Category: Cutting Edge

  • Blended Learning: Seven Lessons Learned through Experience

    Nancy Smith
    Nancy Smith, MA

    By Nancy Smith, MA

    In June of 2009, employees of the Washington State Administrative Office of the Courts gathered to hear the news about state budget cuts. Within minutes, State Administrator for the Courts Jeff Hall relayed that the money for the Presiding Judges conference had been eliminated from the budget. The Washington Court Education Services team had to figure out how to provide appropriate learning opportunities for this important group. The answer came a few months later when the State Justice Institute provided a grant of $25,000 to fund a test of a blended learning model for the courts. This grant took advantage of resources already on hand at the Washington AOC: Skilled educators, well-established processes, and the newly acquired web-conferencing system Adobe Connect Pro and associated eLearning software Adobe Presenter to help solve the problem of diminishing budgets.

    In this article, you will find a definition of blended learning, a description of the grant project, an outline of web-based learning capabilities used, and lessons learned for future blended learning projects.

    What constitutes blended learning? According to the Sloan Consortium, blended learning consists of courses or programs in which 30%-79% of the learning is offered online while the rest is face-to-face (Allen, Seaman, and Garrett, p. 5). To test a blended model for our courts, we envisioned three blended learning series consisting of 2-3 electronic learning modules and one single or part day face-to-face module. Using this model, travel could be limited to one day for most participants, hotel and meal costs could be drastically limited, topics could still be dealt with in some depth, while still providing some time for networking and collegiality.

    The Education Team proposed the creation of three (later increased to four) iterations of a blended learning model. For the electronic learning modules we combined either webinars, which are live (synchronous) instructor led sessions, or self-paced eLearning (asynchronous) sessions, followed by a face-to-face session conceived of as a capstone event. Important to the plan was the idea that all sessions needed to be interrelated and interactive, with ideas and concepts building on the ones previously taught. The face-to-face session was designed to allow the opportunity to synthesize, analyze, and evaluate the learning from the web-based events to create a tangible product learners could use. We used the word “product” very loosely to mean anything from action plans, forms, bench cards, and checklists to skills acquisition through role plays, discussion groups, coaching and the like. We wanted our face-to-face events to be used to enhance education in ways that are difficult to reproduce in web-based sessions.

    We designed our first iteration of the model for the presiding judges and their court administrators. With budget development as the topic, we presented two live webinars that talked about leadership, relationships, and processes both within and outside of the courts. We recorded the webinars for future viewing by those unable to attend the live event. The self-paced module consisted of a nuts and bolts approach to budget controls and performance monitoring, complete with exercises for practice. The last event, a face-to-face symposium, brought together judges and administrators to share concerns and ideas with elected and appointed officials from the executive and legislative branches of Washington State and local government.

    The second iteration, for courthouse facilitators, had a similar design, although the three electronic modules were more sequential than in the budget series. The facilitators learned and practiced techniques on the topic of Temperaments and Dealing with Difficult People.

    In the third iteration, we combined several traditional teaching methods with electronic learning modalities. With Search and Seizure as the topic, participants completed a reading and self-test, answered discussion questions, considered hypothicals and participated in a live discussion via web-conference for each of four learning modules. Learners accessed all parts of the series through an Adobe Connect curriculum which served as an online “one-stop” shop.

    Developing and teaching in the blended model proved to be so cost-effective that we were able to apply to SJI to continue the model testing with grant funds so far unused. Our fourth iteration is underway, and considers the topic Procedural Fairness. It is organized quite differently, and involves reading an article and completing a web-based court self-assessment, attending a live conference session with national speaker Judge Kevin Burke, participating in a webinar with Washington judges as facilitators, and completing the self-assessment a second time to gauge improvement. As can be seen from the contents of the learning series, the modalities used to present learning modules evolved with practice, and the order different modalities occurred varied as time went on.

    This evolution occurred for several reasons. First of all, we learned as we practiced and tested to add different methods to our repertoire. Thus, by round three, we had added readings, self-tests and discussion groups to the web-sessions, and used those sessions like a classroom discussion instead of a lecture. By round four, we added a web-based self-assessment designed to be completed twice and to function as a self pre-test and post-test for individual judges or courts.

    Thus, we arrive at lesson number one for creating blended learning: choose the modality to suit the learning objectives, not the other way around. Always choose the most effective means to teach your learning objectives. If, for example, the material requires working with content, not people, a self-paced module might be perfect. If your audience needs to access the information at their own pace, or at any time, self-paced is a good choice. If coaching is involved, face-to-face may be best. Wikis, threaded discussions, blogs and many other tools can be used. The possibilities are many, but the modality used should fit your learning objectives.

