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Workplace sociology
Gerhard Ohrband5th lectureTraining
Course structure
Part I Introduction1 Managing diversity2 History and context for Work and Organizational
Psychology / Roles and methods
Part IIPeople at work3 Job Analysis and Design4 Personal Selection5 Training
Course structure
6 Performance Appraisal: Assessing and Developing Performance and Potential
7 Job Stress and Health
Part IIIHuman Factors at Work8 Workload and Task Allocation9 Work Environments and Performance10 The Design and Use of Work Technology11 Safety at Work
Course structure
Part IVOrganizations at Work12 Leadership and management13 Work motivation14 Teams: the challenges of cooperative work15 Organizational development (OD)
Part II – People at work5 Training
Outline:1. Definitions and Contexts of Training2. Rational Stages of Training
Development3. Identifying Training Needs and
Content4. Evaluating Training5. Practice: Error Management Training
1. Definitions and Contexts of Training
- Definition: “The systematic development of the knowledge/skills/attitudes required by a person in order to perform effectively a given task or job” (Glossary of Training Terms, 1971)
Training versus development
Training Development
Focus Current job Current and future jobs
Scope Individual employees
Work group or organization
Time frame Immediate Long term
Goal Fix current skill deficit
Prepare for future work demands
Challenges in Training
Is training the solution to the problem?
Are the goals of training clear and realistic?
Is training a good investment? Will the training work?
Is training the solution? A fundamental objective of training is the
elimination or improvement of performance problems.
However, not all performance problems call for training.
Performance deficits can have several causes, many of which are beyond the worker’s control and would therefore not be affected by training.
For example, unclear and conflicting requests, morale problems and poor-quality materials
Are the goals clear and realistic? To be successful, a training program must have
clearly stated and realistic goals. The goals will guide the program’s content and
determine the criteria by which its effectiveness will be judged.
For example, management cannot realistically expect that one training session will make everyone a computer expert.
Unless the goals are clearly articulated before training programs are set up, the organization is likely to find itself training employees for the wrong reasons and toward the wrong end.
For example, if the goals is to improve specific skills, the training needs to address specific goals for training.
Is training a good investment? Determining whether training is a good investment
requires measuring the training’s potential benefit. Training that focuses on “hard” areas (such as the
running and adjustment of machines) that have a fairly direct impact on outcomes (such as productivity) can often be easily translated into a monetary value.
Estimating the benefits of training in “softer” areas – such as teamwork or diversity training – is much more challenging.
Will training work? Some types of training are more effective
than others for some purposes and in some situation.
An organizational culture that supports change, learning and improvement can be a more important determinant of a training program’s effectiveness than any aspect of the program itself.
Training will not work unless it is related to organizational goals.
2. Rational Stages of Training Development
Instructional Systems Development (ISD)
Interservices Procedures for Instructional Systems Development (IPISD)
Relationships between training development and selection decisions
Identifychanging
needs (1)
Definetraining content
(4)
Developcriterion
measures(6)
Definetraining
objectives(3)
Selecttrainees
(2)
Designmethods and
training materials(5)
Trainees
Trainingprogramme
Graduates
Feedback
Feedback
3. Identifying Training Needs and Content Hierarchical Task Analysis (HTA):Systems perspective, breaking down a job or task into
subtasks Specifying training objectives. Mager (1962) -
three elements for the specification of an objective:1 identify the terminal behaviour by name; you can specify
the kind of behaviour that will be accepted as evidence that the learner has achieved the objective
2 Try to define the desired behaviour further by describing the important conditions under which the behaviour will be expected to occur
3 Specify the criteria of acceptable performance by describing how well the learner must perform to be considered acceptable
