This course looks at collaboration beyond the concept of just working together and explores the ways it can be used in learning and development environments

Collaborative Learning in Organizations: Strategies, Tools, and Culture
Collaboration is one of the most used — and most misunderstood — words in organizational learning. Many organizations assume collaboration means communication, agreement, and resource sharing. But genuine collaboration requires something harder: the ability to handle disagreement productively, to suspend judgment and rank, to make space for divergent perspectives, and to build trust across teams, departments, and generations.
This course brings together three experienced learning and development professionals for a panel discussion on what collaborative learning actually looks like in practice. From defining what collaboration really means to diagnosing why it breaks down, the course explores the culture, communication skills, and change management approach that make collaborative learning stick. It also examines the practical realities of implementing collaboration tools, monitoring engagement, and supporting facilitators and learners through the transition.
Whether your team works in one location or across multiple offices, whether you are introducing new technology or trying to get more out of what you already have, this course offers grounded advice from practitioners who have done it — and made the mistakes along the way.
Learning Objectives
By the end of this course, participants will be able to:

As a Certified Training and Development Professional (CTDP) with years of experience working with associations, I am currently the Executive Director of the Institute for Performance and Learning or I4PL. Our purpose is to elevate the performance of the Canadian workforce.