    Lesson number two: Whichever modality is chosen the learning needs to be interactive. As defined in Michael Allen’s Guide to e-Learning, instructional interactivity is “interaction that actively stimulates the learner’s mind to do those things that improve ability and readiness to perform effectively” (Allen, p. 94). This can be particularly challenging with self-paced learning, where there isn’t a live instructor. In a self-paced design, a read and click module will likely put learners to sleep. Strive to create modules where learners have to make decisions and choices through scenario based learning or simulations. For webinars, a talking head will drive learners directly to their email or other work. Create opportunities for interaction through polling, status checks, the chat pod, and in smaller sessions, by opening the microphone to audience members. Experts advise an interaction anywhere from every 3-5 minutes to every 6-7 minutes (Hofmann, p. 12).

    In addition to interactivity, ensure all the elements of your blend are coordinated. This is lesson number three. If for example you require a self-paced lesson prior to learners attending a classroom event, devise a way to make sure they have completed the module on time. Do not teach over again something you expect learners to know before they arrive in your classroom. You will frustrate those who did the work ahead of time, enable those who don’t, and waste valuable teaching time in unneeded review. By the same token, allow learners to skip parts of a series they already know (Allen, p. 88). For example, if a judge has worked extensively on a particular kind of case, why should she have to read the case again to advance through your curriculum? A quiz could work as a “test-out” and allow the learner to move on.

    Lesson four, make sure the technology works. Quizzes, pre-work, webinars, job aids, whatever your modality, it should function the way you expect it to. Things that function well at a central location with powerful servers and excellent internet capabilities do not necessarily work in a remote location. For example, we stopped using webcams in our webinars because while audio usually works fine, video takes a lot of bandwidth and can be problematic. Screen resolution and older software can also be issues. Sometimes it is the computer user who is the problem. Be flexible, try modules on computers away from your system, and test, test, test. That said, don’t be afraid to make use of technology because it might not work. If you do your homework, you will likely find a solution and be successful.

    Lesson five also has to do with success, and the lesson is be patient! You will find resistance to learning online among your clients. Gradually increase your offerings, teaching their use and publicizing them carefully. Guide your learners to accept that online learning can be just as effective as face-to-face learning by producing excellent learning modules in appropriate modalities. It will take time. We have found more judges are beginning to participate in webinars and there is greater acceptance of web-conferencing for meetings. Our court staffers often prefer self-paced modules because they can do them at their own pace when they have time. You won’t persuade everyone right away, but with time, solid learning opportunities, interactive modules, and well-coordinated events, you will eventually build your audience.

    You not only have to convince your audience, you also have to convince your faculty. Lesson six is train your faculty for their new role. For a self-paced module, they may fill the role of subject-matter expert while you do instructional design, while for a webinar, they should act more like a facilitator than a talking head. In a December 2010 Adobe event, trainer Ken Molay of Webinar Success provides valuable insights about presenting webinars in a recording called “Training Webinars 101”. A more advanced lesson on facilitating webinars comes from author Cynthia Clay in “Great Webinars: Crossing the Chasm to High-Performance Virtual Delivery”, sponsored by the eLearning Guild and recorded February 2, 2012. Consider asking your faculty facilitators to watch Mr. Molay’s presentation first, and as they build confidence, move them to Ms. Clay’s presentation. Follow the blogs from various eLearning publications to improve your skills and your faculty’s skills in this domain.

    Lesson seven is money talks, and as long as you have a web-conferencing system and eLearning development software, it can be cheaper to produce a blended learning event, or any online event, than face-to-face training. Given the choice between no training and eLearning due to lack of funding, our audience chose eLearning. We limited travel time and expense by holding our face-to-face events in locations easily accessible to large numbers of learners. In addition to fewer travel expenses, our webinars and self-paced events limit time away from the office and make learning more accessible.

    It is not easy to persuade judicial branch clients of the value of these new ways of learning. It takes research, planning, testing, coordination, and a new skill set to successfully put together blended learning events, or any online learning event. It might provide perspective if you keep these numbers in mind as you tackle the topic: approximately 5.6 million U.S. college and university students enrolled in one or more online courses in the fall of 2009, reflecting a 21% increase in online enrollment compared to only a 2% increase in overall student population in the same period (Allen and Seaman, p. 8). College and university administrators predict continued growth in this sector. These students represent our future court employees, lawyers, judges, and educators. Soon, I believe we will find our learners demanding online learning opportunities from us.

    Is blended learning always the best solution? No, not always, but appropriately planned and implemented, it can be the best approach in many situations.

    References
    1. Allen, I. E., Seaman, J., and Garrett, R. (2007) Blending In: The Extent and Promise of Blended Education in the United States, Sloan Consortium.
    2. Allen, I. E., Seaman, J. (2010). Class Differences: Online Education in the United States 2010, Babson Survey Research Group.
    3. Allen, M. (2008). Guide to e-Learning, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons.
    4. Hofmann, J., (2011). “Top 10 Challenges of Blended Learning,” Training Magazine p. 10-12.

