Dear Members,
I have posted the pre and post training assessment sheets for your easy reference of employees as well as supervisors.
Hope it will useful to all training coordinators.
Expecting your valuable comments......
Regards,
JP
From India, Mumbai
I have posted the pre and post training assessment sheets for your easy reference of employees as well as supervisors.
Hope it will useful to all training coordinators.
Expecting your valuable comments......
Regards,
JP
From India, Mumbai
Hi there,
As requested by you to evaluate your form I have a few points on your post training evaluation employee from
• You have not asked weather or not the object of the program has been achieved
• You have not asked what are the skills acquired in this program
• You have not asked about what are the applicable knowledge would be used in real life job
• You have not asked how would this program help the employee achieve their annual goals set by the organization in their business plan.
The same is applicable in the appraiser form except you need to ask
• Has the employee closed the gap between the required skill/ competence acquired in the training and existing competence with in the employee
• The evaluation of employee after training by the appraiser needs to be 2 weeks post the training program or during the performance appraisal assuming you appraise employees on a quarterly basis.
Hope my notes are of value to you should you require any help do not hesitate to contact me
Regards
From Oman, Muscat
As requested by you to evaluate your form I have a few points on your post training evaluation employee from
• You have not asked weather or not the object of the program has been achieved
• You have not asked what are the skills acquired in this program
• You have not asked about what are the applicable knowledge would be used in real life job
• You have not asked how would this program help the employee achieve their annual goals set by the organization in their business plan.
The same is applicable in the appraiser form except you need to ask
• Has the employee closed the gap between the required skill/ competence acquired in the training and existing competence with in the employee
• The evaluation of employee after training by the appraiser needs to be 2 weeks post the training program or during the performance appraisal assuming you appraise employees on a quarterly basis.
Hope my notes are of value to you should you require any help do not hesitate to contact me
Regards
From Oman, Muscat
If there is one part of HR that seems constantly under question for its “ROI” potential, credibility or plain effectiveness it is what is usually known as “Training” – or in the new world as “Learning”, “Management Development” etc.
The reasons for the questions are not difficult to spot.
Training is the only group in HR that actually spends hard cash externally, as opposed to Recruitment or Compensation and Benefits that spend it as salaries. Once people see rupees flowing out of the organizational kitty, they are quick to question the ‘effectiveness’ of these trainings.
The training folks in organizations, haven’t actually covered themselves in laurels when it comes to their work.
The reasons for these are varied. Here is my diagnosis of the reasons:
Training is usually organized as a monolithic sub-function within HR and is junior staffed. This usually means a fresh graduate gets the fancy title of “training asst manager” or some such designation and becomes a gopher for meeting various training requests.
Why a training is being asked for?
What skills/competency gaps will it fill?
What is the follow up program for that training ?
Questions like these are scarcely asked.
Metrics used to measure training are usually uni-dimensional. Lacking either content expertise or process expertise, the training dept/person is measured by the HR head on factors like :
Number of training programs conducted
Satisfaction ratings
Number of people trained
Number of training days conducted per employee etc
Budget variations to plan
With the result, that the training department/person essentially is trying to meet these metrics. As you might have noticed none of these metrics even talk about linkage of training to business needs or outcomes. Any wonder why training fails to link up strategically.
Different groups need to own different parts of training. Content expertise for example resides in the various groups. The training group needs to turn facilitator and help these groups discover their own knowledge and learnings. The role that training needs to play is less of ‘content provider’ and more of standard settings and inculcating similar language across various organizational silos.
Training also needs to engage with various groups to help them to share learnings that are localized, across the organizations.
At a horizontal level, training needs to work with business and identify developmental areas of various levels to meet current and emerging business needs.
By doing that training will need to do a role that even HR is struggling in most organizations. i.e. linking to strategic business needs. That can happen best when training is led by someone who has been in business or can demonstrate in depth understanding.
The path for Training to become strategic
To uncover the way to become strategic training groups need to start doing the following:
Ask questions : Most training people are so ‘task focused’ that they do not seem to be able to ask “why am I doing this?” “How will this impact my firm’s bottomline?” If they do not think about ROI, others will think it for them
Think numbers : Training professionals need to think about a new set of metrics that focus more on effectiveness and less on efficiency. They have to rise from Kirkpatrick’s level 1 to level 3 and 4.
Realise that learning is more than training: Let’s face it. Face to face, classroom training probably accounts for less than 30% of what a person actually learns in an organization. Trainers, have to start thinking how factors like supervisor and management support will help in learning, how they will help in applying concepts learnt to increase workplace productivity. Attending training programs should not be the end, increasing workplace productivity should be
Involve line managers: Training professionals should involve line managers to actually be responsible for their employees trainings and where possible they should actually conduct the training themselves. Outsourcing training might help in the short term, but does not pass organizational culture along.
Transparency: People who are getting trained need to understand the larger context of where the training fits in with organizational strategy. Their managers and training professionals need to paint the whole picture to help them understand and communicate it to them.
New skills: Trainers themselves should pick up new skills like business and financial skills and not be just event managers. They need to understand the linkages between knowledge, learning and performance to figure out how they can add value to the organization.
From India, New Delhi
The reasons for the questions are not difficult to spot.