Part of a Hierarchical Task Analysis of an industrial task
Warm up furnace1
Prepare plantand services
1.1
Start air blower1.2
Start oil pump1.3
Heat up to800ºC
1.4
Increase temperaturecontroller as per
chart 1.4.1
Ensure plantis ready
1.1.1
Ensure gas-oilavailable
1.1.2
Ensure oxygenanalysing system
is OK1.1.2
Monitor oxygen1.4.2
Monitor temperature1.4.3
Switch toautomatic
1.4.4
Designing the Training Three
components in the design of training
1. Training contentTypes of content
2. Training methods and strategiesRetrainingPractice with advicePart-whole trainingOvertraining etc.
3. TraineePrior knowledgeAptitudes, ageLearning strategiesAttitudes and motivation
Motivational influences on training effectiveness
Locus of control
Career/job attitudes•Exploration
•Job involvement
ExpectanciesSelf-efficacy
Reaction toskill assessment
feedback Motivationto
transfer
Results Behaviour
changeLearning
Motivationto learn
Reactionto
training
Environmental favourability•Social•Task
4. Evaluating training
Evaluative questions: How were the training needs identified? What were the training objectives and how were they
derived? What techniques were used to identify training
content? What principles were used to design the training
program? What forms of evaluation were carried out before and
after training? What revisions have taken place to the training
program, and for what reasons?
Reasons why evaluation is often neglected
Evaluation of training is often neglected by organizations
Why? Insufficient technical competence Lack of political will Abundance of different methods and
criteria in the literature may be potentially confusing
Case study: training in the steel industry 1. identifying training needs and content. Management reported that, in one area of the mill,
fault-finding was problematic even for experienced technicians/engineers. Failure to fault-find effectively and efficiently could result in poor quality steel, damage to equipment and/or personnel and, ultimately, shutdown of the mill. Examination of the plant records and discussions with personnel responsible for fault-finding confirmed that there was indeed a training need in this area. In order to analyse the nature of this need in greater detail and to develop training content, three forms of analysis took place.
a) Error and problem collection First, errors and problems that arose in connection with
fault-finding were collected. Various data sources and methods were used, including retrospective analyses of reported faults, observation of technical personnel during shifts and ‘talking through’ proposed actions, intentions and decisions while locating hypothetical faults. This revealed various inefficiencies during fault-finding. Surprisingly, personnel frequently failed to utilize all the initial symptoms that were available in the fault scenario. This tendency was compounded by a failure to set and tackle systematic subgoals in the search for the source of the problem. This was not surprising given the overwhelming complexity and size of the technical domain. Further, personnel tended to adopt a rather risky hypothesis-driven search for the fault rather than a more painstaking and systematic one, and considerable time could be lost by searching in an area of the plant which did not contain the fault.
5. Error management training
General trainingtypes
Behavior modelingtraining
Exploratorytraining
Error managementtraining
DifferencesBehavior modeling training:- Detailed step-by-step instructions on correct task
solutions- Focus on error prevention - Negative attitude towards errorsExploratory training:- Minimal intructions- No explicit mentioning of errors as issue, often
negative attitude towards errorsError management training:- Minimal instructions- Positive framing on errors
Error management training1. Minimal guidanceParticipants are given only minimal guidance and
otherwise are encouraged to actively explore and experiment on their own.
EMT creates a learning environment in which errors are likely to occur.
2. Encouragement of errorsPositive framing of errors:“The more errors you make, the more you learn!”“You have made an error? Great! Because now you can
learn something news?”
Discussion Points1. What are the main stages in the development of
training?2. Why are the training objectives important in training
development?3. How might you evaluate a training course for car
mechanics?4. Discuss how to design practice sessions to improve
your typing and keyboard skills.5. What are ISD models and what are their advantages
and disadvantages?6. Try do analyse a simple familiar task, such as making
an omelette, using hierarchical task analysis
Literature Goldstein, I.L. (1993). Training in
organizations: Needs assessment, development and evaluation, 3rd edn. Monterey, CA: Brooks Cole.
Keith, Nina, & Frese, M. (2008). Effectiveness of error management training: A meta-analysis. Journal of Applied Psychology, 1, 59-69.
Patrick, J. (1992). Training: Research and practice. London: Academic Press.