    *****
    Nancy F. Smith joined the team at the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) in September 2008 as a Court Education Professional. She has worked in education for most of her career, including 14 years as a teacher at the community college and secondary levels in Tucson, Arizona. Prior to moving to the AOC, she assisted the Deans of Curriculum at the Evergreen State College in Olympia planning and producing the curriculum for Evergreen’s full-time programs. In a past life, she spent four years as an Army Intelligence Officer.

    At the AOC, Ms. Smith supports the Appellate Judges, County Clerks, Presiding Judges and District and Municipal Court Judges Education Committees. In addition, she enjoys running the Institute for New Court Employees in the fall. In June of 2010, Ms. Smith completed a certificate in Electronic Learning Design and Development at the University of Washington. She has organized a variety of webinar and self-paced learning modules for different groups supported by the AOC. In 2009, Ms. Smith was awarded a grant from the State Justice Institute to establish a model for blended learning (combining e-learning with face-to-face learning) for Washington Courts.

    Ms. Smith has broad experience in multi-cultural education, and has traveled widely in the United States and abroad. A French linguist, she earned her bachelor’s degree from the College of William and Mary in Virginia, and her master’s in French Language and Literature from the Université Libre de Bruxelles in Brussels, Belgium. She is a certified community college and secondary teacher. She also studied Spanish at the University of Arizona.

  • Cutting Edge: Personal Best

    There is a recent New Yorker article that asks how to be your best and in the course of that discussion addresses the issue of coaching for experienced practitioners (the article focuses on surgeons). There might, in fact, be implications for us and our profession.

    If you have a few minutes, it is an interesting read: “Personal Best” at New Yorker website

  • Cutting Edge – New Research Shows Strong Results for Vermont Integrated Domestic Violence Docket

    by Hon. David Suntag

    A newly released report by the Vermont Center for Justice Research demonstrated that an innovative three year (September 2007 – September 2010) integrated domestic violence docket (IDVD) court program decreased criminal recidivism while also significantly decreasing time from arrest to case resolution. According to the data, IDVD criminal cases resolved three times more quickly than the statewide average. At the same time, IDVD participants recidivated 54% less often than domestic violence offenders statewide. For the full report go here.

    Follow up analysis including process evaluation is being pursued. One area of particular interest concerns identifying the specific skills for judges to be successful in presiding over this type of non-traditional docket. Training needs for both judges and staff are being assessed with the goal of successfully replicating the program.

    OVERVIEW OF IDVD PROJECT

    After one year of planning and with minimal resources, the Bennington County, Vermont Integrated Domestic Violence Docket (IDVD) Project opened its doors at the beginning of September, 2007. The IDVD Project was developed to provide an immediate response to domestic violence events by coordinating Family and Criminal Division cases. The IDVD Project focused on: 1) protection and safety for victims and their children as well as other family members; 2) providing immediate access to community services and resources for victims, their children, and offenders to help overcome the impact of prior domestic abuse and prevent future abuse; and 3) providing an immediate and effective response to non-compliance with court orders by offenders.

    The IDVD Project operated as a special docket within the Bennington County Criminal/Family Division Courts. The IDVD Project initially handled all criminal division misdemeanor offenses, some felony offenses, all felony and misdemeanor violation of probation cases, and Family Division abuse prevention order (protective order) cases involving domestic violence. The IDVD Project also integrated related Family Division child custody matters, juvenile matters and child/family support matters whenever possible. Dedicated to the idea of One Family, One Judge, the IDVD Project was designed to allow a single judge, one day each week, to have immediate access to all relevant information regardless of the traditional docket and to gather all appropriate players at the table regardless of any traditionally limited roles. For example, the State’s Attorney’s (prosecutors) and Public Defender’s roles were traditionally limited to criminal matters. Nevertheless, they attended and participated in the coordinated case resolution efforts taking place even during abuse prevention order hearings, matters traditionally considered not to be within the State’s Attorney’s or Public Defender’s authority.

    By so integrating all DV related matters involving the same people, the IDVD Project was able to coordinate all court efforts toward the same goals of preventing further abuse and violence and overcoming the impact of prior abuse on the involved adults and their children. All orders were coordinated, case scheduling was expedited, and appropriate, comprehensive case resolution for all parties was the primary and immediate focus. The IDVD Project had as a goal to schedule hearings in the family’s related multiple cases, whether criminal or family, for the same time thus avoiding multiple trips to the court house for parties and witnesses. If there was non-compliance with any order, the program provided an immediate and effective response. If there was a need to modify any one order, the IDVD Project assured that all related orders, regardless of docket, were modified at the same time and remained consistent.

    Victim Safety

    Of paramount importance to the IDVD Project was the court’s ability to provide the victim with immediate access to a free attorney who specialized in matters of domestic violence on behalf of victims. In addition, a separate victim advocate and additional victim advocacy services were available. The local domestic violence advocacy organization was directly involved in the creation and planning of the IDVD Project and was always available to assist victims of domestic violence with safety planning and support services before, during, and after court proceedings.

