Agile Coaching Content Outline 1
Agile Coaching Content Outline 1
Agile Coaching Content Outline 1
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ICAgile Learning Roadmap
Agile Coaching Track
Version 2.0
The work in this document was facilitated by the International Consortium for
Agile (ICAgile) and done by the contribution of various Agile Experts and
Practitioners. These learning objectives are intended to help the growing Agile
community worldwide and as such this work is licensed under the following
license.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
NOTICES:
No warranties are given. The license may not give you all of the permissions
necessary for your intended use. For example, other rights such as publicity,
privacy, or moral rights may limit how you use the material.
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LICENSING INFORMATION
SPECIAL THANKS
For the Agile Coaching Track, ICAgile would like to give
special thanks to the following Track Founders (2011):
Marsha Acker • Lyssa Adkins • Ahmed Sidky • Michael Spayd
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SPECIAL THANKS
CONTENTS
2 LICENSING INFORMATION
3 SPECIAL THANKS
4 TABLE OF CONTENTS
6 FOREWORD
7 THE AGILE TEAM FACILITATION STEP (ICP-ATF)
7 THE AGILE COACHING STEP (ICP-ACC)
7 THE AGILE COACHING FOR ENTERPRISES STEP (ICP-EAC)
7 AGILE COACHING INFLUENCE AND IMPACT
8 STATE OF THE LEARNING PATH
9 HERE IS WHAT’S STILL LEFT TO DO…
9 CHANGE NOTES FOR VERSION 2.0
11 HOW TO READ THIS DOCUMENT
12 LEARNING OBJECTIVES
12 1. DEVELOPMENT IN THE AGILE COACHING DISCIPLINE
12 1.1. Development Path for Agile Coaching
12 1.2. The Agile Team Facilitation Mindset
13 1.3. The Agile Coaching Mindset
14 2. COACH AS FACILITATOR
14 2.1. Foundational Facilitation Skills
15 2.2. Conducting a Facilitated Session
16 2.3. Facilitating Collaborative Meetings
16 2.4. Skillfully Facilitating the Agile Practices
18 4. COACH AS MENTOR
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CONTENTS
18 4.1. Key Mentoring Skills
19 4.2. Mentoring Agile Role Transitions
20 5. COACH AS TEACHER
20 5.1. Key Teaching Skills
21 5.2. Agile Mindset Shifts and Frameworks
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CONTENTS
FOREWORD
WHY AGILE COACHING?
Change. The Agile Manifesto changed the world. It introduced us all to the idea that
change can be harnessed and celebrated. It provided us values and principles upon
which to stand and from which to build practices that help us keep pace with an ever
changing world. It taught us that change is the only constant, and that it should be
embraced.
But, it didn’t change the human truth that change is hard, and in the face of constant
change, we can be lost, hurt, confused, or left behind. Change challenges our thinking,
our world-view, and our self-view.
Agile coaching is a craft intended to guide others in understanding, processing, and
embracing constant change, so that the change is sustainable, lasting beyond the
individuals.
Agile coaches guide individuals and teams to get clear about the change they desire,
identify places where current reality does not match desired reality and then take action
to close the gap -- all in service of delivering business results that matter. Along the way
coaches hold the bigger view of desired change, even when others may have lost sight.
Agile coaches support, guide, coach, teach, mentor and facilitate change without
colluding with the current reality.
The Agile Coaching Track provides a development path in skills needed by agile
coaches. Through the track, agile coaches learn progressively more complex skills, and
receive exposure to rich areas of further self-development beyond the classroom. Agile
coaches bring their whole self to the work, weaving together skills from professional
facilitation, professional coaching, mentoring, and teaching. They do this in service to
teams, to cause change, navigate conflict, intervene, and guide teams toward joyful high
performance.
