Focus on Learning, Not Training

By: Kevin Dwyer
Submitted: 2007-01-17 15:05:18
Print this article | Tell a friend | For publisher | Social Bookmarking
Rating:
 

Nearly every organization I have ever worked for or with has a serious problem with training. They concentrate on training rather than learning.

The first indication of a problem is that the mediums chosen to impart learning are the poorest at retaining learning but are the easiest to organise.

Learning retention rates vary depending on the medium that is used to impart the learning. The usual training methods of lectures, reading, audio visual and demonstration (including role plays) have average retention rates of five, ten, twenty and thirty percent, respectively.

A chief financial officer revising these numbers would not have an anticipation of a high rate of return from training.

The average retention ate for discussion groups is fifty percent. Good role plays will result in discussion groups occurring. Unfortunately, most role plays are unstructured with the roles given cursory attention as to what impact they need to have on the learning required and the discussion which follows is as much about the acting ability of participants as it is about the key learnings.

Good role plays will structure the background of the individuals, the behaviour of the individuals, the environment in which they are operating and the responses required to specific situations of at least one of the participants of the role play. The discussion at the end of each role play will be similarly structured, looking for observation about content, not style.

Practice by doing has a retention rate of seventy-five percent. And yet, repetition of a task or a method seems to be considered as demeaning in many organisations. There is still much to be said for drilling concepts into people during and after the "training programme" to aid retention.

By far the most effective ways of ensuring that learning is retained is to immediately apply the learning in a real situation or be required to teach others. I have not seen either of these alternatives to improve retention of learning employed except by the occasional individual diligent manager or supervisor.

When it comes to the medium of training, the tried and true lectures with audiovisuals and a few role plays are the norm. The training department generally checks whether the training was enjoyed and was considered relevant by use of the reaction sheet. This is always in the affirmative of course if the training was conducted overseas or in any location considered exotic.

Reaction sheets bring me to the second indication that training departments concentrate on training rather than learning. Whilst a reaction sheet is important to determine whether the trainer and the programme delivered are suitable, they are only a fraction of the story if the focus is on learning rather than training.

What is more difficult and more important to measure is whether the learning is actually relevant to the participant's workplace not just intellectually stimulating and theoretically relevant to the workplace, which will score high on a reaction sheet.

Learning which cannot be used in the workplace is not only forgotten, but it has no chance of changing behaviours at the workplace and changing the bottom line of the organisation.

Kirkpatrick's four levels of training evaluation has been around, discussed and built on since 1994 and yet few organisations actually measure beyond the first level, which is the reaction sheet. Kirkpatrick's four levels are reaction, learning, transfer (to the workplace) and results. Kirkpatrick's evaluation model is a model for evaluating the level and impact of learning and not training.

A good instructional designer will insist that the determination of the measures to be used at each of the four levels is completed as part of the instructional design. But this rarely happens as organisations remain focused on the training and the trainer rather than learning.

The third indication that organisation's focus on training rather than learning is that whilst most training is lectures combined with audio visual and role plays with a low retention rate, hardly ever is there an attempt made to increase retention rates by providing a means to revise the material learnt.

People who participate in traditional training methods and have no intervention which requires them to revise the material will forget over eighty percent of what they learnt within eight weeks. People who have some intervention forget about twenty percent of what they learnt.

If organisations introduced something as simple as a revision test, the potential for a return on training investment increases by a factor of four.

Some organisations truly see training as an investment. However, most pay the notion of training being an investment lip service. It is not hard to understand why, when the concentration is so much on training and so little on learning applied to achieve an end result.

Organisations need to learn that training is about the organisation, learning is about the person.

Kevin Dwyer is Director of Change Factory. Change Factory helps organisations who do do not like their business outcomes to get better outcomes by changing people's behaviour. Businesses we help have greater clarity of purpose and ability to achieve their desired business outcomes. To learn more visit http://www.changefactory.com.au or email kevin.dwyer@changefactory.com.au Copyright 2006 Change Factory

To see more articles visit http://www.changefactory.com.au

Article source: Expert Articles

Most Recent Articles in Change Management category

  • Ideas to Get Your Started Online $ Marketing Business - By: Thingom Kenedy
    Is the same old routine that you have everyday getting you down? Fighting the traffic to go and sit in an office for 8 hours or more and then joining the rush hour home again. Collecting the kids from school, watching their sports practice or helping with homework, this leaves you no time for yourself at all.
  • Manifesting The Law of Attraction: An Unbiased Evaluation - By: Brian Garvin
    Find out the scoop with relation to Law of Attraction and evaluate if it is proper for you at this time. Please read our original evaluation of Law of Attraction.
  • Small Business Kit For Dummies - By: Ajaay Kumar
    The Small Business Kit for Dummies has eliminated the need for business coaching for many companies because the book explains in enough detail a range of aspects from beginning to continuing a successful business. This book is invaluable to both a new entrepreneur as well as those with plenty of experience.
  • Identifying the Right Venture Capital Firm Partner - By: Rahul Rana
    Venture capital firms are comprised of individual partners. These partners make investment decisions and typically take a seat on each portfolio company's Board. Partners tend to invest in what they know, so finding a partner that has past work experience in your industry is very helpful. This relevant experience allows them to more fully understand your venture's value proposition and gives them confidence that they can add value, thus encouraging them to invest.
  • Business Plan - By: Gaurav Walia
    A is a short brief that explains how a business owner, director or entrepreneur plans to orchestrate an enterprising effort that carries out the actions that are necessary in order for the effort to succeed. Basically, a business plan is the written description of a business's business model. Those involved in the planning process and management are the most likely to use a business plan. Business plans are also used when approaching potential lenders or investors that have an interest in a particular business venture.
  • Data Center Automation - What Your Organization Needs - By: Sam A. Brown
    When it comes to researching resources, there are several aspects worth considering, to ensure that business and operational needs are met. From the basics of implementing a software solution to automate tasks such as provisioning, patching and software distribution, to a full blown multi-tier architecture, data center automation is key.
  • The Power of the Chamber of Commerce - By: Andy Keeler
    Advice on how your Chamber of Commerce can work for you
  • Conference Sessions Focus on Organizational Change - By: Mark Harbeke
    Recently, I summarized the tips and strategies provided in two of the morning sessions at our recent 2006 Best Bosses Conference, held September 27, 2006 in Chicago. Below, I continue in this series of articles dedicated to the knowledge provided by the workplace leaders and experts at the Conference workshops. In recounting the two remaining morning sessions, “Evolution of a Best Boss: Changing to Grow Your Organization” and “Small Steps to Big Culture Change,” the common theme is organizational change.
  • Medical Billing Outsourcing - By: Damian Sofsian
    The medical treatment business has changed significantly in the past few years. It presents many administrative difficulties during the preparation of insurance policy procedures and dealing with complicated claim forms. To avoid these complexities, doctors look out for outside help, and hire representatives to advise them, attend insurance company seminars, and provide them with regular financial reports.
  • Leadership v Management - By: Kevin Hinton
    Change is one of the only certainties in life – it is constant.How we adapt to change will be one of the most determining factor in evaluating our successes or our failures.• where we end up.