    Service Delivery

    The IDVD Project was designed to quickly identify serious unmet needs for families in the court system and provide referrals to a comprehensive array of health and social services designed to meet the immediate and long-term needs of the family, including the victim, the offender, and their children. IDVD Project staff developed a relationship with community service providers and helped parties access those service providers on a court ordered or voluntary basis. The process involved a range of services including: arranging for free legal representation or advice; explaining court orders to self-represented parties or special needs parents who chose not to access legal services; making appointments for parents to immediately access supervised visitation or monitored exchange services; setting up prompt mental health, substance abuse or batterer’s education/counseling intakes and assessments resulting in prompt needs assessment reports to the court and all parties; providing all contact information for available service providers as well as actually making the service appointments for the family before they left the courthouse; negotiating with providers to obtain affordable services or available appointment times for the family, and/or follow-up calls and reports to advise the court and parties whether services were obtained; as well as other services as needed.

    Offender Accountability

    The IDVD Project sought to ensure offender accountability by relying on a comprehensive coordinated community response based on active participation of the court, criminal justice agencies, the community, and professional service providers to hold offenders accountable for their behavior. Within the context of the IDVD Project responses to non-compliance with court orders were swift, consistent, and proportionate to the violation and needs of the offender and victim. IDVD Project responses included: 1) immediate arrest for violation of any criminal or abuse prevention order; 2) additional appropriate criminal sanctions; and 3) referral to the batterers’ intervention program and/or other treatment or educational programs as appropriate. To ensure that offenders understood orders which were issued as well as their rights and responsibilities, public defenders provided assistance during the abuse prevention order process as well as the criminal process. In this manner, all parties had legal advice regardless of the type of case which initially brought those parties to the courthouse and regardless of their ability to hire counsel.

    The IDVD Project, in conjunction with the Probation and Parole Office, created a specialized criminal probation warrant which helped facilitate more effective and close monitoring of the defendant’s compliance with court orders. This enabled swift action by the Court when dealing with violations of probation. Probation and Parole officers assertively enforced judicial orders and conditions of probation. The response was immediate and generally resulted in immediate arrest and incarceration until the first appearance on a violation of probation. At that time all parties then attempted to reach a prompt resolution best designed to assure future compliance.

    COMMENTS FROM THE AUTHOR

    It has been my privilege to have worked with so many dedicated professionals to develop and implement such an innovative court docket. While the process of development was time-consuming and at times frustrating, it was also exciting and rewarding. Personally, it was the culmination of years of research and thought arising from decades of work within a criminal and family court justice system that was often clearly ineffective in addressing the complex dynamics of domestic violence in our state. I think we made progress. Although our initial goal was simply to make the process more effective for even one victim, offender or child, the latest research shows that we may well have created a process that addresses recidivism on a greater level.

    There is much yet to be done. What is clear is that judicial leadership and willingness to work outside the traditional judicial role without sacrificing fairness and due process is key to the success of any program like this. Developing a judicial education program that identifies willing and able judges and then teaches them the requisite skills will be crucial to any hope of expanding the program. Equally important will be identifying and teaching those skills needed for staff whose hands-on responsibilities so often make the difference between maintaining contact with the involved parties long enough to make a difference for them and their children or losing them again to the trauma of repeat abuse.

    If you would like more information on the Bennington Vermont IDVD project, contact Hon. David Suntag at david.suntag@state.vt.us.

    Judge David SuntagHon. David Suntag has been a Vermont Superior Court trial judge since 1990. He developed and led the Bennington IDVD project from 2007-2010, Vermont’s first integrated domestic violence court project. He is also a faculty member for the National Judicial College and has presented judicial education programs on various topics including domestic violence since 2004.

  • Unretirement: Innovative Uses of Web-based Technology for Baby-boomers (and others) Navigating Economic Downturn

    by Robert Boone (KY)

    The relatively new and increasingly used word unretirement conjures up many different thoughts and emotions. Applying reductionism, two of these emotions are as simple as the Facebook expressions “like” and “unlike.” Merriam Webster’s dictionary indicates origins of the term as early as the mid-1960s. But use of unretirement is still new enough that computer spell check does not even recognize the term and keeps suggesting use of the word retirement instead. At any rate, and for better or worse, the term unretirement exists because of the economic downturn in contemporary American society, and the acute need for the retirement-aged workforce to reconsider employment or re-employment options.

    According to Maestas (2004), “Nearly one-half of retirees follow a non-traditional retirement path that involves partial retirement and/or unretirement.” If you find yourself one of the “nearly one-half “ of retirees in the United States who will be seeking re-employment, or if you have had a long-term career and are now considering a career change or even advancement within your chosen profession, this article is the first in a series meant to help you navigate your way to a new career using web-based technologies.

