Two Scrums Up

De : Sarah Rose Belok & John Ragozzine Certified Scrum Masters
  • Résumé

  • Learn how your team can reach their full potential. Our Agile advice, anecdotes, and research-based practices can be applied to all teams with and without Scrum. Let us help you build equity-minded and people-first, high performing teams.
    © 2023 Two Scrums Up
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    Épisodes
    • Unlocking Flow State on Teams
      Jun 8 2021

      It’s the Season 2 finale, we’re at the top of the mountain, and Sarah Rose and John are here to show you the view. Accompanied by multidisciplinary designer and founder of /ayd, Charis Alexander, they explore the question of what is really at the heart of driving ourselves and our teams towards more meaningful achievement? Together, they’ll guide you through the ways in which cultivating psychologically safe, equity-minded teams is a precursor to Flow State which, in turn, is the foundation of peak performance. In fact, the entanglement between these concepts is such that one experience may not be possible without the other.
       ___

      Referenced this week:

      • Charis Alexander: https://layd.life/ 
      • Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1990). Flow: The psychology of optimal experience. Journal of Leisure Research, 24(1), 93–94.
      • Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1997). Finding flow. New York: Basic.
      • Ghosh, R., Haynes, R. K., & Kram, K. E. (2013). Developmental networks at work: Holding environments for leader development. Career Development International, 18(3), 232-256.
      • MacCurtain, S., Flood, P. C., Ramamoorthy, N., West, M. A., & Dawson, J. F. (2010). The top management team, reflexivity, knowledge sharing and new product performance: A study of the Irish software industry. Creativity and Innovation Management, 19(3), 219-232.
      • MacNeill, N., & Cavanagh, R. (2013). The possible misfit of Csikszentmihalyi’s dimensions of flow in the contemporary roles of school leaders. Management in Education, 27(1), 7-13.
      • Maslow, A. (1965). Self actualization and beyond. Proceedings from the Conference on the Training of Counselors of Adults. Winchester, MA: The New England Board of Higher Education. 
      • Moneta, G. B. (2004). The flow experience across cultures. Journal of Happiness Studies, 5, 115–121. 
      • Quinn, R. W. (2005). Flow in knowledge work: High performance experience in the design of national security technology. Administrative Science Quarterly, 50(4), 610-641.

      _____
      Show Norms

      • Be transparent about where we're at. Only record show when we're both ready.
      • Tell me where your head is at. This will help us adapt to our moods and tones. 
      •  Share the mic. Push for equity of voice in recording and editing.
      • Respect each other's privacy. 
      • Use 'I'. Avoid broad generalizations.
      • Speak your truth. Stay positive, but honest.
      • Ask WHY. If something's unclear, we push each other to clarify.
      • We make decisions together. Nothing goes live unless we are both happy.
      • We will make mistakes, tell me when so I can learn.

      ______

      Do you want to learn more about Scrum? Follow us!
      Twitter / Facebook: scrumsup | Instagram: twoscrumsup

      Find out more about Alley at https://alley.co

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      50 min
    • FeedForward: Feedback Models for Growth
      May 25 2021

      What is the right way to engage in feedback conversations? In this episode, John and Sarah Rose challenge traditional, default modes of feedback, including telling it how it is, blaming, and constructive criticism—all of which are unidirectional and assume one “right” answer. Instead, your intrepid hosts guide you out of the binary realm of one truth and walk you step by step through alternative models that contribute to building a feedback culture for growth.

      _____
      Referenced this week:

      •  Exploring the relationship between learning and leadership. Leadership & Organization Development Journal. (Brown & Posner, 2001).
      • Leading adult learning: Supporting adult development in our schools. (Drago-Severson, 2009). 
      • How the way we talk can change the way we work: Seven languages for transformation. (Kegan, R., & Lahey, L. L. (2001).)
      • Managing diversity at work: Does psychological safety hold the key to racial differences in employee performance?  (Singh & Selvarajan, 2013). 
      • Situation, Behavior Impact Model (Center for Creative Leadership, 2020)

      _____
      Show Norms

      • Be transparent about where we're at. Only record show when we're both ready.
      • Tell me where your head is at. This will help us adapt to our moods and tones. 
      •  Share the mic. Push for equity of voice in recording and editing.
      • Respect each other's privacy. 
      • Use 'I'. Avoid broad generalizations.
      • Speak your truth. Stay positive, but honest.
      • Ask WHY. If something's unclear, we push each other to clarify.
      • We make decisions together. Nothing goes live unless we are both happy.
      • We will make mistakes, tell me when so I can learn.

      _____

      Do you want to learn more about Scrum? Follow us!
      Twitter / Facebook: scrumsup | Instagram: twoscrumsup

      Find out more about Alley at https://alley.co

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      41 min
    • Powerful Praise and The Pitfalls of Prizes
      May 11 2021

      Beware the default mode of prizes and back-pats lest you drain the power from praise. Trite and nonspecific praise can at best offer minimal value, and at worst create a system of winners and losers. We know it’s common to under-communicate genuinely positive, appreciative, and admiring regard for our coworkers in a powerful way. That's why Sarah Rose and John are jumping into the deep end of the praise pool and focusing this episode on sharing 3 tactical checkpoints to examine, reform, and transform your team’s practice of praise.
      _____
      Referenced this week:

      •  Exploring the relationship between learning and leadership. Leadership & Organization Development Journal. (Brown & Posner, 2001).
      • Leading adult learning: Supporting adult development in our schools. (Drago-Severson, 2009). 
      • Excerpt from: How the way we talk can change the way we work: Seven languages for transformation. (Kegan, R., & Lahey, L. L. (2001).)
      • Managing diversity at work: Does psychological safety hold the key to racial differences in employee performance?  (Singh & Selvarajan, 2013). 

      _____
      Show Norms

      • Be transparent about where we're at. Only record show when we're both ready.
      • Tell me where your head is at. This will help us adapt to our moods and tones. 
      •  Share the mic. Push for equity of voice in recording and editing.
      • Respect each other's privacy. 
      • Use 'I'. Avoid broad generalizations.
      • Speak your truth. Stay positive, but honest.
      • Ask WHY. If something's unclear, we push each other to clarify.
      • We make decisions together. Nothing goes live unless we are both happy.
      • We will make mistakes, tell me when so I can learn.

      ____
      Do you want to learn more about Scrum? Follow us!
      Twitter / Facebook: scrumsup | Instagram: twoscrumsup

      Find out more about Alley at https://alley.co

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      35 min

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