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Training Needs Analysis Approach

The document discusses models of learning and training needs analysis, outlining Goldstein's 6 stage model of analyzing training needs at both the individual and organizational level, including establishing commitment, analyzing the organization and requirements, assessing tasks and individual needs, and addressing special needs like diversity management. It also covers psychological learning theories, the experiential learning cycle, factors influencing transfer of training, and analyzing training climate and resources.

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Cherry Gong
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
217 views19 pages

Training Needs Analysis Approach

The document discusses models of learning and training needs analysis, outlining Goldstein's 6 stage model of analyzing training needs at both the individual and organizational level, including establishing commitment, analyzing the organization and requirements, assessing tasks and individual needs, and addressing special needs like diversity management. It also covers psychological learning theories, the experiential learning cycle, factors influencing transfer of training, and analyzing training climate and resources.

Uploaded by

Cherry Gong
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Training & Development Needs Analysis

Training
Overview
 Models of Learning
– Reinforcement Theories
– Cybernetic & Information Theories
– Cognitive Theories & Problem Solving
– Experiential Learning Cycle
 The ‘learner’ and the organisation’ : transfer
 Model of Training Needs Analysis (TNA) : individual
and organisational levels of analysis
 Special training and development needs : diversity
management
Learning

‘Training and developmental activities are designed to


bring about changes in behaviour’
Arnold, Cooper & Robertson (1998)

Learning is ‘a relatively permanent change in behaviour


that occurs as a result of practice or experience’
Bass & Vaughan (1966)

 How do we learn ? Psychological theories...


Reinforcement Theories
 Pavlov (1904) ‘Classical Conditioning’ - making dogs
dribble

 Skinner (1965) ‘Operant Conditioning’ - teaching


pigeons ‘ping-pong’

 Watson & Rayner (1920) ‘little Albert’

 Nord (1969) application of Skinner’s ‘positive


reinforcement’ principles to org./mgmt practices
 N.B. Conditioning by punishment ?
Cybernetic & Information Theories
How information is received and monitored (‘’human
thermostats’’ - Stammers & Patrick, 1975)

Power Source Monitoring Process


(muscular action) (receipt of ‘cues’ through
the senses)

Feedback

Skills Analysis - what ‘cues’ or ‘stimuli’ an experienced


worker is being guided by (e.g. typist : ‘hunt & peck’)
Cognitive Theories & Problem Solving
 Reflect the way in which we learn to
recognise and define problems or
experiment to find solutions
– trial & error
– deductive reasoning
– information seeking
 Kohler (1973) Theory of ‘Insight Learning’ or
‘Discovery Learning’ (e.g. Chimps, bananas
and sticks or Archimedes ‘Eureka!!’)
Gagné’s Hierarchy of Learning
 8 major varieties of learning, hierarchically related, each
building on earlier, more simple abilities (which therefore
act as prerequisites for more complex abilities)
– Signal Learning (classical conditioning)
– Stimulus-Response Learning (operant conditioning)
– Chaining (connecting sequence of 2+ S-R units)
– Verbal Association (learning ‘verbal’ chains)
– Discrimination Learning (different responses to similar stimuli)
– Concept Learning (common response to different stimuli in gp)
– Rule Learning (a chain of 2 or more concepts I.e. if ‘A’ then ‘B’)
– Problem Solving (recombining old rules into new ones)
Experiential Learning
Kolb (1974) : ‘Learning Cycle’
Concrete
Testing experience Observations
implications of & Reflections
concepts in new
situations Formation of
abstract concepts
& generalisations

Honey & Mumford (1986, 1992) : ‘Learning Styles’


