Title: Procedure Training How to make it effective
1Procedure TrainingHow to make it effective
Meshing Man and Machine
Presented to
The 5th Annual Technical Trainers
Conference Bellingham, Washington May 1, 2008
V. Earl Brown, Jr. ebrown_at_industrialpsychologists.
biz Office 865-681-3173 Mobile
865-805-3948
2Procedures
- Why do we need them?
- How do we make sure we have the right ones?
- How do procedures fit into our overall training
program? - Why would we train our personnel on them?
- How do we make procedure training effective?
3Why do we need procedures?
- Regulatory compliance (OSHA, EPA, DOT,
State/Local regulations) - Industry/voluntary guidelines (API, CSB, OSHA VPP
Star program, ISO quality series) - Company policies and engineering standard
requirements
4How do we make sure we have the right ones?
- Conduct job task analysis on each job position
- Review existing materials
- Interview job incumbents
- Conduct additional interviews with supervisors,
engineers, and managers - Goal of additional interviews validate data
collected and obtain additional job tasks - Compile an overall list of job tasks performed by
personnel in each job position
5Now that we have compiled the task lists, what do
we do with them?
6Risk rank each task to determine which ones need
procedures and training
7Sample Maintenance Task List
8Sample Operations Task List
9Design our training program
- Identify the training needed
- Process overview
- Regulatory required
- System/equipment
- Operating limits/consequences of deviating from
established limits - Troubleshooting
- Procedure
- Sequence the training in the right order
10Typical Training Sequence
MOC
11How do procedures fit into our overall training
program?
12What is the Difference in operating manuals and
procedures
- Operating manuals contain
- Process overviews
- Descriptive text related to systems and equipment
- Equipment specifications/materials of
construction - Why you do things
- Procedures contain
- Specific steps required to perform tasks
- Warnings/cautions
- PPE requirement
- Procedure prerequisites
- Tools/equipment required to perform tasks
- How you do things
13Why would we train on our procedures?
- Regulations (OSHA/EPA/DOT) require that personnel
be trained on applicable procedures - Generally accepted industry standards require
procedure training - Company policies require procedure training
- Its the right thing to do
- Provide clear instructions for task performance
- Facilitate consistent job performance
14Why do our personnel avoid using our existing
procedures?
- I dont need to review the procedure because I
know how to do the job - Our procedures are not technically accurate
- Our procedures have too much detail and you cant
find what you need - Our procedures have too little detail and dont
help me - I was never trained on the procedures
- I know the shortcuts that are not in the
procedures - We dont have a procedure for this task
- I dont know where the procedures are
- The manuals and procedures are not user friendly
and are too difficult to use
15What are some of the things we can do to
encourage personnel to use our procedures?
- Review and update our procedures and training
materials to ensure they are - validated and technically accurate
- adequately covering the subject matter
- communicated to personnel responsible for
performing the tasks - uniform and consistent in relation to style,
format, level of detail - clearly understood
- current
- Verify they are always readily available and easy
to find
16One clear example of why documents must be
reviewed for accuracy!
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19School learning vs. adult learning
- When in school, we
- Read books
- Listened to lectures
- Memorized things
- Answered test questions
- Got our grades
- Forgot things and moved on to the next class
- As adults in the workplace, we
- Are only interested in learning things that are
work related (while at work) - Really only interested if they make their jobs
easier, more efficient, or safer
20Confucius said,
- Tell me I will remember a little,
- Show me I will remember more,
- Involve me I will learn
21Effective procedure training works exactly the
same way
- Conduct classroom training on the procedures
(tell them), the trainees will remember a little - Take them into the field and show them how to
perform the procedure tasks (show them), and they
will remember more - Watch them perform the procedure tasks (involve
them), and they will learn
22Procedure classroom training (Telling them)
- Use an instructor lesson plan
- Explain applicable sections of the operating
manual - Walk personnel through PIDs associated with
procedure - Explain hazards using area MSDSs
- Explain reference material identified in the
procedure - Using PFDs pictures of the systems/equipment
explain the process covered by the procedure - Using the operating limits table, explain all
critical process variables and address the
operator actions required to correct or avoid
deviating from acceptable operating ranges
23Procedure classroom training (Telling them)
- Using the troubleshooting guide, explain proper
problem response - Walk them through all sections of each procedure
in the classroom - Tabletop exercises are very effective for
classroom procedure training - Answer all questions
- Administer procedure knowledge test all
personnel must receive a passing score before
beginning the field portion of the procedure
training
24Procedure field training (Showing them)
- During a walking tour through the work area, tell
the trainee what you are going show them - Using a structured OJT checklist, demonstrate the
proper method of performing tasks associated with
the procedure
25Training in the field has many names
- Demonstration
- Skill assessment
- Job performance
- Proficiency testing
- On-the-job (OJT)
26Traditional characteristics of this type training
- The location of the training is the actual work
site - An experienced employee teaches the new employee
- The training is provided from memory
- The new employee assumes work responsibilities
very quickly
27Pitfalls of this type training
