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Training Design Chapter #5
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Learning Outcomes By the conclusion of this discussion you should: å Understand the different kinds of training objectives and be able to write effective objectives for your training course. å Be able to design a training program to improve learning and transfer of training.
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Training Objectives Trainee Reaction Learning Objectives Transfer of training objectives Organizational outcome objectives
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Good Training Objectives A – Audience B – Behavior (desired outcome) C – Condition D - Degree (standard)
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Objective Writing Exercise PART #1 å Take 5 minutes and write your own objective statement. Use all 4 components (audience, behavior, condition, degree). You can use your training topic or a hypothetical one. PART #2 å Break up into groups of 3-4 and switch objective statements. Read, critic, and help revise the objective statement for your group member. å Select a spokesperson to read two of the best objective statements from your group.
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Why Write Objectives? Trainee: å Understands requirements & expectations å Reduces stress å Focuses attention å Increases chances of achievement goal-setting theory – motivation
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Why Write Objectives? Training Designer/Trainer/Evaluator: å Guides design å Maintains consistency å Facilitates learning process å Guides evaluation process
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Design Constraints Organizational/environmental constraints å Budgets å Employees involved å Regulations/laws å Technology Trainee Population å Diversity of KSAs in training group å Negative attitudes regarding training/topic
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Evaluating Costs Results Costs!! Determine if Results will be worth the Costs!! å Cost-Benefit å Cost-Effectiveness Cost savings analysis Utility analysis
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Cost Estimate Development Costs å Materials (20 trainees x $100)$2,000 å Trainer/developer time (40hrs @ $80)$3,200 Direct Costs å Trainer’s time (24hrs @ $80)$1920 å Food/beverage (20 trainees @ $20 each)$ 400 å Material/equipment (projector rental, markers, etc.)$ 250 Indirect Costs å Marketing $ 100 å Administration (20 hrs @ $10)$ 200 Participant Compensation å 20 employees (24hrs @ $10)$4,800 Evaluation Costs å Evaluators time (40 hrs @ $80)$3,200 å Materials$ 250 Total$16,320
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Cost/Benefit Analysis Results – Increased productivity by 20% å In an regular 8 hour day, each employee now produces 96 parts instead of 80 parts. å (8hrs *$10)/80 parts = $1.00 per part å (8hrs *$10)/96 parts = $.83 per part å $.17 addition profit annualize over 1 years production of 26,880 = $4,570 per employee å (20 *4570) = $91,400
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Learning: Focus on Trainee Individual differences (KSAs/culture/etc.) Motivation levels å Individual expectations å Expectancy theory å Classical/Operant Conditioning å Goals/goal setting
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Learning: Focus on Design Social Learning Theory å Attention/Expectancy Eliminate distractions Attract attention å Retention å Symbolic Rehearsal/Behavioral Reproduction Reinforcement
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Transfer of Training Positive transfer Negative transfer Zero transfer
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Transfer of Training Conditions of practice: å Massed vs. spaced practice å Whole vs. part learning å Overlearning Identical elements/maximizing similarity General principles
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Transfer of Training Other Consideration: å Knowledge of results å Relapse prevention å Goal setting
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Organizational Intervention Support å Supervisor å Peer å Trainer Reward system Climate/Culture
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Outcomes of Design Understanding the various factors that facilitate learning and transfer Identification of evaluation objectives Identification of alternative methods of instruction
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Conclusion Training design takes the elements of learning styles and motivation and applies them to the training program. Writing thorough, complete objectives is a necessary design step with many benefits. Well designed programs will increase learning and ensure transfer of training.
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