    One clarification from the beginning: locating employment continues to maintain many vestiges of the traditional job hunting process of which baby-boomers and other age cohorts are intimately familiar. Hand-written follow up letters, firm handshakes, and feet-to-the-ground networking remain unparalleled in importance. There exist, however, innumerable opportunities for innovation and creativity within the traditional employment processes using social media and other electronic means. Though baby-boomers, and to a lesser extent other age cohorts, wince at the very mention of social media, these contemporary technologies greatly enhance one’s marketability. Current research indicates that only about one-third of baby-boomers utilize social media networking sites (see Hampton et al., 2011). [NOTE: Baby-boomers are defined as those individuals aged 46-64 who were born between 1946-1964.] They provide a prospective applicant with solutions to both stand out in the current challenging career climate, and more control over how professional information is transmitted to potential employers.

    Résumés, CVs and Portfolios: Websites Enhance Marketability
    Combining tradition and innovation, job seekers can add an additional dimension to hard copy résumés, curriculum vitae and portfolios by creating an on-line professional profile with existing websites such as LinkedIn, Facebook, and CareerLab.com. Each website exhibits unique advantages for the job search. Among these advantages are the ability to network with potential employers, locate employment and professional opportunities, aggressively market oneself (and others), and appear “near the top” in searches performed using Google and Yahoo. According to a recent study by the Society for Human Resource Management (2011), “More than half (56%) of the organizations currently use social networking websites when recruiting potential job candidates. This is a significant increase since 2008, when a little over one-third (34%) of organizations were using these sites as a recruiting tool.” Referencing the same study, the social networking website most used by organizations for recruitment in 2011 was LinkedIn, which was reportedly used by 95% of respondents. Facebook was the second most used social networking site for recruitment, with 58% reported usage among respondents.

    If you find yourself among the cohort that has yet to experiment with the aforementioned websites, please know that the websites are intuitive, offer excellent step-by-step instructions for developing and uploading online documents, can offer assistance in the event that difficulties arise, and best of all are either free or low-cost. And much like a professional job coach, they give a gentle nudge regarding the importance of keeping updated, professional documents on-hand even if you aren’t currently in the job market.

    Transitions
    Writing in the Journal of Computer-Mediated Communications, Boyd and Ellison (2007) define social networking sites as,

    “…web-based services that allow individuals to 1) construct a profile or semi-public profile within a bounded system, 2) articulate a list of other users with whom they share a connection, and 3) view and traverse their list of connections and those made by others within the system.”

    Embarking on the process of electronic networking and information sharing is less like a “new beginning” and more akin to a transition; you are intimately familiar with the data reflecting your life’s work, and use of social media simply vaults your information and expertise into a contemporary, easily accessed format. You can begin with what you already have: your portfolio, your résumé, your CV. This transition process generally takes just a few minutes and is a matter of copying and pasting your existing material into this new social media format. You will quickly find that several functions on LinkedIn, Facebook, and CareerLab.com are very familiar, including the ability to

    • Highlight current and past professional experiences. This function allows the job seeker to list dates of employment, position title, company name and location, along with examples of how you met or exceeded the responsibilities of those positions.
    • List educational attainment, professional affiliations, and interests.
    • Write an executive or professional summary

    Next, we seek to concentrate on functions of LinkedIn, Facebook, and CareerLab.com that are powerful tools for the job seeker. These functions, and resulting ideas, are by no means an exhaustive list of what can be accomplished using employment-driven social media. Instead, the following serves as a quick reference to aspects of social media that we have found particularly useful, especially for individuals just starting to explore new tools of the employability trade.

    LinkedIn
    According to a 2010 article appearing in CNN Money, “recruiters rely on the site [LinkedIn] to hire even the highest caliber executives.” The same article continues to explain the average user of LinkedIn “is a college-educated 43-year-old making $107,000 [per year]. More than a quarter are senior executives.”

    According to prdaily.com, “Executives from every Fortune 500 [firm] could be found on LinkedIn in 2010.” LinkedIn can be a very powerful tool in locating (or being located) for your next job. Below are several functions that will allow your LinkedIn account to help you achieve unretirement:

