Training & Development Consultant versus Lecturer
The connection lies in the application of communication skills to achieve specific outcomes.
For example, a lecturer teaching pragmatics helps students learn how to:
- Make requests politely
- Negotiate meaning
- Adapt language for different audiences
- Manage cross-cultural communication
- Influence, status, and context of the communication
A training and development consultant often teaches very similar competencies in organizational settings:
- Customer communication
- Leadership communication
- Negotiation skills
- Presentation skills
- Conflict resolution
- Intercultural communication
- Stakeholder management
In both cases, the underlying question is:
“How can people use language effectively to achieve their goals while maintaining positive relationships?”
Transferable Skills
If you are a lecturer in English pragmatics like me, you likely already possess many competencies valued in training and development:
- Adult learning and facilitation
- Curriculum and program design
- Needs-based-analysis
- Coaching and feedback
- Assessment and evaluation
- Public speaking and presentation
- Cross-cultural communication expertise
- Communication strategy
- A Development Consultant Perspective
In a Nutshell
A lecturer in English pragmatics teaches people how language works effectively in social and professional contexts.
A training and development consultant applies those same communication and learning principles to improve workplace performance, behaviour, and organisational outcomes. In essence, being a consultant is being an extension of a lecturer, if you have been lucky enough to be in class to teach. How else could you assess the viability of any training programme?
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