Title: A WORKPLACE DESIGNED FOR LEARNING: FROM STRATEGY TO IMPLEMENTATION
1A WORKPLACE DESIGNED FOR LEARNING FROM STRATEGY
TO IMPLEMENTATION
HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT FOR THE PUBLIC SERVICE
2A VISION FOR HRD
A dedicated, responsive and productive Public
Service
BUILDING HUMAN CAPITAL FOR HIGH PERFORMANCE AND
ENHANCED SERVICE DELIVERY
Fostering HEI FETC Partnerships
Mobilization of management support
Utilization of the strategic role of SETAs
Responsiveness to Millennium Development Goals
E-Learning Programmes for the Public Service
Career Planning Talent Management
Values, Ethics Professional Code of Practice
Promoting integrated inter-sectoral approaches
to developmental priorities
A National/Provincial Public Service Academy
Managing Employee Health Wellness
Promoting HR Learning Networks
Capacity Development to promote success of
Industrial Economic Plans
Promoting Learnerships, Internships Traineeships
Ensuring adequacy of Physical Human resources
facilities
Managing Effectiveness of Communication
Development programmes of professional bodies
Promoting appropriate Org. Structure for HRD
Awareness promotion of growth development
initiatives
Fostering Effective Monitoring, Evaluation
Impact Analysis
Leadership Development Management Strategies
Performance Management Development Systems
Integrating NEPAD, AU, Regional Global
Programmes
Managing HRD Policy Planning Frameworks
Guidelines
Integrated ABET Framework
Knowledge Information Management
Workplace Learning Programmes
HR Planning - Supply Demand Management
Strengthening aligning governance roles in HRD
ASGISA, JIPSA, EPWP, PGDP, IDPs
CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVES
ORGANIZATIONAL SUPPORT INITIATIVES
GOVERNANCE INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVES
ECONOMIC GROWTH DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVES
1
2
3
4
4 KEY PILLARS FOR HIGH PERFORMANCE IN THE PUBLIC
SERVICE THROUGH HRD
Responding to needs of designated groups (women
disabilities
Focus on all Performa levels of employment
Building learning communities organizations
Continuity through all spheres of government
Recognizing contextual differences
Maintaining a performance focus
Responding to sectoral differences
Promoting the agenda of development
Cohesiveness Integration
Flexibility and adaptability
10 CORE PRINCIPLES INFORMING IMPLEMENTATIONOF HRD
STRATEGY
LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK AS A FOUNDATION
3Pillar 1.1 Workplace Learning
- Strategic Focus
- To strengthen workplace learning interventions
so that quick gains could be seen in
organisational performance and in the services
provided to citizens and stakeholders
4Some key activities of 1.1
- 1.1.1 Guidelines developed for managing and
evaluating HRD in the workplace - 1.1.2 Training provided in managing HRD in the
workplace for HRD practitioners and for line
managers - 1.1.3 Guidelines developed for pre and post
training interventions - 1.1.4 Common framework and guidelines are in
place for skills audits, needs assessment and the
evaluation of the impact of training on workplace
performance - 1.1.5 Common frameworks and processes are
available for managing workplace learning
5What is workplace learning?
- A definition
- learning or training or development undertaken
in the workplace, usually on the job, including
on-the-job training under normal operational
conditions, on-site training which is conducted
away from the work process (e.g. in a training
room)
6New way (model) of viewing the challenge
- First focus on PERFORMANCE rather than training
or even learning new way of viewing HRD
strategy identify the problem first then
provide the solution. - Ask the question Is there value in solving it?
- Smart questions What are we trying to
accomplish rather than what training does the
person require
7A model of how processes relate
- A learning performance architecture is a
systematic integration of approaches (electronic
non electronic) that facilitates both formal
informal workplace learning support
ultimately improved human performance
8Learning and Performance Architecture
- Most learning takes place on the job
- Learning is not training
- Training is incapable on its own of supporting
all learning needs of employees - Technology can be used for learning in a powerful
way - Learning effectiveness is extremely important in
the smart organisation, but it does not, in and
of itself, constitute the ultimate value
proposition that comes from improved level of
workforce performance
9- the usual approach to training taking
employees off-site for intensive training is in
fact misguided. Such courses tend to work
against human nature, since they are typically an
attempt to part knowledge needed to employees in
one fell swoop , with little attempt to tailor it
to the specific employees job or learning style
in order to improve performance.
10- On-the-job training coupled with self-paced
e-learning online help to deliver personalised
assistance as required is in fact a more
effective way of ensuring employees get training
that is relevant to their jobs in order to
improve performance.