    • Make the most of the connections you have made during your career by requesting recommendations from colleagues. LinkedIn provides the ability to have recommendations published verbatim on your profile. This function allows potential employers to view, for example, what others have said about you, your work ethic, and the arenas in which you excel. Consider how imperative recommendations are to a salesperson’s ability to make a sale. In looking for a job, we take on some fundamental responsibilities of a salesperson, insofar, as we are “selling” our skills, experience, and potential. Accordingly, detailed recommendations from other experienced professionals can have a serious impact on our likelihood of locating employment. This recommendation function gives others the opportunity to assist you in selling what you have to offer, with LinkedIn providing the forum for you to transmit these recommendations to potential employers.
    • Build connections. These connections serve as valuable networking tools to find out about position openings, exchange information with potential employers, interact with other professionals, and to learn about company culture or the health of an industry. In fact, LinkedIn provides the ability to send messages to anyone with a LinkedIn profile. Although certainly no substitute for a formal follow-up letter delivered via traditional mail service, the ability to send messages can be a helpful means of following-up with an employer, directing the employer’s attention to your on-line professional portfolio, and standing out amid the many résumés that were undoubtedly received by the employer.
    • Perform “detective work” by locating information about hiring managers, including professional background, affiliations, references, and interests. Knowing this information could give you an advantage in an interview by providing tailored talking points. Additionally, you may be able to locate the individual who most recently had the job to which you are now applying. This data might be beneficial to determine how you “match up” to someone currently working with that company as well as provide insight into the overall organizational health and advancement opportunities.
    • Promote your blog or website by linking them to your LinkedIn account. In doing so, you can provide potential employers with great insight into your technical savvy by way of your website design, further examples of your excellent writing ability, or snapshots of public speaking virtuosity as demonstrated in video clips. Ultimately, this LinkedIn function allows candidates to showcase diverse abilities and accomplishments in a non-intrusive way, while providing more detailed information to employers about the repertoire of the applicant. For instance, I recently developed a website for my small business and linked the website to both my LinkedIn and Facebook accounts. My intention was not necessarily to market products, but to market my business model and to add a further dimension to my stated experience as a business owner. The result is an increased awareness among my social media contacts of my diverse skill set, community involvement, and productivity outside of my full-time employment in workforce development. I recently created a website for free utilizing Google sites (www.sites.google.com) and am in the process of creating a blog, also for free, utilizing Blogger (www.blogger.com). A quick search using Google or Yahoo will yield many more results for website and blog creation. You might want to consider purchasing a domain name for your site (this is generally a great investment for as little as $10.00 per year). This purchase might allow you to use your name or any name as your web address. For instance, the name of my business is Commonwealth Framing, after purchasing the domain name, my website is www.commonwealthframing.com.
    • Share an update. This function allows you to publish updates and attach files in order to inform your networks of your professional activity and productivity. For instance, you can attach a file containing a press release of an initiative you have been involved with. In doing so, you are providing an immediate update of your professional involvement in addition to directing attention to your LinkedIn profile. Facebook will also allow you to share an update with your networks. I recently shared a press release on LinkedIn and Facebook from my local paper. Sharing this information was important for at least three reasons: 1) It informed my networks of the progress I have made in my current position (my networks would not have otherwise read my town’s newspaper). 2) It provided some level of substantiation for my current position description and responsibilities as they appear on my LinkedIn and Facebook profiles. 3) It directed my networks to visit my profile, allowing for further advertising of my experience and skills.

    Facebook
    Facebook, because of its prevalent usage, has impacted the way individuals communicate.

    According to Facebook.com, there are 750 million active users of the social networking website. Due to its wide usage and helpful features, Facebook can be useful for someone seeking unretirement. Just last week, I posted a status update related to this article. My post read: “Robert Boone is exploring uses of social media for a workforce navigating economic downturn. Anyone have insight into how Facebook helped you, or someone you know, locate employment?” The comments received from my networks were varied. One person commented that she learned of a position vacancy from a Facebook contact. Through her contact, she was able create a dialogue about the position, submit her résumé to the hiring manager, and receive an interview and job offer. Without Facebook, she explained, she would not have known about the position vacancy. Another one of my contacts commented that he had not located a job via Facebook, but something better…his wife! Focusing on the job search, Facebook can allow you to:

    • Create an on-line photo and video portfolio. Facebook gives the job seeker the wonderful ability to post pictures and create albums related to projects you have been involved with. In addition, you can post video clips of lectures, presentations, video résumés, and award ceremonies directly to your profile, allowing potential employers to view your professional accomplishments.
    • Establish networks and begin professional dialogues. This is the key to using Facebook as a job search tool. You will need to develop a list of networks, also known as “friends” in Facebook language. From this list of networks, you can communicate via messages, wall posts, status updates, notes, or on-line chat. A friend used the status update feature to make the following update: “Is looking for job openings at XYZ Company. Does anyone have contacts there?” In response to the status update, he received messages with names of hiring managers. He then looked up the hiring managers on LinkedIn and sent out messages detailing his interest in working for the company. The managers had immediate view of his on-line portfolio. The following month he was offered a job.
    • Make wall posts and allow for comments. Central to every Facebook account is a wall that is used for postings and status updates. Utilizing this feature, you can post professional articles, advances in your field, and personal accomplishments to further encourage dialogue, comments, and networking. This feature helps you to be viewed by networks and potential employers as someone who stays up-to-date and who is passionate about their professional involvement and development.
    • Visit Facebook job boards. Many organizations of all sizes have a Facebook page. Often, these organizations will post job openings and other opportunities on their Facebook wall. Simply use the search function on Facebook to locate the organization of interest. Once the organization is located, scroll through their Facebook wall to search for job postings. For example, you can visit http://www.facebook.com/#!/MaysvilleCTC, scroll through announcements, and view a job posting that we posted on August 25 for Maysville Community and Technical College. On a side note, organizations generally use their Facebook page for press releases and to announce special initiatives and events. In reviewing this information, one can learn a great deal of helpful information about the organization. This information can prove to be useful as you prepare for an interview or simply gather more data about the organization. Two great Facebook pages to visit include The National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges and The National Center for State Courts.