Training is the only group in HR that actually spends hard cash externally, as opposed to Recruitment or Compensation and Benefits that spend it as salaries. Once people see rupees flowing out of the organizational kitty, they are quick to question the ‘effectiveness’ of these trainings.
The training folks in organizations, haven’t actually covered themselves in laurels when it comes to their work.
The reasons for these are varied. Here is my diagnosis of the reasons:
Training is usually organized as a monolithic sub-function within HR and is junior staffed. This usually means a fresh graduate gets the fancy title of “training asst manager” or some such designation and becomes a gopher for meeting various training requests.
Why a training is being asked for?
What skills/competency gaps will it fill?
What is the follow up program for that training ?
Questions like these are scarcely asked.
Metrics used to measure training are usually uni-dimensional. Lacking either content expertise or process expertise, the training dept/person is measured by the HR head on factors like :
Number of training programs conducted
Satisfaction ratings
Number of people trained
Number of training days conducted per employee etc
Budget variations to plan
With the result, that the training department/person essentially is trying to meet these metrics. As you might have noticed none of these metrics even talk about linkage of training to business needs or outcomes. Any wonder why training fails to link up strategically.
Different groups need to own different parts of training. Content expertise for example resides in the various groups. The training group needs to turn facilitator and help these groups discover their own knowledge and learnings. The role that training needs to play is less of ‘content provider’ and more of standard settings and inculcating similar language across various organizational silos.
Training also needs to engage with various groups to help them to share learnings that are localized, across the organizations.
At a horizontal level, training needs to work with business and identify developmental areas of various levels to meet current and emerging business needs.
By doing that training will need to do a role that even HR is struggling in most organizations. i.e. linking to strategic business needs. That can happen best when training is led by someone who has been in business or can demonstrate in depth understanding.
The path for Training to become strategic
To uncover the way to become strategic training groups need to start doing the following:
Ask questions : Most training people are so ‘task focused’ that they do not seem to be able to ask “why am I doing this?” “How will this impact my firm’s bottomline?” If they do not think about ROI, others will think it for them
Think numbers : Training professionals need to think about a new set of metrics that focus more on effectiveness and less on efficiency. They have to rise from Kirkpatrick’s level 1 to level 3 and 4.
Realise that learning is more than training: Let’s face it. Face to face, classroom training probably accounts for less than 30% of what a person actually learns in an organization. Trainers, have to start thinking how factors like supervisor and management support will help in learning, how they will help in applying concepts learnt to increase workplace productivity. Attending training programs should not be the end, increasing workplace productivity should be
Involve line managers: Training professionals should involve line managers to actually be responsible for their employees trainings and where possible they should actually conduct the training themselves. Outsourcing training might help in the short term, but does not pass organizational culture along.
Transparency: People who are getting trained need to understand the larger context of where the training fits in with organizational strategy. Their managers and training professionals need to paint the whole picture to help them understand and communicate it to them.
New skills: Trainers themselves should pick up new skills like business and financial skills and not be just event managers. They need to understand the linkages between knowledge, learning and performance to figure out how they can add value to the organization.
From India, New Delhi
Dear JP,
Sorry for posting my view lately. You need to modify your forms for gathering relevant and effective information from the TRAINEE and APPRAISER.
Dear Ms. Anayath,
Looking at your inputs, I request your good-self to share your format, if you have any.
a) FEEDBACK - POST TRAINING,
b)SKILL ASSESSMENT - POST TRAINING
Kindly do the needful as i would love to learn and enhance my knowledge base through your goodself.
Kindly do add me to your GTALK(abdul.khadir@gmail.com) LIST for future discussions.
REQUEST FOR OTHERS MEMBERS OF THIS FORUM
------------------------------------------------
Other members of this forum are also requested to share your TRAINING FEEDBACK & SKILL ASSESSMENTS. May be, after analysis, we may draft a better form that will be of much useful to various members of this forum.....
With profound regards
From India, Chennai
Sorry for posting my view lately. You need to modify your forms for gathering relevant and effective information from the TRAINEE and APPRAISER.
Dear Ms. Anayath,
Looking at your inputs, I request your good-self to share your format, if you have any.
a) FEEDBACK - POST TRAINING,
b)SKILL ASSESSMENT - POST TRAINING
Kindly do the needful as i would love to learn and enhance my knowledge base through your goodself.
Kindly do add me to your GTALK(abdul.khadir@gmail.com) LIST for future discussions.
REQUEST FOR OTHERS MEMBERS OF THIS FORUM
------------------------------------------------
Other members of this forum are also requested to share your TRAINING FEEDBACK & SKILL ASSESSMENTS. May be, after analysis, we may draft a better form that will be of much useful to various members of this forum.....
With profound regards
From India, Chennai
Dear Respected Members
As requested please find attached requested form, you will find the Pre & Post evaluation is one form.
Hope you will put it to good use.
Should you have any feedback to improve it or add to it please do share.
Regards
From Oman, Muscat
As requested please find attached requested form, you will find the Pre & Post evaluation is one form.
Hope you will put it to good use.
Should you have any feedback to improve it or add to it please do share.
Regards
From Oman, Muscat
Thank you anayat. Do you have any specific format for the competency mapping analysis. I am new to this job and I have to prepare the training calendar for next year!
From India, New Delhi
From India, New Delhi
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From Australia, Melbourne
From Australia, Melbourne
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