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Yet again I need someone to read something.....pretty please?

31 replies

KatyMac · 26/01/2008 23:00

Analysis of the problem

?Information is gathered to identify possible solutions to the problem (9).
? Information is interpreted and presented (9)
? A number of options to solve the problem are identified (5)
? Discretionary mark (2)

Above is the question below is the supposed answer - does it answer it - or have I gone off half assed in to something else?

As a team we discussed through both team meetings and individual appraisals a variety of options including:
? Bringing in a new manager
? Promoting internally & recruiting a new assistant, then either
? Giving all management tasks and roles wholesale to the new manager
? Splitting the tasks down and dividing them between the new manager, the new member of staff recruited specifically for the skills needed and existing staff members.

The process of decision making has been simplified by my being able to define the additional responsibilities and work load because they substitute for parts of my existing role. I have had to factor in some allowance for the time it will take for people to train and develop into their new roles.

The problem naturally fell into 2 distinct goals; Firstly, the establishment of the new post of Childminding Manager, involving;

? The extent of the responsibility and authority to be delegated (Appendix B).
? The business, personal skills and qualifications required of the post holder for the management role.
? A review of the capacities of my existing staff in relation to the above parameters (Appendices C & D).
? A comparison of these skills to what might be available by external recruitment.

Secondly, to assess the additional staffing required covering the shortfall in my direct work with the children. This required;

? An estimation of the hours/times I have direct contact with the children (Appendix A).
? A breakdown of the total shortfall by task (Appendix B).
? The development of a timetable of requirements (Appendix C).
? The matching of existing staff skills to the tasks (Appendix C & D).
? Investigating the availability, qualification and willingness of existing staff to take on additional tasks and hours (Appendix E & F).
o This involved a skills and training audit.
o Arrangements to provide the necessary training.
o The development of additional guidance procedures.

Establishment of childminding manager

? What roles will I be delegating?
? Can they be delegated to a single person or in part to more than one person?
? Has my existing lead Childminder got the skills now?
? If not, what are the missing skills sets and has she the competence to obtain those skills?
? Can we find other people to cover part of the delegated functions and does this make economic and business sense?

Having regard to the preferred option of using my existing lead childminder, how does that compare with the option of new recruitment.

Additional childminding and other assistance

From the work in the investigation phase I have defined the requirement in both time and skills and have assessed the capacity of my existing staff. It is clear that I am able to cover the shortfall in my time input mostly using existing staff (with training and development) but I have had to recruit a new member of staff as a childminding assistant.

Suggestions for action cover the two matters previously noted and an identified need for part of my roles which cannot be delegated to either the Childminding Manager or any other staff to be retained by me owing to either only me having the skills or to their being critical senior tasks.

OP posts:
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gigglewitch · 26/01/2008 23:16

well impressed. it appears to answer it as far as i can see (BTW, what is the qual? I can poss guess it down to two or three...) You have got a really logical structure and fantastic explanation of what you actually did in there, well written etc i could go on

The only thing I wonder if you might want to 'tweak' is making the info relevant to the third part of the question more obvious - which is partly why i wondered what 'level' it is. I think it may gain more i.e. full) marks if the number of options to solve the problem are identified - yes you have a good set of ideas and actions but they seem to be a list which are inter-dependent, rather than a set of options iykwim. However, I may be missing something and need to re-read.

KatyMac · 26/01/2008 23:29

Thank you so much for reading it I know it is Saturday night but they moved the goal posts on me & I'm struggling

Level 3 Cert in First line Management (I think - I can never remember it)

I think I know what you mean

EG X could do it but doesn't want to
Y could do it but won't committ the time

I thought these were more answers (which is the next section...below)
Resolution of the problem

? Options are summarized, providing facts and evidence, not just opinion (5)
? At least one simple decision making technique is used to evaluate options and arrive at the best solution (5)
? Chosen solution is clearly and concisely stated (10)
? Resource implications are recognised (5)
? Discretionary Mark (5)

OP posts:
KatyMac · 26/01/2008 23:29

I do have a nice set of tables in the appendices but I don't think they help that much

OP posts:

Interested in this thread?