    Career Lab
    CareerLab.com is another great on-line resource that allows the (soon-to-be) unretiree to develop an on-line presence for the job search. CareerLab.com allows the user to develop an executive profile that is especially helpful for its direction and organization. For example, your profile will have a series of tabs such as: Welcome, Contact, Job Targets, Experience, Interview, References, and Personal. Each tab adds direction and depth to your portfolio. As an employer searchers tab-by-tab, they have the opportunity to view a holistic snapshot of your professional life that cannot be captured in traditional résumés, portfolios, or CV’s.

    Helpful functions of the executive profile from CareerLab.com include:

    • The interview tab of your executive profile is arguably the most useful and unique function. This tab allows you to select and answer a series of interview questions ranging from “what is your definition of success” to “what is your typical workday.” These questions give you an advantage by providing a great forum to “discuss” what kind of an employee you are and what kind of employee you will be. Additionally, this function can allow you to tailor interview questions based on positions that you are currently seeking. It is a wonderful tool to take control of one of the most powerful commodities of the job search: the interview.
    • The ability to have a unique URL (web address) to include on business cards, e-mail signatures, stationary, job boards, Facebook, LinkedIn, even traditional résumés. This URL directs potential employers to your executive portfolio and widens your networks.
    • Along the same lines as widening your networks, the executive profile allows you to share your professional experience with others without loudly announcing your job search. This portfolio can be viewed as another method to exchange professional information with other professionals. Keep this networking mantra in mind: the more people you have working for you, the more likely you are to find work.

    So on a quiet Sunday afternoon as you contemplate your unretirement, career change or climb up the corporate ladder, settle down at your favorite PC without wincing and introduce the world (well, ok, at least a few targeted industries) with all that you have to offer!

    FURTHER ONLINE READING

    REFERENCES

    1. Boyd, D.M. and Ellison, N.B. (2007) Social network sites. Definition, history and scholarship. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 13: 201-230. doi.10.1111/j.1083-6101.2007.00393.x
    2. Hagel, J. & Brown, J. (2011, January 31). Five tips for better social networking. Retrieved September 2, 2011, from http://blogs.hbr.org/bigshift/2011/01/five-tips-for-smarter-social-n.html
    3. Hampton, Keith et al. Social networking sites and our lives. PewInternet. org. 16 Jun. 2011. Web. 15 Jul. 2011]
    4. Hempel, J. (2010, March 25). How linkedin will fire up your career. Retrieved September 2, 2001, from http://money.cnn.com/2010/03/24/technology/linkedin_social_networking.fortune/
    5. Maestas, N. (2004). Back to work: expectations and realizations of work after retirement. University of Michigan Retirement Research Center, Working Papers: 2004-085 http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/50534/1/wp085.pdf
    6. Sebastian, M. (2011, May 22). Inforgraphic: executives from every fortune 500 company can be found on linkedin. Retrieved September 2, 2011, from http://www.prdaily.com/Main/Articles/Infographic_Executives_from_every_Fortune_500_can_8338.aspx
    7. Society for Human Resources Management. (2011). Social networking websites and staffing. Retrieved August 31, 2011, from http://www.shrm.org/about/pressroom/PressReleases/pages/SocialNetworking.aspx

    Robert BooneRobert Boone serves in Workforce Development at TENCO Workforce Investment Board, Maysville, KY. Currently, Mr. Boone is working to develop and provide a variety of supportive services to nursing students enrolled in a Department of Labor funded training program that focuses on the career placement of dislocated, unemployed, and incumbent workers into medically underserved areas of Kentucky. Prior to this experience, Mr. Boone served as a department head for a long-term care and rehabilitation facility in Athens, GA. Mr. Boone’s interests include Economic and Workforce Development, Small Business Development, and Historic Preservation. Mr. Boone received his education from Morehead State University and The University of Georgia.

  • Cutting Edge – Best Practices for Handling Mental Competency Issues

    by Daphne A. Burns

    The National Judicial College is delighted to announce the fall launch of the Mental Competency – Best Practices Model website at www.mentalcompetency.org. The purpose of the Mental Competency – Best Practices Model is to present a body of practices deemed to be most effective and efficient for handling mental incompetency issues in the criminal justice and mental health systems. The Mental Competency – Best Practices Model provides practices, protocols, and other recommendations for the various stages in the criminal justice-mental health systems continuum, such as:

    • Practices and protocols for the initial competency hearing and order for competency assessment;
    • Competency evaluation and report, including what a judge may expect to see;
    • Competency treatment plan – to keep the judge and all the stakeholders apprised;
    • Practices and protocols for the hearing on the competency determination;
    • Competency restoration, including the judge’s role in the referral, staying apprised of the status, and complying with Jackson v. Indiana, 406 U.S. 715 (1972);
    • Standards and protocol for a hearing for the involuntary administration of medication in accordance with Sell v. United States, 539 U.S. 166 (2003);
    • Establishing a competency court or docket; and
    • Providing specialized education for judges, attorneys, and all of the stakeholders who handle competency issues.

