Effective workplace communication with employees with acquired brain injury
Chapters
- Introduction
- Implementation guide
- Acquired Brain Injury (ABI)
- Talking about talking and listening
- Talking about learning
- Talking about the job
- Talking about tools
- Talking about safety
- Talking about quality and quantity
- Talking about teams and workmates
- Talking about problems
- Talking about changes
- Talking about futures
Introduction
Welcome to Work Talk.
The team who put the manual together and the Department of Families, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs who funded its production hope you find it useful in your work supporting employees with disabilities.
- Aim of this manual
- Relationship to the Disability Service Standards
- Structure
- Using the manual
- Further information
Aim of this manual
The aim of the manual is to bring together information about and strategies for effective workplace communication in Disability Employment Services. It focuses on the communication between the employee with a disability (we've called them 'supported employees' here, but your service may use a different term) and staff who work with them directly (again, we've used the term 'support staff' but your service may use terms like 'supervisor', 'team leader' or 'job coach'). If you have a different role, you may find the examples and case studies less familiar or directly relevant but we hope you will still be able to make use of the strategies we suggest for your workplace communication with supported employees, specifically those with acquired brain injury.
Work Talk introduces a fictional business service, Merrinvale Enterprises. Throughout the manual you will meet a number of people connected with Merrinvale, including some of its supported employees and support staff (who Merrinvale calls 'supervisors'). Merrinvale provides the 'stage' for case studies and scenarios that illustrate the communication situations support staff may encounter in their everyday work with people with acquired brain injury.
Merrinvale Enterprises is used as the organisation for the case studies presented throughout the workbook. The implementation guide includes information and background about Merrinvale and its staff.
Relationship to the Disability Services Standards
Using Work Talk may assist services in addressing some of the requirements of a number of Standards. For example, it may be useful in demonstrating steps taken to provide appropriate and relevant training for staff.
Structure
This manual has four sections:
- this introduction
- an implementation guide
- an introduction to acquired brain injury
- the series of 10 communication and learning topics that make up the bulk of the manual.
The learning topics are based around communication situations you are likely to encounter in the workplace.
On each of the learning topic pages you will find four sections:
- some background information or theory about effective workplace communication strategies
- a case study or example. The case studies and examples are set in a fictional business service called Merrinvale Enterprises and describe some of the interactions that members of the support staff have with supported employees and/or their reflections on those interactions
- strategies for achieving effective communication and learning in the situation described
- a page for you to add your own notes or thoughts.
Using the manual
You may be asked to use this manual in a number of ways:
- as a self-paced learning resource that you work through on your own
- as a basis for discussion and learning about a particular topic or topics at a staff meeting or in a short training session
- to help you develop your strategies in particular situations or with particular supported employees
- as the basis for a training session for other support staff.
Further information
In the preparation of this resource the development team has researched widely and identified some valuable and comprehensive material produced by a number of organisations. This includes in particular the fact sheets on brain injury developed by the Brain Injury Association of Queensland Inc and similar material developed by other state associations which has informed a number of the strategies identified in the resource.