The track’s two knowledge-based certifications describe steps of development in Agile
Team Facilitation (ICP-ATF) and Agile Coaching (ICP-ACC); this is followed by a
competence-based ICAgile Expert step (ICE-AC) intended for those who are practicing
agile coaches. The content a learner will experience in the knowledge-based
certifications is necessarily “a mile wide and an inch deep” because they are
experiencing a confluence of professional disciplines that each have their own deep
roots, techniques, and craft. It is expected that learners will find compelling areas to
further study, in their service to the work and teams. By design, expertise in the learner
is not presumed simply by engaging in the classroom; rather it is demonstrated at the
ICAgile Expert step, based on demonstrable competence and peer review. To effectively
operate at each step, there is an increasing level of skill, gravitas, and scope of influence
expected.
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FOREWORD
What follows are steps in a development path. They are not roles or jobs. Organizations
will create roles and positions that may or may not map to these steps, but we strongly
encourage the perspective that all of these skills are necessary for everyone functioning
as an agile coach, no matter their scope or level of influence. Broadly, those steps are
described below.
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FOREWORD
The Learning Objectives (LOs) in the Agile Coaching Track
focus on competencies required for self, individuals, team
and program level impact. The Enterprise Coaching Track
builds upon the LOs in this track and adds a focus for
Program and Organizational level impact.
The scope of leadership expands, self, team, multi-team,
enterprise, one’s leadership, focus, capability and gravitas
needs to also grow to be effective at those different levels.
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FOREWORD
• Created an introduction to deeper learning paths.
• This track covers a wide breadth of knowledge and competency areas and is designed to
provide an overview, not mastery. Many students of this learning path have gone to further their
education, well beyond the objectives outlined in this path.
• Normalized the importance of professional coaching and professional facilitation.
• Organizations commonly use ICAgile accreditation as a way to discern high quality in the
training classes they offer to their employees as well as in those they hire as coaches.
• As of May 2018, ICAgile has accredited more than 70 courses for the Agile Coaching
track, and more than 11,700 certifications have been awarded to approximately 9,110
individuals by these courses. More than 60 individuals have achieved the ICAgile Expert
level.
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FOREWORD
• Removed these topics because we believed they could be better addressed as potential
Deep Dive topics:
• Techniques for protecting the team boundary from distractions that reduce team
focus.
• Strategies for dealing with different team situations (co-located vs geographically
distributed, (e.g. Co-located / Virtual; Ongoing / Temporary; Single Organization /
Cross-Organization; Same Culture / Culturally Diverse)
• Development for teams versus working groups
• Identified the following areas as possible Deep Dive topics (this is not intended to be a
complete list):
• Dialogue
• Agile Coaching in Government
• Advanced coaching skills for individuals or team
• Virtual facilitation
• Large group facilitation
• Facilitating intense/intractable conflict
• Experiential teaching
• Team development for remote teams
• The use of Key vs Foundational in Learning Objective names is intentional. Key denotes
the short list of “first” skills in a discipline. Foundational denotes the key skills one must
master to move forward in a deep discipline.
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FOREWORD
HOW TO READ THIS DOCUMENT
This document outlines the Learning Objectives that must be addressed by accredited
training organizations intending to offer ICAgile certifications for each step in the Agile
Coaching Track.
Each LO follows a particular pattern, described below.
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HOW TO READ THIS DOCUMENT
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
1. DEVELOPMENT IN THE AGILE COACHING DISCIPLINE
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Define the purpose, mindset and functions of a professional operating at the Agile
Team Facilitation level of skill. At the most basic, the purview of someone at this
step is to facilitate Agile practices and daily interactions to foster collaboration and
healthy self-organization. Professionals at the Agile Team Facilitation step behave
in ways consistent with Agile and are Agile role models.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Introduce one or more models of self-awareness that impact one's ability to be an
effective Agile Coach. Further, this LO is concerned with giving the learner
techniques for managing themselves, their biases, assumptions and emotions
within a coaching context. To be effective, the Agile Coach must be both self-
aware (e.g., know when she is biased about a given topic) and use self-
management (e.g., not let her bias affect how she facilitates the meeting). There
are many models of self-awareness (e.g., emotional intelligence, Myers-Briggs,
various personality inventories, various self-awareness mindfulness techniques)
that can guide the coach. Most important is to choose at least one model and
apply it.