- As jobs become more complicated, training becomes
more difficult - OJT becomes more difficult to conduct from memory
- Rapid turnover affects the experience level
- In many cases, this turnover results in personnel
conducting training that are not really qualified
themselves
28Benefits of structured training in the field
- Consistency
- Repeatability
- Guidelines for both trainers and trainees
- Documentation of skills training
29Structured OJT means
- A set of objectives with a performance standard
- An outlined plan to teach the objective
- Opportunity to discuss, demonstrate, and
practice, and - Objective evaluation of performance of the task
30The OJT checklist
- Serves as the lesson plan for field training
- Provides a list of actions required for proper
performance - Each action has a definite beginning and end
- Serves as a training tool
- Serves as an evaluation tool
- Provides the documented record of task
qualification - Is an integrated element of the overall training
process
31Sample checklist 1
32Sample checklist 2
33Trainer demonstration
- The trainer demonstrates task performance
- The trainee should follow along using the
appropriate procedure (we want to encourage
procedure usage) - This process should be repeated as many times as
necessary until the trainee is comfortable in
attempting to perform the tasks themselves
34Supervised Practice(Involving them)
- The trainee begins performing the tasks
- The trainer observes and follows each step on the
OJT checklist - Allow the trainee to think through the work flow
- Coach as required
- Interrupt only to prevent injury or equipment
damage
35Supervised Practice(Involving them) Continued
- Continue the practice until both the trainer and
trainee are confident the task can be performed
without assistance - This is the most time-consuming part of the
process and may require numerous repetitions
before proficiency is achieved - Make sure that the trainee realizes that the
training phase will stop only when they are ready
for the evaluation
36Evaluation
- Now the training stops and evaluation begins
- Up to now, the trainer focus has been to provide
reinforcement required for successful task
performance - Do clearly communicate that the training portion
of the OJT process is over and the evaluation
will now be conducted - The trainers only interest is whether the
trainee can perform the task properly - This allows the trainee to return to training if
they feel uncertain about successful performance
37Task evaluation considerations
- Follow each observable step on the OJT checklist
- Evaluate observed performance using the
acceptance criteria for each step - Be sure that trainee performance has met the
required criteria, without assistance - The evaluation phase continues until the trainee
demonstrates successful performance or they
cannot perform the task - Either way the evaluation phase is over
38Post training discussion and documentation
- If successful, the trainee and trainer sign the
OJT checklist and this document becomes part of
their training record - The trainer generally provides positive feedback
as well as pointing out specific improvements
that would benefit the trainee - Also, this is a good time to indicate the path
forward such as the next OJT checklist(s) to be
completed - This is also a good opportunity to identify any
revisions that need to be made to any of the
documents from a MOC perspective
39Knowledge vs. OJT evaluations
- Knowledge tests are quantitative
- The passing score can be 70, 80, 90, etc.
- OSHA representatives I have talked with dont
like 100 as the passing score - They prefer 80-90 with remedial discussions over
all missed questions - OJT evaluations are qualitative
- The trainee either can do the job or they cant
- You cant start the Crude Unit 80 correctly
40Remedial training
- Unsuccessful performance is critiqued with
specific feedback where problems started to occur - Usually unsuccessful performance is not
documented - This is determined by your facility training
policy - Regardless, the training process resumes
- The process continues until the trainee can
perform the tasks correctly
41Final thoughts
- The steps for OJT training are interdependent
- Each step builds-on and supports the others
- The OJT learning process requires patience and
commitment on the part of both the trainer and
trainee - It is important that trainers are both trained in
effective training techniques and that they want
to be trainers
42Refresher training
- Review all emergency response procedures every
year - Review 1/3 of the remaining operating procedures
each year - Operators should be encouraged to walkdown the
procedures in the field to validate their
technical accuracy - Once the procedures are validated, each shift
should discuss the procedures which will result
in group interaction and refresh their knowledge
of the information contained in the procedures - Where inconsistencies are found between the
procedures and actual equipment configuration or
current plant operation, the operators should
initiate a MOC to correct the procedure deficiency
43Refresher training
- Conduct one day of classroom training annually on
the unit. This training would cover things such
as - Recent MOCs relating to process or equipment
changes - Incidents that have occurred over the last year
- Near misses that have occurred over the last year
- PHA action items
- Methods of troubleshooting problems that have
resulted in safety, quality, environmental,
productivity, or production interruptions over
the last year - Knowledge test on the materials covered during
the refresher training class
44Additional refresher training
- Conduct refresher training for unit personnel
prior to assigning tasks that are infrequently
performed - Refresher training prior to unit startups or
shutdowns is especially critical (as a result of
normal shift rotation, it could have been over 10
years since a particular shift has started up or
shutdown their unit) - Give BP an Atta Boy on their simulator use
both routine and before a startup or shutdown
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