Difference between revisions of "After Action Review"
From Learning and training wiki
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*'''Sharing the learning''': As well as distributing your account of the After Action Review to the project team, you need to consider who else could benefit from it. You also need to make your learning more widely available so that people working on similar projects in the future might also benefit. | *'''Sharing the learning''': As well as distributing your account of the After Action Review to the project team, you need to consider who else could benefit from it. You also need to make your learning more widely available so that people working on similar projects in the future might also benefit. | ||
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+ | =='''Facilitator's Role'''== | ||
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+ | The facilitator plays three main roles which are the follows: | ||
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+ | '''Leadership role''' | ||
+ | *To focus on providing a direction to the group when the leader fails to fulfill their role | ||
+ | *To stimulate and encourage constructive debate between group members | ||
+ | *To support members of the group, helping them to bring information, and to build new ideas | ||
+ | *To participate when the group is interacting poorly or in the wrong direction, by promoting new discussion | ||
+ | *To promote team building in a cohesive, interactive, and productive way | ||
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+ | '''Referee role''' | ||
+ | *To regulate and maintain order of the group discussion, discouraging participants from talking at the same time | ||
+ | *To protect members, and ensure that all contributions to the discussion are treated equally | ||
+ | *To deal with problems, and to control people within the group, allowing everyone to participate freely | ||
+ | *To manage the time, and adhere to the meeting timetable ensuring completion of the agenda | ||
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+ | '''Neutral role''' | ||
+ | *The facilitator is neutral, and pragmatic, because he takes a detached look at the discussion | ||
+ | *He encourages feedback, promoting discussion of each point of the meeting<ref> [http://www.library.nhs.uk] (14 August 2008) </ref> | ||
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+ | =='''Print the Document'''== | ||
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Revision as of 14:45, 28 August 2008
AFTER ACTION REVIEW |
Briefing or analysis following the completion of an activity to allow employees and leaders to see whether anything could have or should have been done differently. It is a process developed to help teams to learn quickly from their successes (good practices) and failures (lessons learned) and share their learning with other teams and it should be performed after each identifiable event or milestone, and becomes a live learning process to help support learning organizations. It involves conducting a professional structured and facilitated discussion after a task or project has been completed to review what should have happened, what actually happened and why it happened; this allows participants to learn how to sustain strengths and improve on weaknesses in subsequent tasks or projects.[1] See also: Action Review |
Orginizing an After Action Review |
StepsBefore
During
Facilitator's RoleThe facilitator plays three main roles which are the follows:
Leadership role
Neutral role
Print the Document |
References
- ↑ www.library.nhs.uk(14 April 2008), Wikipedia (14 April 2008), www.au.af.mil (14 April 2008)
- ↑ [1] (14 August 2008)