Month: April 2018

The Conference Notebook – A tool to help you get more out of the professional conferences you attend.

By Amy Strage, PhD  San José State University

Excerpted text: “A word about the purpose of this workbook.  Over the years, I have had the opportunity to attend many, many professional conferences.  In some instances, I contributed to the formal program in some way.  In others, I had the good fortune to just be there just to learn.  In virtually every instance, I did my best to immerse myself in the moment, attending sessions, engaging in animated and thoughtful conversation, taking notes, collecting business cards and handouts.  But all too often, the conference “high” dissipated quickly as I returned to business-as-usual.  As I look back, one thing is quite clear: regardless of my role or responsibilities at the gathering, I benefitted much more from the experience when I had (read “made”) the time to prepare and follow through.  Isn’t this exactly what we encourage our students to do, to get the most out of their educational opportunities?

Main advice provided (I recommend reading the whole posting for full benefit):
I – To ensure that you get the most out of the conference, PREPARE, DO YOUR HOMEWORK, AND BE INTENTIONAL… “Short exercises in advance of the conference
II – To ensure that you get the most out of the conference, REACH OUT… DON’T BE SHY NETWORK …” Structure to identify key contacts

III – To ensure that you get the most out of the conference, REFLECT AND FOLLOW THROUGH…” Structure to align intent with follow up
Thank You Note (You’ve probably already thought to do this, but in case it’s slipped your mind…)
Happy Conferencing and Networking!

Track Your Resistance

Text by Kerry Ann Rockquemore, PhD, president and CEO of the National Center for Faculty Development & Diversity, from the posting of August 1, 2016 in her Monday Motivator series.