Knowledge Mobilization is putting available knowledge into active service to benefit society. Doing this effectively & efficiently requires both skill and strategy. How methods, tactics, tools and resources are applied to moving knowledge into practice can determine whether we enable change or not. This workshop is focused on practical methods to build knowledge mobilization capacity of individuals and organizations.
What will you learn?
Using a comprehensive participant workbook (provided) and expert facilitation, each participant will learn:
Who is this workshop for?
People involved in the management and delivery of knowledge mobilization, knowledge transfer and exchange, and research impact activities in institutions of higher education, non-profit organizations, government departments & agencies.
How Much?
Early Bird Registration (before October 17, 2011): $295.00
Event Fee: $395.00
Who is delivering this workshop?
This workshop is delivered by Knowledge Mobilization Works, a leader in developing human and organizational capacity to access and use knowledge to create added value. The facilitator will be Peter Levesque, President and CEO, who has over 10 years of experience working with individuals and organizations to increase return on human investment.
What are people saying about this facilitator?
Peter is a visionary in the field of knowledge mobilization and knowledge strategies for community well-being. He brings a depth of theoretical understanding about the role of knowledge in social transformation to the challenges of using knowledge to solve the complex and multi-sectoral issues of these times. He is a gifted networker, a superb facilitator and a creative designer of knowledge mobilization and related strategies. He is comfortable with business, government, academic and community audiences. He is Canada’s leading voice in knowledge mobilization. Dr. Budd Hall, University of Victoria
Peter is on the leading edge of thought within the knowledge management. His, as well as his Canadian colleagues’, mantra is “knowledge mobilization” a concept that lends a much needed social and action orientation to the knowledge management arena. Based on my personal experience and exposure in the field I believe the methodologies he and others are developing are responding to shifting realities and will have staying power and practicality for society in the coming decade. Jonathan Green, Director of Knowledge Management, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Thank you for your presentation and follow up conversations. You were truly a hit! You seemed to appeal to everyone both more technically savvy and those less so. Your message was clear and accessible no matter where people were on the continuum. Thanks again for doing this. Amy Coupal, Executive Director, Curriculum Services Canada