So early January I
get a call on my cell. “Can you attend a workshop?”
I was confused. How
could I answer that question? I’d never heard that there was a workshop in my
future requiring my attendance. It was early, I wasn’t quite awake, maybe I
forgot about it.
“I can’t say,” I
tell the person who said they were from the Ministry of Youth, Sport and
Culture (MYSC). “I need more information.”
“We’ll send you a
letter.” I gave her my email address and I wait. No letter arrives.
A couple of weeks
pass, and again an early morning call. I’ve come to realise the only people who call
me before 7:45 am are people from MYSC. I suspect they shut all of the phones
off after reasonable hours like 10 am so they have no option but to phone
people pre-caffeine and often pre-vertical.
“Do you need
accommodation?” the person asks.
“For what?” I ask,
only partly cognitive.
“For the
workshop,” she says.
“I don’t know
anything about a workshop. When is it?”
“From the 27-29th
of January,” she says. It was the 16th
of January that day of the
call.
“But that’s soon! Can
you email me the information? I’ll need to organise things.”
“No, we’ll post
you the letter. We need a record.” What?
Did we go back to 1992 while I slept? Email is apparently untraceable in the MYSC
world.
“But I need to
know what this is about. I don’t know anything, I don’t know if I need
accommodation. You could email the
letter in the meanwhile.”
“I’ll ask my
boss,” she says and hangs up. I never receive an email.
Instead on the 21st of January a
letter arrives in the post, it was postmarked on the 15th of
January, but still people have lives- snail mail is what it advertises, very
snail-y.
Things must now be
organised to travel to Gaborone and stay there for three days. Between the 21st
(the day the letter arrived) and the 27th (the day the workshop
started) were only three working days. How does someone get invited to a three
day workshop with only a three day notice?
The letter says
that “The importance of this capacity
building exercise cannot be overemphasised and it is in your best interest to
ensure attendance of (sic) this very important workshop”. There is no venue or time for the workshop on
the letter! Must I wander around
Gaborone calling out, hoping someone will find me? The venue will be
communicated, the letter assures me. I
was not feeling very assured.
I am the first
person to complain about the fact that our writers need more training. I am
more than happy to attend a writing workshop to improve my skills. But at the
same time what can one expect from a workshop organised in such a slapdash
manner? A workshop organised by people with so little respect for the time of
the writers they are inviting?
The primary
purpose of the workshop was to train scriptwriters. “The workshop will give the writer the ideas and techniques necessary
to properly write and rewrite their script.” But no mention is made of who
the resource people will be to teach us how to do that. This is important. At
the very least let the potential participants know what they’re getting
themselves into when giving three days of their life away.
I know what this is;
I’ve seen it so many times before. Government employees nowadays, thanks to the
productivity movement which brought very little productivity, have a list of
objectives they agree to accomplish during the year. I suspect somewhere there
is a paper and on it is this objective: Hold
one scriptwriting workshop. That’s good; I’m happy. Let’s do it. But the
problem is, now the time has finished and the person responsible just needs to
get it done, however that done might manifest.
Yes, the workshop
will be held. Yes, likely people will attend, the ones who intuitively knew the
venue. Yes, the civil servant will be able to tick off the objective. And yes,
lots of money will be spent. But the
question is: what was really accomplished in the long term? Can such a poorly
organised event make a difference? I think it’s doubtful.
But then- I’ll
never know. I’m writing this on the 28th of January and I’m not at
the workshop. Why? Because the venue is still topic secret and I’m apparently
not on the list of people meant to know it.
(This first appeared in my column in The Voice, It's All Right. )
Thank you for pointing out that resources are wasted when workshops are poorly thought out and mismanaged. The subject matter itself can be of crucial importance, but because it's just another activity to be checked off we get the wrong attendees, short notice, high allowances and unsuitable agendas. As a result, those who could have benefited are cheated out of real opportunities. http://womanforhimself.blogspot.fi/
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