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9 Questions to Ask About a Goal - Part 3 of 3

 

Setting strategic goals is the joint responsibility of all members of your career school's team; each employee should be part of the goal-setting process. In our last two blogs, we looked at six questions to help ensure that our employees develop goals that are effective and obtainable. In today's blog we address the last three questions to ask about a goal. Please note that it is not an exhaustive list, however, the nine questions we have now addressed in Parts 1, 2 and 3 of our blog at least lay a foundation for developing accomplishable goals. 7. Is there a contingency plan? Plain and simple, things change! And changes in the external environment, as well as in our own organizations, can alter how a goal is implemented, or even if the goal is still attainable. To help ensure success in achieving the outcome, a contingency plan should be in place as a back-up strategy. 8. Are interim checkpoints clearly established? Every goal has an expected final outcome. Yet, for successful goal achievement, an organization's action plan should include checkpoints along the way. These interim benchmarks help to identify stages of goal accomplishment and monitor progress toward the ultimate outcome. 9. Is the goal flexible? Though a contingency plan, if executed, may completely alter a goal and its implementation, if the goal itself is flexible, there is more chance for success. It's true that effective goals are SMART, but a goal that is too rigid is subject to failure given any degree of change. In short, effective goal-setting is part of an ongoing strategic process of determining where an organization is, where it wants to be, how it plans to get there, and how it knows when it has successfully arrived. In our next blog, we will overview this full strategic planning process that surrounds an institution's goals.

Group activity assignments are important but instructors need to keep the group relevant to the topic.  I am an educator in the medical field and there is a lot of different info online that can be helpful but confusing.  I find myself having to re-direct frequently.

Same here, Bill. We have certain normal values that are used by the entity that administers our board exam, and often times the values in the text or on the internet are slightly different. I have to remind them that the board values are the ones they need to know now. It can be confusing to the students, but I think that if we as instructors keep reminding them of this then they will be successful.

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