PPT_ch063.pptx

Chapter Six

Training Evaluation

Objectives

Explain why evaluation is important

Identify and choose outcomes to evaluate a training program

Discuss the process used to plan and implement a good training evaluation

Discuss the strengths and weaknesses of different evaluation designs

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Objectives

Choose the appropriate evaluation design based on the characteristics of the company and the importance and purpose of the training

Conduct a cost-benefit analysis for a training program

Explain the role of workforce analytics and dashboards in determining the value of training practices

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Key Terms

Training effectiveness: benefits derived training

Training evaluation: process of determining training effectiveness

Training outcomes: measures to evaluate training effectiveness

Evaluation design: data will be collected and which data will be collected for training evaluation

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Formative Evaluation

Refers to evaluation of training that takes place during program design

Helps to ensure training is well organized, runs smoothly, and that trainees learn and are satisfied

Provides information on how to make a program better

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Summative Evaluation

Refers to evaluation conducted to determine if training has lead to desirable outcomes

Examines whether trainees have improved or acquired knowledge, skills, attitudes, behaviors, or other outcomes

Includes examining the business impact of training

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Importance of Evaluation

There are multiple reasons to evaluate:

identify a program’s strengths and weaknesses

assess what features of training content and context matter

identify which trainees benefited

gather information for marketing training

determine financial benefits and costs

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The Evaluation Process

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Training Outcomes

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Results

Learning & Cognitive Outcomes

Behavior & Skill-Based Outcomes

Affective Outcomes

Reactions

Return on Investment

Reactions

Trainees’ perceptions of the training experience relating to the content, facilities, trainer, and methods

Key questions to consider include:

Did the trainees like the program?

Did the environment help learning?

Was the material meaningful?

Typically measured at the end of training

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Learning & Cognitive Outcomes

Relate to familiarity with information, including principles, facts, techniques, procedures, and processes

Typically measured via paper-and-pencil tests and self-assessments

Tests often preferred over self-assessments

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Behavior & Skill-Based Outcomes

Relate to proficiency with technical skills, motor skills, and behavior

Include learning and transfer

Learning often assessed via work samples

Transfer often assessed via observation or managerial/peer ratings

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Affective Outcomes

Include attitudes and motivation

e.g., self-efficacy, employee engagement, motivation to learn, tolerance for diversity, attitudes toward safety 

The attitude of interest depends on the training objectives

Affective outcomes often measured via surveys

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Results

Did training have an impact on meaningful business outcomes?

Outcomes used to determine the benefits of training to the company

e.g., reduced costs, increased employee retention, increased sales, improved quality or customer service

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Return on Investment

Involves comparing the training program's benefits to its costs in monetary terms

Benefits: value the company gains

Direct costs: salaries for employees involved in training, program materials, facilities, and travel

Indirect costs: costs not related directly to design and delivery

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Which Outcomes?

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Relevance

Reliability

Discrimination

Practicality

Relevance

The extent to which training outcomes are related to the learned capabilities emphasized in the program

Contamination refers to the inclusion of inappropriate or irrelevant outcomes

Deficiency refers to the omission of important information

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Deficiency, Relevance, & Contamination

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Reliability

The extent to which outcomes can be measured consistently over time

Evaluators are concerned with consistency over time, such that items do not change in meaning or interpretation over time

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Discrimination

The extent to which measured performance reflects a true difference

We want tests that discriminate between high and low performance

A test that is too easy may not discriminate

In this instance, both high and low performers would do well and appear “good” even though they are not

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Practicality

The extent to which outcomes can be easily measured and collected

Companies often claim that measurement is too burdensome

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Training Evaluation Practices

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Which Outcomes?

While collecting data on all outcomes is ideal, it may not always be necessary

Consider the scope of the training and practical considerations

Do not assume that positive reactions lead to transfer

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Threats to Validity

Threats to validity refer to factors that will lead an evaluator to question the results

Internal validity is the believability of the study

External validity is the generalizability of the evaluation results to other groups and situations

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Controlling for Threats

There are three ways to control for threats:

Use pre-tests and post-tests

Use a control group

Random assignment of employees to control and training groups

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Post-test Only

Involves collecting only post-training outcomes

Appropriate when trainees can be expected to have similar levels of proficiency prior to training

Strengthened with a control group

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Pre-test / Post-test

Involves collecting both pre-training and post-training outcomes to determine if a change has occurred

Is there a difference in outcomes before and after training?

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Pre-test / Post-test with Comparison Group

Includes pre-training and post-training outcomes and use of a control group

If the post-training improvement is greater for the training group, there is evidence that training was responsible

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Time Series

Involves collecting measures at periodic intervals pre- and post-training

A comparison group may be used

The strength of this design can be improved by using reversal, which refers to a time period when participants no longer receive training

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Solomon Four-Group

Combines the pre-test/post-test comparison group design and the posttest-only control group design

Pre-test, treatment, post-test

Pre-test, no treatment, post-test

No pre-test, treatment, post-test

No pre-test, no treatment, post-test

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When Evaluation May Not Be Necessary

Time constraints

Managers and trainees may lack expertise

The company may view training as an investment from which it expects little or no return

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When Evaluation is a Must

The training is ongoing and has the potential to affect many employees

The training program involves multiple classes and a large number of trainees

The expertise exists to evaluate

The cost of training is significant

There is sufficient time and interest

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Note: Not all reasons from the text are listed.

32

Cost-Benefit Analysis

Companies may desire to quantify whether the benefits of training outweigh the costs

Cost-benefit analysis

Process of determining the economic impact of training using accounting methods that look at training costs and benefits

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Cost Categories

program development or purchase

instructional materials

equipment and hardware

facilities

travel and lodging

salary of the trainer and support staff

cost of lost productivity or replacement workers while trainees are away

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Determining Benefits

A number of methods can be used to identify benefits

literature that summarizes benefits

pilot training programs

observing successful job performers asking trainees and managers for estimates

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Calculating Return on Investment (ROI)

Identify annual change in outcomes

Place a monetary value on the outcomes

Determine the annual change in value

Determine training costs

Calculate net benefit

Divide net benefits by costs

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Administrator (A) - Does this slide make sense?

Utility Analysis

Assessing the dollar value of training based on:

estimates of the difference in performance between trained and untrained employees

number of individuals trained

length of time training is expected to influence performance

variability in performance in the untrained group of employees

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Success Cases & Return on Expectations

Success cases refer to concrete examples showing how learning has led to results the company finds worthwhile and credible

Return on expectations (ROE) demonstrates to key stakeholders that their expectations about training have been satisfied

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Big Data

Big data refer to complex datasets compiled across different systems, including marketing, sales, HR, finance, accounting, customer service, and operations

Three dimensions characterize big data

volume

variety

velocity

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Big Data & Training

Big data help make decisions about human capital based on data, rather than intuition and conventional wisdom

Big data can be used to:

evaluate the effectiveness of programs

determine their impact on business results

develop predictive models for forecasting training needs, course enrollments, and outcomes

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