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Preparing Training Sessions. Same stuff Different Day. Scheme of a Course Cycle. TRAINING ORGANIZATION. ORGANIZATIONAL UNITS. Training Needs. ANALYSIS. EVALUATION. EVALUATION. PROGRAM of COURSES. EVALUATION. EVALUATION. COURSE CURRICULUM. DELIVERY. Trained Employee. Trainee.
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Scheme of a Course Cycle TRAINING ORGANIZATION ORGANIZATIONAL UNITS Training Needs ANALYSIS EVALUATION EVALUATION PROGRAMof COURSES EVALUATION EVALUATION COURSECURRICULUM DELIVERY Trained Employee Trainee
Self-Check • Identify a skill which you think you are really good at. (Skill A) • Identify a skill which you think you are not very good at. (Skill B) • How do you know that you are good at performing skill A? • How do you know that you are not good at performing skill B?
Awareness & Competence 1 2 Competence 4 3
Aiming for Conscious Competence • Know entry level of trainees • Assess trainees’ awareness of that level • Needs analysis • Performance appraisal • Increase awareness of level of competence • Move from 1 to 2 • Increase skills • Move from 2 to 3 • Assess costs and benefits of moving from 3 to 4
Syllabus and Sessions Plan • Overall learning objective • Topics • Prerequisites • Sessions and session objectives • Training Materials & References • Training techniques • Training aids
Case Study Small Group Activity/ Discussion Role Play Demonstration Lecture
Types of Training Techniques ‘Traditional’ lecture Class discussion Group discussion Practical exercise Project work Self learning Adult education Vocational training Case-based learning E-learning
Using Training Techniques • Apply always a combination of techniques • Active participation of students should be encouraged as much as possible: participative training • Understanding basics and relations of the course subjects are more important than learning facts • Select a combination of techniques which is 'suitable' for both trainers as well as participants
Lecture Training Advantages :a quick and simple way to provide information to large groups.rather when compared to the other forms of trainingallows for the giving and taking of questions inexpensive
Lecture • Convey information, theories or principles • Depends on trainer for content
Demonstration • Show and explain an activity • Provides a model • Learn by doing
Small Group Activity / Discussion • Learners share their own experience • 4- 8 participants in a group • Involve all participants
Case Study • Analysis of a hypothetical but realistic situation • No “right answers” • Participant devises his/her own solution
Role-Play • Participants act out a hypothetical situation • Everyone becomes part of the scenario • Participants bring their own experience to role
Case Study Small Group Activity/ Discussion Role Play Demonstration Lecture Training Materials ?
Applying Principles of Adult Learning and Retention Recall: Principles of Adult Learning Learning Styles, Communication Styles
Recency Things that are learned last are best remembered • Summarize frequently • Plan review sections • Divide subject into mini-topics of about 20 minutes in length
Appropriateness All information, training aids, case studies, etc must be appropriate to participant’s needs • Clearly identify a need • Use descriptions, examples or illustrations that the participants are familiar with
Motivation Participants must want to learn, must be ready to learn, must have some reason to learn • Presenter must also be motivated • Identify a need for the participants • Move from the known to the unknown
Primacy Things learned first are learnt best • Short presentations • Interesting beginning • Updates on direction and progress of learning • Get things right the first time
2-way communication Communicate with participants • Include interactive activities in sessions plan • Match body language with verbal message
Feedback Trainer and trainee need information from each other • Include feedback activities (e.g., questions; tests) in sessions plan • Give feedback on performance immediately • Positive and negative feedback • Acknowledge good work (positive reinforcement)
Active learning Participants learn more when they are actively involved in the learning process • Use practical exercises • Use questions • Get the participants to DO it
Multiple-sense learning Learning is more effective if participants use more than one of five senses • Tell AND show • I see and I forget I hear and I remember I do and I understand. Confucius a. 450 BC
Exercise Things that are repeated are best remembered • Hear, see, practice, practice • Frequent questions • Frequent recall • Give exercises