Then you might like threads about these subjects:

gigglewitch · 26/01/2008 23:53

appendices, especially ones with nice tables are good

ah-ha. see what you mean about the next section... you need to save your info

maybe that couple of lines you said, like we thought of solutions x,y and z;
x isn't possible because no-one will do it,
y may be workable if zebedee stops jumping,
and z is also possible if ermintrude comes in early every morning.

time we all went to bed, hope you get lots of zzz's!
(yes i am a manager too, doing company's version of level 5nvq which is really bizzare!)

KatyMac · 26/01/2008 23:56

Thanks

I can put the same info in both sections as they are discrete (which I had to look up as I didn't think they meant private)

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gigglewitch · 26/01/2008 23:57

LOL @ private

KatyMac · 27/01/2008 10:49

OK - I cut all the bits of paper up into small sections and have numbered them 1, 2 & 3 depending upon which part of the answer they are

I am singularily missing section 2 "Information is interpreted and presented (9)"

So how do I do that?

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KatyMac · 27/01/2008 11:11

Bump

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gigglewitch · 27/01/2008 11:21
Hmm
KatyMac · 27/01/2008 11:26

Don't you believe me...I did honest - cutting up bits of paper appeals to my childminder side rather than my manager style

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KatyMac · 27/01/2008 11:27

I think this is OK
Information is gathered to identify possible solutions to the problem (9).

Once we realized the size of the issue facing us, we set in place several methods for discussion and resolution of the problem. These included:

? Team meetings
? Individual appraisals
? Informal discussion
? Initial discussions with a management consultant
? Advise from Business Link

The process of decision making has been simplified by my being able to define the additional responsibilities and work load because they substitute for parts of my existing role. I have had to factor in some allowance for the time it will take for people to train and develop into their new roles.

I have defined the requirement in both time and skills and have assessed the capacity of my existing staff. It is clear that I am able to cover the shortfall in my task input mostly using existing staff (with training and development) but I will have to recruit a new member of staff as a childminding assistant due to the time shortfall.

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gigglewitch · 27/01/2008 11:27

I think you've already done it, as you have 'presented' the information you collected through meetings etc, and you have 'interpreted it' by saying this would work / that wouldn't etc. FWIW, I don't think that you need to present this twice - and remember that on your cut-up papers you can count things twice for two different sections, which doesn't mean you have to write it twice. Your report was very well presented and explained in the first place so assuming that you keep the original format and structure, you should have that one boxed off nicely

gigglewitch · 27/01/2008 11:30

x post

Definitely done it now

KatyMac · 27/01/2008 11:31

Really - I thought I was way off

"Information is gathered to identify possible solutions to the problem" How I gather info

"Information is interpreted and presented" drawing conclusions

"A number of options to solve the problem are identified" Possibilities

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gigglewitch · 27/01/2008 11:31

IMO you should get a huuuuge management qual for such analysis & critical thinking skills

KatyMac · 27/01/2008 11:32

I think part 2 "Information is interpreted and presented" needs some of the info from the appendices

Stuff like you said
"x isn't possible because no-one will do it,
y may be workable if zebedee stops jumping,
and z is also possible if ermintrude comes in early every morning."

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KatyMac · 27/01/2008 11:34

We established that I am a shaper and completer finisher - which is apparently quite rare........and confers 'Bossy anal twat' on me as a management style

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KatyMac · 27/01/2008 11:35

With high resource investigator

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gigglewitch · 27/01/2008 11:37

do you include in appendix a "job description" or analysis of the work you do, divided into childcare / management responsibilities / resource management / communication with other agencies (or whatever)
It might be another handy thing to refer on to for this section, whilst you wouldn't want to make a detailed description of your roles in the main body of the response.
Hope i'm not giving you daft suggestions here...
you think and decide whether useful or bullsht at the end of it

gigglewitch · 27/01/2008 11:39

I recognise that one - "bossy" came up quite high on my style (like top!) and "organised" - which is presumably just bossy but written down

