Title: Workplace Education Yields Demonstrable Benefits
1Workplace Education Yields Demonstrable Benefits
- A presentation by Dr. Lloyd David
- delivered by Brooke S. Toomey of Creative
Workplace Learning - NETWORK CONFERENCE
- Massachusetts Coalition of Adult Education (MCAE)
- Marlborough MA
- October 26, 2006
2Introduction Review of Literature
- First step in preparing for this workshop review
literature on the evaluation of workplace
education programs - Resources referenced
- Google
- Conference Board of Canada studies from 1990s
- NCSALL Focus on Basics
- a report from Northern Illinois University done
in 2003 - NIFL Listserve I am working on a report. Does
anyone know of other research studies on the
benefits of workplace education programs that
have been done in addition to the Conference
Board of Canada study Turning Skills into
Profit?
3Can all workplace education program evaluations
include both quantitative qualitative measures
of success?
- Goal for the workshop show the importance of
including both quantitative and qualitative
measures in workplace education program
evaluation. - By sharing experiences we can begin the process
of setting up a means of collecting and
disseminating the benefits of workplace
education. - Are these benefits currently being overlooked?
4Various programs, common goals.
- In about 3-4 sentences, explain your
organizations primary workplace education
program. What were the initial goals you set out
to achieve and how did you establish them? What
were actual outcomes at the end of the program? - Who benefited from the workplace education
program you implemented? Management? Workers?
Customers or clients? - How did your organization identify and document
successes of the workplace education program? - How can documenting the benefits of workplace
education programs to management, workers and
customers impact the field of workplace education
in general? - Was subsequent funding granted to your
organization if successes were diligently
documented or did documentation have no impact
whatsoever? - Why should companies, employers, public funders,
or foundations support workplace education when
there is little evidence of the benefits? - How can we, as education providers, better secure
cooperation from company management so that
students attendance, progress and satisfaction
are supported? - What do you think the benefits of workplace
education programs should be? Is your opinion
necessarily in line with the funders opinions,
the managers opinions, and the workers
opinions?
5US Department of Education evaluates projects in
1997
- The Conference Board of Canada report, Turning
Skills into Profits, listed economic benefits of
workplace education programs to employees and
employers - 12 skills gained, as mentioned by the employees
- Greater willingness and ability to learn for life
- Improved ability to listen
- Improved ability to understand and use documents
- More positive attitude toward change
- Better ability to work in teams
- Increased ability to use numbers
- Improved capacity to think critically
- Better able to communicate using English
- Improved ability to use computers
- Heightened awareness to others cultures
- Stronger ability to use prose
- Employers report at least one skill gained
6economic benefits of workplace education
programs to the employer
- Improved employee morale
- Increased quality of work
- Improved capacity to solve problems
- Improved capacity to cope with change
- Improved capacity to use new technology
- More employees participating in training
- Higher success rate in promotions
- Improved effectiveness of supervisors
- Increased capacity to handle on-the-job training
- Improved labor-management relations
- Increased output of products and services
- Higher success rate in transferring employees
within the organization
- Improved results in job-specific training
- Increased profitability
- Reduced time per task
- Quicker results in job training
- Reduced error rate
- Better health and safety record
- Reduced waste in production of products and
services - Increased customer retention
- Increased employee retention
- Reduced absenteeism
7Are workplace education programs given the
importance that they warrant?
- Can workplace education providers and instructors
find adequate and specific support in
Massachusetts? - Evidential support of successful programming in
the past is critical to building on a strong
foundation. - Evaluations of workplace education programs can
be the powerful evidence we need. Comprehensive
evaluations should, at minimum - report the process and outcomes of program
implementation and - show the importance of the programs to the
company and the benefits to the students. - Developing a strategy to organize educators and
directors can help nurture advocates for
workplace education - When everyone is uses the same language and
understands the importance of disseminating the
information, the validity of evaluations and the
lessons learned are strengthened - Involving businesses and unions in the evaluation
process furthers the collaboration needed for
successful programming
8CEI/CWL examples of Workplace StudiesAn
evaluation should be all inclusive
9CWL Workplace Education Programs key benefits
- Axcelis Technologies
- Student enthusiasm for classes gt implementation
of additional subjects - Engelhard Corporation
- Administration of company-designed pre post
tests showed 100 of program participants
improved - Imperial Distributors
- Special study demonstrated clear social and
psychological benefits for employees - Fire Control Instruments, Inc.
10Fire Control Instruments, Inc
11Conclusion
- Investing in employee education increases
productivity and morale - Multiple benefits of Workplace Educationcollectiv
ely discussed today - Value in pooling results of evaluations?
- Thank you.