Role of A Facilitator in Change Process
Role of A Facilitator in Change Process
Role of A Facilitator in Change Process
Why
Higher Education institutions need many internal change agents to champion quality
improvement projects in an organization and at the same time need external facilitators to
help assist in changing key values or entrenched historical practices, processes, or
systems. When internal facilitators/change agents try to address significant changes they
get blackballed, fired, or extremely beat up. Effective internal change agents need to
know the risks and pitfalls of trying to facilitate change such as the changes expected
with the Title III projects.
Learning Objectives
Performance Criteria
1. Provide the top five performance criteria for a change agent for any current or
future Brevard change process
a. Factor 1 – comprehensive.
b. Factor 2 – explicit.
c. Factor 3 – clear.
2. For any change process, identify the key ways of using an external facilitator.
a. Factor 1 – productive.
b. Factor 2 – feasible.
c. Factor 3 – efficient.
Information
The role of the internal facilitator or change agent is to mentor, coordinate, and provide
support to those who have volunteered to lead the change process. This includes
recruiting a team, bringing them up to speed, developing a consensus plan, getting the
appropriate faculty development, coordinating activities, incorporating assessment,
keeping people active, documenting progress, and being positive about the change.
The role of the external facilitator is to help the institution to clarify the targeted
outcomes aligning with their mission. This would include identifying the key projects,
inventorying the current resources and leaders, through quality faculty development grow
these individuals skill sets so that they become the internal change agents. Mentor these
individuals on a monthly basis growing their knowledge, skills, and identities so that the
institution becomes empowered to take on the change them. The external facilitator must
challenge quality consistently and provides assessment of the key performances so
everyone is clear about quality and how to improve it. Finally, the external facilitator
must bring closure of a change process by helping the institution freeze again so a new
foundation of institutional effectiveness has been achieved.
Models
1. External facilitators can introduce fresh ideas and concepts with less resistance
2. External change agents think outside of the box and the institutional culture
3. External change agents are neutral and have no stakes in the institution
5. External change agents increase engagement between external entities and internal
departments
6. External change agents bring information and experience from other institutions experiences
and best practices
7. External change agents can manage disputes and provide leadership expertise
8. External change agents can aligned with strategic goals of top management
1. If the college spends a lot of money, it may feel obligated to use the ideas provided whether or
not these ideas are the best.
2. An internal change agent runs the risk of being ostracized if he or she aligns with an external
change agent (ECA).
4. The person who was responsible for bringing in the ECA could lose credibility.
5. Use of a poor ECA can result in a bad experience that prevents one being used in the future.
6. The administration may feel that the changes need to be made without the faculty and staff
buying into the ideas.
6. accountable--held responsible by other entities for the role of facilitating change within the
organization
1. What are the top three roles of an internal change agent versus the top three roles of
an external facilitator of change?
2. What are the top five skills for an internal change agent versus the top five skills for
an external facilitator of change?
6. What three strategies can you use to increase the benefits and decrease the risks of the
use of an external facilitator?
7. Why does trust play such a critical role in the teaming between the internal and
external facilitators of change?
8. Why does an organization discount an internal change agent when, in fact, other
institutions would rain accommodations on that person?
Skill Exercises
1. Describe the three important roles for the change agent in modifying/upgrading
the religion curriculum?
2. Given the existence of an external facilitator, clarify the three ways in which the
external facilitator can validate our local faculty development efforts in
assessment?