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Chapter 3

The document discusses training in organizations, including defining training, the benefits of training, identifying training needs, setting training objectives, developing training programs, and various training methods. It provides details on different aspects of establishing and implementing an effective training program in a company.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
315 views29 pages

Chapter 3

The document discusses training in organizations, including defining training, the benefits of training, identifying training needs, setting training objectives, developing training programs, and various training methods. It provides details on different aspects of establishing and implementing an effective training program in a company.

Uploaded by

Darmmini Mini
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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3

Training
Preview

 The concept of training


 The benefits of training
 A systematic approach to training
 Examples of learning principles

Human Resource Management Principles and Practices (Fourth Edition) All Rights Reserved
© Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2018 3–3
What Is Training

Training is the attempt by an organization


to change employees through the learning
process so that they are able to perform
their jobs as efficiently as possible

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© Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2018 3–4
The Ask Model

Change
Change A
Attitudes
Attitudes

Develop
Develop S
Skills
Skills

Increase
Increase K
Knowledge
Knowledge

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Training is a Learning
Partnership

The Training Training


Department Vendors

Employees Employers Consultants

Heads of
Department Educational
Institutions

The Organization

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What Happens to a Company Which
Does Not Train Its Employees?

Margaret Anne Reid (2004) and her


co-authors in Human Resource Development
point out that the following costs will be incurred if
an employer does not train his employees:

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What Happens to a Company Which
Does Not Train Its Employees? (cont.)

 Payment to employees when learning on the


job, which may take longer if it is not
properly planned for.
 Costs of wasted materials, sales and
customers lost because of mistakes made
by untrained employees.

Human Resource Management Principles and Practices (Fourth Edition) All Rights Reserved
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What Happens to a Company Which
Does Not Train Its Employees? (cont.)

 Management time cost taken to undo the


mistakes made by the untrained employees.
 Lowered morale, leading to higher turnover,
among team members who are demotivated by
working with an untrained employee.

Human Resource Management Principles and Practices (Fourth Edition) All Rights Reserved
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What Happens to a Company Which
Does Not Train Its Employees? (cont.)

 Accident-related costs; it is well-documented


that untrained workers tend to have more
accidents.
 Higher turnover leading to recruitment costs
because employees feel they have no
prospects of further development.

Human Resource Management Principles and Practices (Fourth Edition) All Rights Reserved
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Benefits of Training

 Training opportunities attract and help to retain


talented workers
 Training increases worker productivity
 Training increases workers’ job satisfaction
 Training keeps workers up-to-date
 Training helps to motivate workers

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Learning Organizations

 A learning organization is one which is


permeated with a culture whereby all employees
continuously attempt to increase their
knowledge and skills on a cooperative basis.
 The organization takes proactive steps to retain
this knowledge within the organization.

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The Training Process

Identify training needs

Set training objectives

Develop the training programme

Implement the programme

Evaluate the programme

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What is a Training Need?

A training need is a problem which prevents work


being done satisfactorily and which can be
overcome by TRAINING

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Training Needs Analysis

Training Needs Analysis (TNA) identifies:


Who needs training?
What skills or knowledge do the employees
need? Do their attitudes need changing?

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Training Needs Analysis
(cont.)

Levels of Analysis
Organizational Level
 Organizational culture
 Quality and productivity schemes

Operations Level
 Job analysis

Individual Level
 Evaluating individual performance against standards

Human Resource Management Principles and Practices (Fourth Edition) All Rights Reserved
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Training Needs Analysis
(cont.)

Sources of Information
 Job descriptions
 Heads of departments
 Employees
 Organizational records
 Performance review documents

Human Resource Management Principles and Practices (Fourth Edition) All Rights Reserved
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Training Needs Analysis
(cont.)

Situations
 New employees
 Promotion and transfer
 New machinery
 New procedures and policies
 New products or services

Human Resource Management Principles and Practices (Fourth Edition) All Rights Reserved
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Training Needs Analysis
(cont.)

Problems suggesting a training need include:


 Falling output
 Rising error, scrap, waste, mistakes
 Increasing time taken to complete work
 Increasing accident rate
 Increasing customer complaints

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Training Objectives

A well-written training objective includes a


statement on:
 Terminal behaviour required of the trainee
 Standards of performance
 Conditions for performance

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Developing Training Programmes

Factors to Consider
 Venue
 Trainer
 Duration
 Budget
 Individual or group
 Methodology
 Logistics

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Training Venue

On-the-job?

or

Off-the-job?

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Job Instructional Training/
On-the-job Training

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Training Methods

 Lecture
 Handouts
 Audio-visual aids
 Computer-aided learning/e-learning
 Role-playing
 Case studies
 Simulation
 Coaching
 Apprenticeship
 Projects/Special assignments
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Training Methods (cont.)

Which Methods to Use?

 A, S or K?
 Active or Passive?
 Cost and facilities?

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Learning Principles

 The learner must want to learn


 Active learning is more effective than passive
learning
 Feedback or knowledge of results is essential
 Learning is faster in teams

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The Kirkpatrick Model of
Evaluation

Learning: What have the trainees learned?

Results: Have cost reductions resulted?

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E-learning

 E-learning allows learners


to learn at the speed
which suits them best.
 E-learning allows for savings
on logistics costs.
 E-learning allows employees to learn at times
which suits them best.

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Review

 The concept of training


 The benefits of training
 A systematic approach to training
 Examples of learning principles

Human Resource Management Principles and Practices (Fourth Edition) All Rights Reserved
© Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2018 3–29

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