    In addition to the Model, the website has related resources, including videos of mock competency hearings, and links to articles, books, studies, statutes, cases, and other helpful information in the mental competency area. In the coming months, the NJC will present a series of live webinars that will also be posted on the website.

    The website also features a blog to keep you apprised of new court decisions; legislative changes across the country, including implementation of best practices; educational offerings; new articles, books, studies and other releases; and other news and innovations in the mental competency area. We hope you will subscribe.

    For further information, visit the website at www.mentalcompetency.org, or contact the National Judicial College at (800) 25-JUDGE, or e-mail at competency@judges.org.

  • Cutting Edge: Best Practices for Handling Mental Competency in Criminal Justice Systems

    by Daphne A. Burns

    The U.S. Supreme Court has long held that the Constitution does not permit trial of an individual who lacks “mental competency.”1 The Court defines mental competency as someone who has “a rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against him” and “sufficient present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding.”2 Otherwise stated, a person “whose mental condition is such that he lacks the capacity to understand the nature and object of the proceedings against him, to consult with counsel, and to assist in preparing his defense may not be subjected to a trial.”3

    A startling 31 percent of women and 14.5 percent of men enter jail in the United States with a serious mental illness4; it is therefore not surprising that an estimated 60,000 competency evaluations are performed each year.5,6 The competency process generally entails a number of steps, beginning with the issue of the defendant’s mental competency raised at an initial screening or by the court, defense counsel or others; a competency evaluation by a psychologist or psychiatrist, which generally occurs in jail unless the person is initially diagnosed as psychotic or is a potential threat to him- or herself or others; treatment, which may include forced medications to restore competency in certain circumstances;7 inpatient or outpatient competency restoration; a hearing and finding by the court that the defendant is or is not restored or restorable; and trial or a plea if the defendant is restored—or, depending upon the charges and other factors, civil commitment proceedings if he or she cannot be restored to mental competency.

    Each of these steps in the competency process involves coordination with the court, counsel, law enforcement, jailers, evaluating psychologists or psychiatrists, mental health facility or hospital, treating psychologists or psychiatrists, inpatient or outpatient competency restoration services, social workers and others. When the steps are not adequately linked and performed—when the system is not functioning properly—horror stories abound such as defendants languishing in jail for months while waiting to be evaluated; defendants jailed for months while waiting to be transferred to a mental health facility for observation, evaluation, and treatment; or defendants “decompensating”—suffering the exacerbation of the mental disorder—while awaiting trial or further proceedings—defendants who will need to be “re-cycled” through the competency restoration process. A poorly functioning competency process will also further strain county and state budgets—especially given the increasing number of arrestees who appear to lack competency.

    The Bureau of Justice Assistance component of the Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice recently awarded the National Judicial College a grant to devise a best practices model for handling mental competency issues in criminal justice systems. The NJC is working with experts from across the country to devise a best practices model. Once the model is complete, which we anticipate to be later this year, the model will be published on a website (www.mentalcompetency.org) along with a plethora of supporting information and resources. Next year, the NJC will present a series of webinars on how to utilize or implement the best practices model. The NJC is also available to provide training and technical assistance to states, jurisdictions, or courts interested in the model or various aspects.

    If you or judges, administrators, or others in your state are interested in receiving information about the best practices model for handling mental competency, including receiving e-mail when the model is published and webinars are scheduled to take place, please contact Daphne Burns at burns@judges.org or 916.676.9876. We would be delighted to add you to the e-mail list for updates as the project unfolds.

    1 Dusky v. U.S., 362 U.S. 402 (1960) (per curiam); Drope v. Missouri, 420 U.S. 162 (1975).

    2 Dusky, 362 U.S. at 402.

    3 Drope, 420 U.S. at 171.

    4 ConsensusProject.org, Council of State Governments, Justice Center Releases Estimates on the Prevalence of Adults with Serious Mental Illnesses in Jails, http://consensusproject.org/downloads/prevalence.brief.pdf (last visited Sept. 1, 2010).

    5 Patricia A. Zapf and Ronald Roesch, Guide to Best Practices for Forensic Mental Health Assessments: Competency to Stand Trial (forthcoming).

    6 According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, 767,620 inmates were in the custody of county and city jail authorities as of mid-year 2009. See, Press Release, Bureau of Justice Statistics (June 3, 2010), http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/pub/press/jim09stpr.cfm (last visited Sept. 1, 2010).

    7 Sell v. United States, 539 U.S. 166 (2003).