– activist : open-minded, actively involved, bored with implementation
– reflector : ponder experiences, cautious, ‘back-seat’, ‘bigger picture’
– theorist : adapt & integrate observations, vertical, logical, hierarchical
– pragmatist : try out new ideas to see if they work in practice
The ‘Learner-Organisation’ Interaction (I)
 Learner Motivation
– Otto & Glaser (1970) : taxonomy of motivational factors in learning :
achievement motivation, anxiety, approval, curiosity, acquisitiveness
 Knowledge of results (feedback)
– form of reinforcement
– Extrinsic KR
– Intrinsic KR
– Learning curves & plateau
 Attitude formation & change
– predispose learners to action
– having ‘harmonious attitudes’ (Festinger’s concept of cognitive
dissonance, 1957)
– group discussion, providing new information
The ‘Learner-Organisation’ Interaction (II)
Age
– less brain cells, speeded performance declines
– short-term memory deteriorates (increased errors in
cognitively complex tasks)
– Welford (1962) older less able to cope with large
amounts of information and
– vocab. and comprehension increase (reasoning and
numerical ability test scores decreased)
– Vernon (1960) rate of decline slowest in originally
high scorers.
– Stimulation
– Education & Training offset decline in abilities
Transfer
 ‘Training transfer occurs when new learning is used in new settings
beyond those employed for training purposes’ (Arnold, Cooper &
Robertson, 1998)
 Positive Learning Transfer
– ‘when learning that has already taken place on one task assists later learning on
another’
– vertical positive transfer : one subject acts as a basis for another (e.g. maths to
statistics)
– lateral positive transfer : occurs when the same type of stimulus requires the same
response (e.g. flight simulators)
– N.B. ‘On-’ vs ‘Off-the-job’ Training
 Negative Transfer
– ‘when an old learning or past experience can hinder performance on a new task;
when the same stimuli requires a different response’ (e.g. driving on right hand
side)
Factors that assist Transfer
Individual
 Understanding of general principles

– facilitated by discovery learning; issue of physical and


psychological ‘fidelity’
 Overlearning

– practising beyond the level of minimum competence


 Association

– getting the trainee to associate new learning with other, previous,


learning.
Organisational
 Supportive culture ?

 Congruent norms/values/attitudes
Goldstein (1986, 1991, 1993)
Model of Training Needs Analysis
Stage One
Establish organisation’s commitment and support

Stage Two
Organisational Analysis

Stage Three
Requirement Analysis

Stage Four
‘Needs Assessment’ - Task & KSA analysis of training needs

Stage Five
‘Person Analysis’

Stage Six
Collate data to input to, and design of, training environment
and training evaluation
Stage One : Establishing Organisational
Commitment and Support
Identify whose co-operation is needed, i.e.
management, workers, clients, other stakeholders.
‘Project Parameters’ : rationale of approach(es), time
needed, numbers of people involved, admin. (&
other) support needed.
Glaser & Taylor (1973)
– collaborative approach
– highly motivated, ‘team-like’ interface
– early and active contacts between parties
Goldstein (1993) advocates a ‘liaison team’
Stage Two : Organisational Analysis
of Training Needs

 Central Issue = ‘how well is the organisation doing?’


N.B. Organisation does not have to be underperforming
to need development
 Importance of the ‘transfer’ climate : system-wide

factors that may support/undermine training


 Goldstein (1993) : 4 stages of OA

– Specify training goals (3 types)


– Determine training climate
– Identify legal constraints (vertical and horizontal)
– Determine resources available
Stage Three : Requirement Analysis

Goldstein (1993) : 6 stages


 determine target job to be assessed

 identify how needs assessment data best collected

– interviews, observations, surveys, tests, records, SME’s,


focus groups, work samples, etc.
 determine who is going to provide necessary info
 ascertain key points of contact and their
responsibilities
 anticipate problems and difficulties
 develop a TNA protocol
Stage Four : Needs Assessment
Task Analysis
 TA for TNA should provide a job specification
(KSA’s/competencies required). Training spec. derived from
difference between employees’ current and ideal levels
 Reid & Barrington (1997) : 3 main TNA TA approaches (task
identification & task element analysis)
– Comprehensive Approach
– Key Task Analysis
– Problem-Centred Approach
 Task fidelity (physical and psychological)
– e.g. stages and ‘key points analysis’, manual skills analysis, job
learning analysis, faults analysis, benchmarking, Critical Incidents
Technique.
Stage Five : Person Analysis

 Who in the organisation needs training


 What kind of training is needed
 KSA deficits - must have suitable performance
criteria
– performance appraisal ratings
– 360-feedback ratings
– KSA’s of new recruits
– Development Centre ratings
– self-assessments
Special Training Needs
 Retraining
– learning how to learn
– the ageing workforce
 Managing Diversity
– cross-cultural training (increasing globalisation, multi-cultural
societies)
– Equal Opportunities legislation
 Training the Unemployed
– long-term unemployed (more than 27 weeks continuously)
– causes of long-term unemployment (physical, psychological &
environmental factors)

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