Alexandra West
Creative Director
Nerd/Noir
location_on United States
Member since 6 years
Alexandra West
Specialises In (based on submitted proposals)
Alexandra West was born and raised in Florida in the US. She moved to Atlanta to attend Emory University, where she earned a degree in Art History. After graduating, Alex remained in Atlanta and worked in several non-profit and commercial art galleries for a little over ten years. After eventually finding her way to the film and television industry, she is now in her seventh year of working as an art director and production designer creating environments for feature films, television programs, and commercials. Alex is also the Creative Director of a Agile training & coaching firm, Nerd/Noir, co-founded with husband David Laribee.
Currently, Alex provides art direction and design consulting for a variety of clients, as well as training in Visual Thinking Strategies, or VTS.
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Art & High Performing Teams - A VTS Workshop for Facilitators
favorite_border 3 agile-india-2019 agile-mindset Workshop 240 Mins Beginner modern-agile team-dynamics facilitation collaboration diversity inclusion psychological-safety visual-thinking culture business-agility retrospective product-discovery team-efficiency coaching building-agile-teams design-innovation innovation240 Mins
Workshop
Beginner
What defines a high performing team? Why do some succeed while others fail? This workshop will introduce you to both the VTS method and the findings of Google's "Project Aristotle". A multi-year rigorous research study, Project Aristotle found the critical success factor to be Psychological Safety - a team climate characterized by interpersonal trust, risk-taking, and mutual respect. To succeed, each and every team member must feel confident speaking up and making mistakes. This session is an extension of my talk "Art For Agilists: VTS & High Performing Teams". During this session, you'll learn how VTS increases both critical thinking skills and psychological safety - leading to happier, more productive, and more innovative teams. We take a deeper dive into the method and also cover the basics of facilitating sessions in your own environment. In addition to in-person sessions, you'll learn how to conduct online sessions for remote teams.
Visual Thinking Strategies, or VTS, is a cross-disciplinary technique applicable to anyone working in a collaborative setting. VTS develops observation, reasoning, and collaboration skills by viewing and discussing works of art in a group. It is backed by over 30 years of field research showing its effectiveness and accessibility. By allowing individuals to talk about art - without needing a background in the field - VTS advances skills you can use to create more relevant products and stronger teams: Observing, Brainstorming, Cultivating a Point of View, and Revision & Elaboration. As you participate you'll also learn how VTS can help to create an environment of psychological safety. Because there are no right answers , VTS creates a safe space, one that encourages participation from all viewers. Empathy, Communication and Collaboration skills are enhanced along with Comfort with Ambiguity, Openness to the Unfamiliar, Civil Debate, and Willingness to Participate in Group Thinking.
During our fun interactive exercise, we’ll discuss selected works of art as a group. We’ll create an environment and process for looking, thinking, reasoning and revision - skills that are mission-critical to anyone working in a software design or development role. You'll discover new ways to engage teammates and highlight the value of diverse points of view.
After our group discussion, participants will learn the basics of image selection and facilitating VTS sessions within their own organizations. You'll discover how creating psychological safety within your teams leads to innovation and a more inclusive environment.
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Art For Agilists: VTS & High Performing Teams
90 Mins
Workshop
Beginner
What defines a high performing team? Why do some succeed while others fail? This talk will introduce you to both the VTS method and the findings of Google's "Project Aristotle". A multi-year rigorous research study, Project Aristotle found the critical success factor to be Psychological Safety - a team climate characterized by interpersonal trust, risk-taking, and mutual respect. To succeed, each and every team member must feel confident speaking up and making mistakes. During this session, you'll learn how to use VTS to increase both critical thinking skills and psychological safety - leading to happier, more productive, and more innovative teams.