11- Organisational success (performance) is due to
the skills knowledge of its workforce - Due to changing nature of work in a global
environment means that skills must be
continuously developed
12Features of creating a learning organisation
- Training is not adequate alone to foster a
learning organisation - Open communication style
- Innovative systems/structures
- The role of workplace trainers
- The role of informal learning
- Fostering generic skills
- Applying skills learnt to the work at hand that
this leads to improved performance and capability - Networks of learning alliances, partnerships,
collaborative problem solving - Creation of learning events
13- Learning in the workplace is not just something
that happens. It is planned and - It is part of a wider system
- The manager/supervisor
- The employee
- Trainers
- The Mentors
- The Coaches
14Importance of the workplace
- The workplace is the key site for the development
of generic skills such as communication,
problem-solving, teamwork, information technology
and customer service skills all critical in
todays workplace. - EG Encourage employees to reflect on current
practice within the organisation and to tolerate
risks. -
15- Workplace learning is a deliberate strategy which
takes into account the work that needs to be done
and the skills needed to do the work - Customised training/learning/development for
individual employees occurs in the workplace - Quality of training can assist with staff
retention and in attracting skilled workers
16Challenges
- Line managers increasingly responsible for
training their staff (Revised Competency
Framework) - Increase in the number of workplace trainers,
coaches and mentors to assist in the process - While workplace trainers have NB role to play
often training is delivered by staff who are not
trained to do so - leading to issues of quality
relevance of training being delivered - Issues of these trainers delivering training that
lies outside the nationally developed competency
standards within training packages
17The HR Professional (ex Practitioner/Trainer)
- As trainer
- As researcher action research interventionist
studies of learning in work activities (activity
theory) - EG The HR Professional conducting action
research around the using of the HRD
Implementation Guide and the process around
organisational change and attitude change in
using this Guide in the organisation
18The HR Professional cont.
- Strategy expert
- Work organisation expert
- Employee champion
- Agent of continuous transformation (nor change)
- Staff discharging HRM functions need to be
specialist - Staff who play these roles will have to be
- Specialists, advisors, consultants, business
partners - Solid understanding of environment in which the
organisation operates the ability to deliver
services efficiently
19The ideal workplace learning situation
- Workplace learning is aimed at increasing
innovative capacity - Organisational culture supports values
development learning - Development learning are a part of doing
business are included as an integral part of
strategic planning cycle - Development is customized to individuals to
increase work capability (focused use of PDP)
20Considerations
- So think strategically when planning for capacity
development for your department when working
with managers from the various - Is there a need for external programmes or is it
a workplace learning issue? - What then is your role to assist the manager to
realise this requirement? - Do you as HRD meet with the managers to plan
capacity development initiatives? - How do you construct the balance between
knowledge and skill development in workplace
learning?
21Key features of LD Plan
- Every position has a learning and development
plan, with a statement of identified competencies
(Competency Framework) required training
programmes to attain them (HR Learning Framework
July Lekgotla Task 9) - An internal portal provides easy access to
information is regularly updated - Employees are aware of internal opportunities
the next career steps
22Key features of LD Plan cont.
- The organisation has a comprehensive resource
library, designed for various learning styles - There is a well-balanced blend of e-learning
internal class training, as well as spot
mentoring - Partnership with professional bodies assist in
specialist areas and is context related - Strong focus on measuring results in terms of the
PMDS aligned to the Competency Framework - Strong ME through the SMS PMDS (under PM)
holding manager accountable - Measure improved organisational performance
- Link training to job requirements and then career
progression
23Some workplace learning outputs
- Number of employees receiving workplace
training/development - Level of external provision
- Greater level of workplace delivery of training
- Greater use of workplace trainers
24Ways to address the development of a knowledge
management strategy
- One way to address this is to try to make
knowledge-sharing an integral part of performance
assessment of staff. - Another option is to recognise publically the
staff most active in knowledge-sharing in the
organisation - Get more experienced staff to mentor coach the
younger professionals or provide adequate
opportunities for senior staff to document
codify their tacit knowledge
25- Overcome the resistance to change (to knowledge
management practices to share this knowledge
through education coaching - With greater sharing of knowledge, need for
developing appropriate protocols to handle
sensitive confidential information.
26Organisational Performance Improvement
- How organisations integrate knowledge-sharing
strategies, such as communities of practice,
on-site training sessions, daily or weekly
debriefings, peer feedback, and formal mentoring
coaching, into institution-building can
significantly impact on their overall performance.
27Knowledge is sticky. Without systematic
processes and enablers, it wont move