Week06, TrainingDevelopment HRM1
Week06, TrainingDevelopment HRM1
II. Job-based: To review the jobs involved and the tasks performed in those jobs. By
comparing the requirements of jobs with the KSAs of employees, OR survey
employees.
The Training Process (Cont.)
III. Individual employee The following sources are examples that are useful for
individual analysis:
• Performance appraisals
• Skill tests
• Individual assessment tests
The Training Process (Cont.)
Establishing Training Objectives and Priorities
•Once training requirements have been identified using needs analyses, training
objectives and priorities can be established by a “gap analysis,” which indicates
the distance between where an organization is with its employee capabilities and
where it needs to be.
•Training objectives and priorities are then determined to close the gap. Three
types of training objectives can be set:
– Knowledge: Impart cognitive information and details to trainees.
– Skill: Develop behavior changes in how job and tasks are performed.
– Attitude: Create interest and awareness of the training importance.
The Training Process (Cont.)
Step 2: Training Design
Determining how the assessed needs are to be addressed, considering learning
concepts, legal issues, and types of training available
Considerations:
I. Determining learner readiness: Ability to learn, motivation to learn, self-
efficacy(People’s belief that they can successfully learn the training program
content).
II. Understand different learning styles: People learn in different ways.
a) Auditory learners learn best by listening to someone else tell them about the
training content.
b) Tactile learners must “get their hands on” the training resources and use them.
c) Visual learners think in pictures and figures and need to see the purpose and
process of the training.
Trainers who address all these styles by using multiple training methods
can design more effective training.
The Training Process (Cont.)
III. Designing training for transfer.
Transfer occurs when trainees actually use on the job what
knowledge and information they learned in training.
1. Trainees must be able to apply it to the job context in which they work
I. Informal Training:
• Training that occurs through interactions and feedback among employees.
E.g. asking questions and getting advice from other employees and
supervisors.
• For the employer, the advantages of cross training are flexibility and
development.
• For the employee, sometimes, do more work for the same pay.
• These packages enable virtual chat and electronic file exchange among course
participants, and also enhance instructor-student contact.
• Simulations allow for safe training when the risks associated with failure
are high.
Training Delivery (Cont.)
II. Learning: Measuring how well trainees have learned facts, ideas, concepts,
theories, and attitudes.
• Tests before and after the training are commonly used.
• BUT, learning enough to pass a test does not guarantee that trainees will
remember the training content months later or that it will change job
behaviors.
Training Evaluation (Cont.)
Development:
An effort to improve employees’ ability to handle a variety of assignments and
to cultivate capabilities beyond those required by the current job
Development versus Training
Development Approach
Job-Site Development
I. Coaching: The observation and feedback given to employees by immediate
supervisors
Off-site Methods
II. Human Relations Training: Prepares supervisors for dealing with “people
problems”