching qualifications and other credentials can have these formally recognised.

Our next London-based programme starts 19th October 2013. It's a mix of face-to-face, webinar, blended learning and training practice. Later this year, we intend to run programmes in Romania and India too.

If you're interested in knowing more, we'd love to hear from you. Or find out more here at www.unimenta.com under professional development.

Author Profile Picture
Emma Sue Prince

Director

Read more from Emma Sue Prince
Newsletter

Get the latest from TrainingZone.

Elevate your L&D expertise by subscribing to TrainingZone’s newsletter! Get curated insights, premium reports, and event updates from industry leaders.

Thank you!