KatyMac · 27/01/2008 11:40

No - I like that idea

I have a list
Acceptance and termination of children?s contracts
Accounts
Behaviour Management and Equal concern
Building maintenance
Child Protection/Safeguarding Children responsibility
Cooking
Day-to-day management of childcare & opportunities
Efficient Staffing/Timetabling
Financial and Business Planning
Implementation of Health and Safety Guidelines, Food Safety regulations and Risk Assessments
Initial point of contact for parents
Invoicing and Billing
Marketing, publicity and promotion of childminding
Menu planning & stock-control
Policy
Procedure
Production of timetables & associated spreadsheets
Recruitment
Responsibility for EYFS (Early Years Foundation Stage)
Staff discipline other than day-to-day direction
Staff training and Professional Development
Strategy
But I haven't created a JD - which ight be an idea

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gigglewitch · 27/01/2008 11:43

just as you refer to various bits of your role "i need to cover these aspects with a new member of staff" and "I'm delegating these roles to another member of the team" and a complete set of duties / responsibilites would sort of idiot-proof make it clear

KatyMac · 27/01/2008 11:46

I have a table for that including whether or not training would be needed to delegate a particular duty

Is this bit more of part 4
"Resolution of the problem

? Options are summarized, providing facts and evidence, not just opinion (5)
? At least one simple decision making technique is used to evaluate options and arrive at the best solution (5)
? Chosen solution is clearly and concisely stated (10)
? Resource implications are recognised (5)
? Discretionary Mark (5)"
"The problem naturally fell into 2 distinct goals; Firstly, the establishment of the new post of Childminding Manager, involving;

? The extent of the responsibility and authority to be delegated (Appendix B).
? The business, personal skills and qualifications required of the post holder for the management role.
? A review of the capacities of my existing staff in relation to the above parameters (Appendices C & D).
? A comparison of these skills to what might be available by external recruitment.

Secondly, to assess the additional staffing required covering the shortfall in my direct work with the children. This required;

? An estimation of the hours/times I have direct contact with the children (Appendix A).
? A breakdown of the total shortfall by task (Appendix B).
? The development of a timetable of requirements (Appendix C).
? The matching of existing staff skills to the tasks (Appendix C & D).
? Investigating the availability, qualification and willingness of existing staff to take on additional tasks and hours (Appendix E & F).
o This involved a skills and training audit.
o Arrangements to provide the necessary training.
o The development of additional guidance procedures.

Having regard to the preferred option of using my existing lead childminder, how does that compare with the option of new recruitment.

OP posts:
gigglewitch · 27/01/2008 11:49

sounds impressive. And probably at the point where more debate and dilemma would muddle the issues that you've put so clearly. You'll need a trolley for the appendices tho

KatyMac · 27/01/2008 12:04

Is this part 3?

A number of options to solve the problem are identified (5)

Suggestions for action cover:

? Firstly, the establishment of the new post of Childminding Manager, this can be met by either:
o Bringing in a new manager
o Promoting internally & recruiting a new assistant, then either
ï‚§ Giving all management tasks and roles wholesale to the new manager
ï‚§ Splitting the tasks down and dividing them between the new manager, the new member of staff recruited specifically for the skills needed and existing staff members.

? Secondly, to assess the additional staffing required covering the shortfall in my direct work with the children. The options available appear to be either:
o Increasing existing staff hours to cover the additional shifts.
o Recruiting a new member (or members) of staff to fulfill this time need.

? Next to cover the tasks that currently no-one has the skills to action effectively, the following issues might be considered.
o External training courses
o Internal training, coaching and mentoring which will require my continued presence will provide on-going cover and roles in mentoring, developing and managing staff into their new roles.
o Recruiting a childminding assistant with high quality admin and accountancy skills (which might be a difficult combination of skills to find).

? And finally an identified need for part of my roles which cannot be delegated to either the Childminding Manager or any other staff to be retained by me owing to either only me having the skills or to their being critical senior tasks.

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