
4 Keys to Achieving Farrier Competency
© Doug Butler, Ph.D., CJF, FWCF
Competency is defined by Webster as "being sufficient to answer
or fit all requirements." While competency is both perceived and
real, it is primarily dependent upon expectancy and training. You
expect competent people to have the skill, character, experience and
wisdom to use their skills training wisely. When you go to a doctor or
other health care practitioner, you expect him or her to be competent.
If they aren't - or don't appear to be - you won't go back to them for
advice or treatment. The same thing is true for farriers. Your clients
expect you to be competent in your work. Here are 4 keys to help you
achieve farriery competency:
1. Skill
Skill can only be properly defined and measured when there is a
standard by which to measure that skill. A standard is a predetermined
level of performance, expectation or outcome based on accepted
knowledge or training. A standard doesn't change.
Unfortunately, many people make up their own set of standards to
justify the level of skill they personally have attained. Their
personal standard may be much weaker or lower than a reasonable,
predetermined standard generally accepted by others skilled in the
identified task. That doesn't change the true standard.
In evaluating your standards of farriery skill mastery, consider
these 3 principles:
- An assessment of skill mastery should measure the ability to meet
a defined industry standard with a specified degree of accuracy and
speed. The assessment itself measures the ability to perform the
work. A time limit in a skill mastery evaluation measures how
accurately and efficiently a skill can be performed at that
standard. Ability can be measured without a time limit. Skill
cannot.
- A standard should be something that is defined in a clear and
concise manner. The specific parameters of the standard to achieve
skill mastery must be written down and accessible to all so an
examiner can measure an individual against a well-defined and
written standard (not what the examiner feels is their own standard
or comparative ability to perform a task). This allows both the
examiner and the examinee to measure the work performed against a
specific "mark on the wall."
- Meeting a standard is not an accident. Proper focus and
discipline will allow anyone with commitment and personal
responsibility to achieve the standard and develop skill mastery.
Commit to acquiring and developing skills to the point of mastery.
You can be competent to some degree without skill mastery, but a
professional shouldn't be satisfied until they can do it right. He
or she should be willing to practice until they are confident they
can't do it wrong. This doesn't mean you won't make a mistake. It
means you won't quit until it's right.
2. Character
Competency equals skill plus character, according to Stephen R.
Covey, author of First Things First and The Seven Habits of Highly
Effective People. Character is at the core of competency. It implies
integrity and the possession and expression of various virtues,
especially honesty and goodness. Character, to a large degree, is
dictated by self-concept. Self-concept is derived from public
perception and private awareness. Often people are consumed with the
public's perception of them. When private awareness of their own
faults violates the public perception of their virtues, self-concept
is deflated because they know who they really are.
General Arthur G. Trudeau once wrote: "Character is something
each one of us must build for himself, out of the laws of God and
nature, the examples of others, and - most of all - out of the trials
and errors of daily life. Character is the total of thousands of small
daily strivings to live up to the best that is in us. Character is the
final decision to reject whatever is demeaning to oneself and others
and with confidence and honesty to choose the right."
Each individual is responsible for the outcome of their own
character. Every thought we think, word we speak and act we
participate in contributes to our character. What drives you? What is
at the core of your character? Do honesty and goodness fill your life
and your practice? It has been said many times, "You can't make a
good deal with a bad person." Until character is in place,
competence will never be claimed.
3. Experience
Experience equals awareness. You must fail in order to progress.
As Michael LeBoeff, author of The Perfect Business, states, "Success
doesn't teach you anything." Zig Ziglar, author of See You at the
Top, says, "The food you live on when you get to the mountain
peaks is always grown in the valleys of life." Herman Melville,
author of Moby Dick, said, "Failure is the true test of
greatness." One often thinks of failure as disgrace, when we
should think of failure as a vital component of progress. Mistakes
should not be rationalized and Farriers also must ensure that they
completely understand the basics of farriery before they move on to
more advanced procedures in the craft. As individuals learn the craft,
they are all at different levels of skills mastery. I have come to
know that each individual must recognize what level he or she is at in
order to progress. You cannot pretend, for eventually you will be
found out. Admission of ignorance is the first step in education. We
all believe this in our hearts.
Your success in gaining experience and mastering farriery depends
upon your understanding and mastery of certain basic general
principles. You must not only know what to do, but why you're doing
it. For example, the pianist masters certain principles, learns about
music, and practices various exercises until he/she develops skill at
the keyboard. Once the pianist has mastered the basics, they can play
any piece of music that is placed before him, with some practice and
additional learning. Although each individual piece of music is
different from any other, there are only 88 keys on the piano, and
eight notes on the scale. Even if you are not a pianist, you can
quickly learn how to play a chord on the piano. With patience, even a
novice can learn how to individually play all of the separate chords
that a concert pianist uses. But this alone does not make you a
concert pianist. If you tried to give a concert in front of your
friends, knowing only how to play the separate chords, your
performance would be an absolute disaster. The concert pianist has not
only mastered the basics, but has paid the price through countless
hours of personal practice to master the complex nature of combining
these chords to make beautiful music.
Likewise, a novice farrier can learn the basic principles of
horseshoeing without becoming a master of the craft. A novice
motivated from within by a desire to learn how the principles relate
with one another can excel through countless hours of practice and
application. With time and patience, one's accuracy and speed in
completing the task will improve and he will attain a higher skill
level. The master craftsman, like the concert pianist, has not only
mastered the basics, but has paid the price through hours of personal
practice by learning the complex nature of combining principles and
techniques to achieve the highest skill level.
There is simply no substitute for experience. Reading and studying
all the books in the world about a particular subject will never give
you the skill that can be learned in a shorter time while actually
doing the work. Someone with experience is considerably more
productive than an inexperienced person. Everyone makes mistakes, but
the experienced person is less likely to make mistakes and cause
serious errors. And these people learn the lessons of life from their
mistakes. Brian Tracy, author of Maximum Achievement, says, "Common
sense is the ability to apply the lessons we learn from our
experience."
You can learn many things simply by paying attention to your
experiences and seeking to understand them and apply them. Education
comes in many forms, but experience is the most valuable. Great
educators have always recognized that you learn by doing.
4. Wisdom
Wisdom is the sensible application of knowledge and experience.
Wisdom involves knowing when to make decisions and knowing why you
made them. Test your assumptions based on your skill and experience as
you evaluate treatment possibilities. Clearly define the procedure you
will use. Once you arrive at a particular conclusion, you must have
the courage to act on what you feel is best. You must be willing to
defend your premise on the basis of principles. If the owner suggests
a popular or faddish solution that you know violates time-tested
principles, you must have the courage and knowledge to explain why
such techniques or products aren't practical. Then, use your skill and
character to sell and apply what you believe will provide a sensible
solution.
Your clients expect you to be competent. You can only express
competence with confidence and earn trust when you have skill mastery
and a reputation of character. If you do this, I am confident you will
fulfill the statement made in 1910 by W. F. Hayden in The Farriers
Annual (pg. 40): - "With a thorough knowledge of practical skills
and theory [you], as farriers, could defy the world to produce a craft
equal in skill, pride, practice and knowledge."
Doug Butler, Ph.D., CJF, FWCF is an internationally known
speaker, trainer, author and consultant to the farrier industry. He
may be contacted at Butler Publishing, P.O. Box 1390, LaPorte, CO,
80535. (970) 221-2834 or FAX (970) 482-8621
published in ANVIL Magazine, September
1998
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