Focusing on personal styles, learning styles
and personality may be non-productive!
Personal Styles -- Time-Waster or Useful - Should You
Join The MBTI Shuffle?
You can find them almost everywhere. Myers-Briggs,
Enneagrams, leadership styles, learning styles, communication
styles, teaching styles, conflict management styles...all
designed to classify or label people so they can better
understand themselves and others. More and more
training vendors are using style questionnaires as
a basis for training and development. The question
is: are they really useful, or are they just fun
exercises akin to astrology?
Overview
Style questionnaires usually consist of a number of items.
Format may vary. In some, you may be asked to choose
one of two activities (forced choice), while in others
you may choose one option from a set of four or five.
After you have completed all of the questions, you
tally up your scores to determine which category of
style is your most dominant. If it's a decision- making/leadership
style instrument, you may fall into one of the following
categories: autocratic, consultative, participative
or laissez faire. If it's a conflict management
style instrument, you may fall into the following:
avoider, confronter, compromiser, or cooperator.
Generally, your results will give you a "reading"
of your preferred style, a secondary style, and your
least preferred style.
Advocates for the use of these kinds of instruments claim
that they will help you:
. understand yourself better
. understand how other people see you
. develop style flexibility (eg. situational behaviour)
. understand others with different styles, and become more
tolerant of stylistic differences
. build better teams
Things You Should Know
1. Psychological research indicates that people's behaviour
is not very consistent. It is naturally situationally
specific. For example, you may use one conflict management
style with a subordinate, and an entirely different
one with your boss, regardless of what your "preferred
style" might be. Your behaviour, in any given
situation, is largely determined by the situation,
NOT your preferred style. So, style questionnaires
are a relatively poor predictor of what you (or someone
else) will do in the real world.
2. There is a tendency for people completing these types
of questionnaires to respond in a way that is consistent
with how they would like to be, rather than they way
they actually behave. For example, few people want
to see themselves as wimpy conflict avoiders, so it
isn't surprising that you don't come across too many
people that fall into this category. Since many instruments
are pretty easy to "figure out", there is a tendency for
people to respond in ways that they feel will present
themselves in a positive light.
3. In many cases, the descriptions you receive as part
of the interpretation of your score(s) are sufficiently
general as to fit almost anyone. At least some
of it is going to fit, much like the astrology predictions
one finds in the newspaper.
4. Many trainers, or test administrators know that people
are interested in themselves, and will become highly
motivated when they are given the opportunity to "find
out about themselves". Taking a test about oneself
is fun, and exciting, and often this excitement will
obscure the fact that the instrument is poor, and
the interpretations overly general.
5. Many trainers or test administrators have had little
training in the use of instruments. Almost anyone
can purchase questionnaires and offer them to clients.
As a result trainers may not be aware of the limitations
of the instruments or the interpretations, having
had little or no education in test theory, or psychology.
On The Negative Side
The negative side of training based on these instruments
is that things appear scientific. The limitations
of the approach are not always explained, and it is
possible to take the enterprise far too seriously.
In the hands of an unqualified trainer or consultant,
the process becomes more of a fun parlour game, rather
than a useful one.
The primary danger here is that we will take the results
far too seriously. Human behaviour is so complicated
that a quick style assessment instrument simply cannot
do justice to human complexity. In the hands
of trainers with a limited background in testing or
psychology, the results can be "oversold".
Finally, there is no guarantee that a person's behaviour
will change as a result of taking one of these courses,
or instruments. There is no guarantee that they
will become better team members, more tolerant, or
more effective. What they will be able to do
is label themselves or others as being of a particular
style. They may learn to explain a person's behaviour
(or their own) as being a result of a style preference,
and that explanation will almost always be overly
simplistic.
On The Positive Side
Stop Creating Conflict
It's better to prevent unnecessary conflict than to manage conflict once
the flames have started. Click
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Communication
Besides being fun, these kinds of instruments have
one primary benefit. They encourage people
to be reflective about themselves and others.
Even if the results of these instruments are totally
bogus, and have no relationship with real world behaviour,
people tend to look at themselves a bit more
carefully. This is good. Whenever people
think about themselves and their own behaviour,
there is a chance that they will find better, or different
ways to behave.
Recommendations
1. Approach test results as suggestive at best. Be
aware that your behaviour is determined by many factors,
and that most tests are very general.
2. If you are contemplating attending a training course
based on style identification, inquire as to where
the trainer learned to administer the test.
If they "learned it from a book", then it is likely
that they will have insufficient background to use
the test properly. Look for people that have some
form of formal training or certification. This
is no guarantee that they will have the breadth of
knowledge to point out the test limitations, but at
least they will understand the instrument they are using.
3. If you think that having your team identify their particular
styles is going to increase tolerance and team effectiveness,
think again. On its own, it can create as many problems
as it solves. It is possible that people will
understand each other, but it is just as likely that
they will use style labels to justify their intolerance.
Stop Letting
Conflict Control YOU
Learn to manage conflict by "using your head",
rather than your heart. Find out about pro's and con's of different conflict
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4. Find out how the particular test was developed.
Ask how the validity of the test was determined,
and whether it is reliable. Validity and reliability
of tests are very technical topics. However,
if the trainer can't answer your questions, or doesn't
understand them, then you can pretty much assume that
he or she is not competent to use the instrument.
5. Finally, approach these forms of tests as fun exercises
that may encourage reflection. Don't get fooled
by the appearance of science here unless the instrument
has been thoroughly tested, and take the interpretations
with a grain of salt. They should be seen as
suggestive, not absolute, and can be used to stimulate
discussion and thinking. Remember that no test can
capture the complexity and flexibility of human behaviour.
Note: We invite comments, and letters on this topic.
If you are a proponent of this type of assessment,
please feel free to present your position on the benefits
of style assessment instruments. We will attempt
to provide you with a forum to rebut these comments.
An Innovative Approach To Conflict!
Conflict
Prevention In The Workplace - Using Cooperative Communication
is one of the few books that explains how to prevent
conflict rather than manage it. Learn how to modify
what and how you communicate to reduce unnecessary personality
conflicts. Available in print or electronic format you
can preview or get more information by clicking
here.
Learn
To Use Your Head When Dealing With Conflict
The
choices you make when involved in conflict determine
whether good comes from it or bad. Using Your Head
to Manage Conflict Helpcard explains your various
conflict management options, and when to use each
one.
Stop
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management decisions.