Title: Health, Safety
1 Friday 25th March 2009 Training Needs Analysis
and the Virtual Classroom Bob Harris
Technical Director
Health, Safety Environmental Consultants
2Safety Announcements
- Fire alarm procedures
- Smoking policy
- W.C. locations
- Mobile telephones please switch off or to silent
Health, Safety Environmental Consultants
3Agenda
- Training and UK Legislation
- Training needs analysis
- Common successes and failures in TNA
- The virtual classroom
- Pros Cons of e-learning
- Summary
- Questions Answers
Health, Safety Environmental Consultants
4AEC The Company Formed in 1997 Offices in
Trafford Park, Liverpool Scotland Independent
environmental consultant UKAS accredited
In-house laboratory Health, Safety and
Environmental Consultants Safety training
Asbestos Management Specialists UK Worldwide 60
consultants
Health, Safety Environmental Consultants
5Training Services
- Asbestos proficiency training courses (BOHS
accredited) - Asbestos awareness training (bespoke training)
- General Health Safety training (including IOSH
courses) - Legionella awareness
- Noise at work
- Etc.
- E-learning services
Health, Safety Environmental Consultants
6Training U.K. Legislation
- The basic Implicit HS standards for
training are set by the Health and Safety at Work
Act 1974. - The Act sets out in Section 2(2)c the requirement
for the employer to provide suitable and
sufficient Information, Instruction and Training
to his employees to enable them to undertake
their work safely. - This is supported with specific training
requirements within safety regulation, Approved
codes of practice and guidance issued by the HSE
7Legislative requirements for training
- This still leaves responsibility with the
employer to assess and deliver the required level
and depth of training - Regulations ACoPs often only detail elements
that should be included if appropriate. - Reference is made to generally acceptable
standards and qualifications for specific
roles/tasks - There is still a role for the employer to assess
adequacy of training provided and competence to
perform a task - Training does NOT automatically equal competence
8Health Safety Legislation in the UK
Health Safety at Work Act
Health Safety Regulations CAR, COSHH, RIDDOR etc
ACOPs
Guidance
9What is a Training Needs Analysis?
- Tool used to evaluate any gap between the skills
your business needs and those its employees have. - Can be complex
- Is meant to be flexible and can apply at high or
low level - Can result in primary and secondary objectives
10Overall Approach to Training
- TNA is not the complete training package, it is a
tool used as part of an organisations overall
approach to implementing appropriate and
effective training.
11TNAs the overall approach to training
- Draft training policy
- Identify training needs (TNA)
- Choose training provider
- Deliver training
- Check training delivery
- Keep records
- Consolidation of skills and knowledge
- Monitor, audit and review
12Scope of TNA
- Depends on organisation roles within it
- Can be simple or extremely complex
- Covers safety skills, and soft skills
- Involved TNAs could include the following to
identify organisation individuals needs - Observation
- Questionnaires
- Interviews
- Focus groups
13Basic Training Needs Analysis
Step 1 Gap Analysis
Step 2 Identify Problems Opportunities
Step 3 Evaluate current training
Step 4 Provide training Evaluate
14Step 1 GAP Analysis
- Assess current skills vs skills you need
- Which staff require training?
- What is their experience/education levels?
- Have they had previous training is it adequate?
- Is there legislation that effects training
requirements? - What will the training accomplish?
15Step 2 Identify Causes / Problems
- Accept that it is unlikely that training will
immediately solve all training needs need to
prioritise - Does the need apply to all employees, groups, or
just individuals (training matrix approach) - Does the training require skills that the trainee
will find difficult to learn? - Is there a legislative requirement?
16Step 3 Evaluation
- Prepare the training plan
- Assess your current training arrangements
- Are current training arrangements adequate
- Internal provision
- External provision
- Review and adapt your training arrangements to
meet your training needs
17Step 4 Provide the Training
- Provide the training
- Reinforce with practice, audit and assessment as
necessary - Review effectiveness by repeating the 4 steps
recommended annually
18Training Summary of key requirements
19Example - Basic TNAMixer Vessel assistant
TRAINING ELEMENT CURRENT STANDARD REQUIRED STANDARD IMPORTANCE
Site safety induction Completed (100) Completed (100) HIGH
SWP Using mixing vessel T13 Incomplete (70) Still undergoing site training assessment Completed (100) HIGH
PPE RPE Incomplete (80) RPE training not completed Completed (100) HIGH
COSHH procedures (basic) Completed (100) Completed (100) HIGH
COSHH procedures (advanced) Not started (0) Needed for progress to operator level Completed (100) LOW
Emergency Response procedures Incomplete (50) Completed (100) HIGH
20TNA Training Delivery
- People learn in different ways
- The TNA should determine which way will be the
best - Are you trying to deliver
- Skill
- Competency
- Awareness
- Behaviour
- Development
- Select the right medium to deliver the required
training goal
21TNAs Safety
- Regulatory requirements
- Risk assessments
- Accidents D.O. statistics
- Procedural training
- Awareness training
- Skills training
22Common TNA faults
- Approach it from the wrong direction
- Make the TNA fit the historic training package
- Blinkered approach to training
- Ignore risk assessments and accident stats
- Forgetting the managers supervisors
- Lack of involvement of employees, representatives
etc. - Lack of review / update
- Lack of knowledge of TNA requirements and
Training solutions
23The Virtual Classroom
- This is often referred to as e-learning or
web-based training - It is now a sophisticated learning forum
- Can be web based or held on intranet systems
- Massive range of courses are available
- Generic and tailored courses are available
24E-learning courses
- Course content is variable
- Can be very simplistic on low level awareness
courses - Can incorporate very sophisticated systems
- Assessments and testing packages
- Video footage
- Interactive walk-throughs of buildings and
processes - On-line interaction with tutors, colleagues
work groups - Web-cam voice links
25Learning Management Systems
- Ability to track individuals performance on line
- Track group performance
- Interpret test assessment results
- Print reports keep records
- Prompt training due dates
- Email notification of training activity
- Upload storage of classroom results
information - Viewable anywhere at any time
26E-Learning PROs
- Can be very cost effective compared with
classroom training - Can learn where and when it is convenient
- Individuals can learn at their own pace
- Can include some interaction with trainers
- Can involve testing and assessment
- Can be used with classroom training to reduce
overall costs - Is good for theoretical and awareness level
training - Can incorporate media such as video, photographs,
interactive tools etc. - Can be tailored to specific needs
27E-Learning CONs
- Need to be computer literate
- Need reading language skills
- Need a computer
- Who sat the course?
- Can just flick through not absorb
- People dont do the course on time
- Often generic and not relevant to an
organisations specific needs - No forum for interaction with trainer
- Often no method of assessment or test
- Very poor at passing on practical skills
28E-Recommendations
- Make sure the course is applicable bespoke it!
- Try it out before committing
- It wont run on my computer!
- Control who completes the course when
- Make sure the courses are completed chase up
- Assess whether the training worked
- Carry out a satisfaction survey
- Keep records / confirmation of training
29 SUMMARY
- TNA is important, incorporate it into your
training, risk assessment management strategy - Approach it from several directions to obtain the
best results involve people - Remember to review regularly
- The Virtual classroom is here to stay but be
aware of its shortcomings - Is not the panacea for training but can be
effective when mixed with classroom and practical
training
30Thank you Any Questions?