2. COACH AS FACILITATOR
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
2.2. CONDUCTING A FACILITATED SESSION
2.2.1. Maintain Neutrality
Neutrality is the facilitator's ability to focus on the group process and suspend
judgments on the content of the meeting.
Teach the importance of neutrality and how its absence can erode trust, decrease
full participation and result in a less effective decision. Provide the learner with
techniques and methods for maintaining neutrality.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
2.3. FACILITATING COLLABORATIVE MEETINGS
2.3.1. Facilitating Agile Framework Meetings
The connection between the purpose of an Agile ceremony and the underlying
principles/values it expresses must be made explicit so that Agile ceremonies do
not become empty rituals.
Convey the purpose and the underlying principles/values that are satisfied in each
of the meetings in the Agile framework(s) pertinent to your course. This can be
delivered as written information and does not need to be explicitly covered real-
time in the classroom.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Provide an opportunity to practice some of the facilitation skills and mindsets they
have just learned in the context of an actual meeting that occurs within an Agile
framework.
3.1.2. Presence
Being fully present as a coach is key to successful coaching. Methods for
presence include building rapport, awareness of the environment, self-
management and consciously preparing for coaching.
Teach the importance of presence and provide the learner with techniques and
methods for achieving it.
3.1.3. Listening
Listening is more than hearing; and, it is a skill that is often taken for granted. To
be of service, coaches must develop their listening skill.
Teach the importance of listening and provide the learner with at least one model
or technique for developing their listening skill.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
3.1.5. Giving and Receiving Feedback
Being able to openly receive and provide effective feedback that builds people up
instead of tearing them down is essential to helping individuals achieve their
potential.
Provide the learner with techniques for giving effective feedback to coachees and
being open to receiving feedback from coachees and other coaches.
4. COACH AS MENTOR
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Introduce the learner to at least one advice giving technique that maintains full
presence in order to further the mentee’s agenda.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
transitions to be covered will be dependent on the Course Designer's beliefs about
Agile roles and their business context.)
5. COACH AS TEACHER
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
new idea) and reporting out (ask the students to report in with new experiences
based on the new idea).
6.1.2. Observation
An Agile Coach must develop muscles of observation apart from interpretation
and evaluation.
Help the learner see with neutral eyes to differentiate between the facts of
observation (as a video camera would capture it) and analysis, interpretation,
judgment or evaluation.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Being able to name what you see, in a non-judgemental way, creates awareness for
the system.
Help the learners voice their observations, in service of the system becoming more
self-aware. The ability to present a neutral observation is one of the agile coach’s
most basic interventions. A system that can see itself may self-repair when
unhealthy dynamics are present.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
performing team model needs to support agile team performance characteristics
(e.g., empowerment, shared leadership, vulnerability, resolving conflict, trust and
continuous improvement).
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
6.4.3. Creating Awareness that Teams are Human Systems
Teams are human systems that have their own values, perspectives,
consciousness and truth.
Expose learners to the idea that a team is more than a collection of individuals,
that it is a human system with its own characteristics, needs and growth potential.
Further, show that moments of conflict or collaboration difficulty can be seen as
human systems dynamics, rather than solely personal to the individuals involved.
The learner will be able to begin seeing the team as a human system by bringing
their awareness to this level, at least some of the time.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
coach will not do (e.g., give performance management evaluations for team
members), as well as what the “client” will do (e.g., provide training for the team,
make a candidate Agile Team Facilitator available from within the team) are all
components of this LO. Effective Agile Coaches, whether they are internal
employees or external consultants, see their work similarly to that of a
collaborative consultant (see for instance Peter Block, Flawless Consulting), which
is why the coaching contract is an appropriate learning topic for all Agile Coaches.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
For more info: +91
+91 9958287711
9036309574
[email protected]