Visual Thinking Strategies, or VTS, is a cross-disciplinary technique applicable to anyone working in a collaborative setting. VTS develops observation, reasoning, and collaboration skills by viewing and discussing works of art in a group. It is backed by over 30 years of field research showing its effectiveness and accessibility. By allowing individuals to talk about art - without needing a background in the field - VTS advances skills you can use to create more relevant products and stronger teams: Observing, Brainstorming, Cultivating a Point of View, and Revision & Elaboration. As you participate you'll also learn how VTS can help to create an environment of psychological safety. Because there are no right answers , VTS creates a safe space, one that encourages participation from all viewers. Empathy, Communication and Collaboration skills are enhanced along with Comfort with Ambiguity, Openness to the Unfamiliar, Civil Debate, and Willingness to Participate in Group Thinking.
During this fun interactive exercise, we’ll discuss selected works of art as a group. We’ll create an environment and process for looking, thinking, reasoning and revision - skills that are mission-critical to anyone working in a software design or development role. You'll discover new ways to engage teammates and highlight the value of diverse points of view.
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Visual Thinking Strategies - How Art Can Improve Your Product
480 Mins
Workshop
Beginner
This workshop will introduces lean/agile leaders, coaches, and facilitators to Visual Thinking Strategies, or VTS.
VTS is a cross-disciplinary technique applicable to anyone working in a collaborative setting where observation is key. VTS develops critical thinking skills by viewing and discussing works of art in a group. It is backed by over 30 years of field research showing its effectiveness and accessibility. By allowing individuals to talk about art - without needing a background in the field - VTS advances skills you can use to create more relevant products and stronger teams: Observing, Brainstorming, Speculating, Reasoning with Evidence, Cultivating a Point of View, and Revision & Elaboration.
We'll begin with an introduction to the concepts, background, and learning outcomes of VTS. Teaching through demonstration, I'll facilitate a VTS session with the entire group so attendees can experience the process first-hand. During this interactive exercise, we’ll discuss selected works of art and then have the opportunity to review initial impressions of the method. There are no right answers or group consensus being sought - we’re creating an environment and process for looking, thinking, reasoning and revision - skills that are mission-critical to anyone working in a software design or development role.
Participants will learn the basics of image selection and facilitating VTS sessions within their own organizations. We'll break down the various components of the technique and dig into why & how the process works. In addition to the above skills, we'll cover how VTS can help you and your team with the following: Comfort with Ambiguity, Openness to the Unfamiliar, Civil Debate, and Willingness to Participate in Group Thinking.
I'll share some case studies with the group before we break into our first set of practice sessions where workshop participants can try their hand at leading VTS discussions. We'll then take a more detailed look the process of image selection for VTS sessions, and more advanced facilitation tools such as paraphrasing. We'll then break into smaller groups for more hands-on practice of the entire process: from choosing images to facilitating sessions.
Finally, we'll review the entire day, getting feedback and having a group discussion of how this tool can be applied in your specific environments. We'll save some time at the end for Q&A and I'll leave everyone with a toolkit of online resources to take back to their team. Attendees will leave with the ability to take VTS back home and introduce a whole new way to build better teams and products.
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A Visual Thinking Warmup
90 Mins
Workshop
Beginner
Do strong personalities dominate your development team? Are code reviews painful? Are you blindly following orders from a backlog, or are you learning from observation?
Visual Thinking Strategies, or VTS, is a cross-disciplinary technique applicable to anyone working in a collaborative setting where observation is key. VTS develops critical thinking skills by viewing and discussing works of art in a group. It is backed by over 30 years of field research showing its effectiveness and accessibility. By allowing individuals to talk about art - without needing a background in the field - VTS advances skills you can use to create more relevant products and stronger teams: Observing, Brainstorming, Speculating, Reasoning with Evidence, Cultivating a Point of View, and Revision & Elaboration.
During this interactive exercise, we’ll discuss selected works of art as a group. There are no right answers or group consensus being sought. We’re creating an environment and process for looking, thinking, reasoning and revision - skills that are mission-critical to anyone working in a software design or development role. After our group discussion, participants will learn the basics of image selection and facilitating VTS sessions within their own organizations. In addition to the above, we'll cover how VTS can help you and your team with the following: Comfort with Ambiguity, Openness to the Unfamiliar, Civil Debate, and Willingness to Participate in Group Thinking.
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No more submissions exist.