Effective Training Techniques Mark A. Hernandez, CHST Houston South Area Office.

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Presentation transcript:

Effective Training Techniques Mark A. Hernandez, CHST Houston South Area Office

Presentation outline Most frequent cited standards 2010 Training requirements for Construction Industry Other training references: ANSI Z & Blooms Taxonomy ASSE Professional Safety Articles on Effective Training Techniques OSHA Construction Trainer resources and requirements OSHA Resources

Top 10 MFC standards in FY 2011 (1926) 1.Scaffolding 2.Fall Protection 3.Ladders 4.Fall Protection, Training Requirements 5.HAZCOM 6.General Safety & Health Provisions 7.Head Protection 8.Aerial Lifts 9.Eye & Face Protection 10.Specific Excavation Requirements Inspections: Region VI: 5,635 Nationally: 40,993 Construction: 3,600 (68%)

Blooms Taxonomy In 1780 Abigail Adams stated, "Learning is not attained by chance; it must be sought for with ardor and attended to with diligence" Although it received little attention when first published, Bloom's Taxonomy has since been translated into 22 languages and is one of the most widely applied and most often cited references in education.

Blooms Taxonomy Creating: can the student create new product or point of view? Evaluating: can the student justify a stand or decision? Analyzing: can the student distinguish between the different parts? Applying: can the student use the information in a new way? Understanding: can the student explain ideas or concepts? Remembering: can the student recall or remember the information?

ANSI Z490.1: Criteria for Accepted Practices in Safety, Health & Environmental Training 1.1 Scope - This Standard establishes criteria for safety, health, and environmental training programs, including –development, –delivery, –evaluation, and –program management.

ANSI Z490.1: Criteria for Accepted Practices in Safety, Health & Environmental Training 3.2 The training program shall, at a minimum, include the following elements: - training development, including needs assessment, - learning objectives, - course content and format, - resource materials, and - criteria for course completion (see Section 4 of this Standard)

ANSI Z490.1: Criteria for Accepted Practices in Safety, Health & Environmental Training 3. Training Program Administration and Management: –training delivery by competent trainers in a suitable training environment (see Section 5 of this Standard) –training evaluation and a continuous improvement system

Effective training: Case Study (Oil & Gas) 1. Compelling content: Must be interesting, credible, and compelling. Lessons learned proved to be significant (relevant story). Use Adult learning theories. 2. Identify the players: The “Master” in the group to act as a narrator for video, describing task and potential hazards. Source: Professional Safety: March 2001

Pareto Principle The Pareto Principle: 20% of your priorities will gill you 80% percent of your production. If you spend your time, energy, money, and personnel on the top 20% of your priorities. 1. Determine which people are the top 20% producers 2. Spend 80% of your “people time” with the top 20% 3. Spend 80% of your personnel development dollars on the top 20% 4. Ask the top 20% to do on-the-job training for the next 20% (Multiply vs. Growth)

Pareto Principle How to implement: Step 1: I do it. Step 2: I do it and you’re with me. Step 3: You do it and I’m with you. Step 4: You do it. Step 5: You do it and someone is with you. Compounding (Multiplication) happens when you equip someone who equips someone else. – People do what people see.

Effective training: Case Study 3. Avoid Common Mistakes: Do not use professional actors, the CEO for videos. The worker knows much more about the job than an outsider. Best choice for the master trainer is the person who looks the part and speaks with occupational (not organizational) authority. Use language that is understood by the workers and is a cultural insider. Source: Professional Safety: March 2001

Engaging Learners: Techniques To Make training stick The Training Process: According to Kline (1985)’ [T]raining emphasizes the psychomotor domain of learning. Training that is done in the cognitive domain is generally at the knowledge level or lower part of the comprehension level. Education, on the other hand, teaches a minimum of psychomotor skills. It concentrates instead on the cognitive domain, especially the higher cognitive levels. (ie. High comprehension & above) Source: Professional Safety: August 2001

Engaging Learners: Techniques To Make training stick Adult Learners retain: 20% of what they read and hear 40% of what they see 50% of what they say 60% of what they do (people do what people see) Building Rapport: (Connecting) 38% Tonality 55% Physiology 7% Words Source: Professional Safety: August 2001

Engaging Learners: Techniques To Make training stick 1.Talk: All kinds: monologues, dialogues, discussions, debates, interviews – promotes creative and critical thinking. Lecturing is the most common form of training – only 20% what is heard is retained. 2. Role Playing: Based on believability of scenario and participants -will gain life & interpersonal skills. Source: Professional Safety: August 2001

Engaging Learners: Techniques To Make training stick 3. Group Projects with single response: Break-out into 3 or 4 groups, give a scenario with same question, ea. group responds to 2 questions, and has a time-limit for answers. Each group will deliver their responses. 4. Group Project with Individual responses: Similar to 3., with instructor choosing one person and each person writes their own answers. Source: Professional Safety: August 2001

Engaging Learners: Techniques To Make training stick 5. Group Examination: Each group has a different scenarios and questions, each group give outcomes. 6. Accelerated Learning: A combination of games or activities which involves imaginary and all of the senses in order to create a rich memorable moment (ex. Bingo). Source: Professional Safety: August 2001

Engaging Learners: Techniques To Make training stick 7. Student Demonstrations: Show what they know: Allow students who “know” or are proficient in a specific area (Maestro/Master) and allow that person the opportunity to show their proficiency by allowing five minutes to demonstrate skill. 8. Peer Coaching: One-on-One: observe work and give positive feedback Source: Professional Safety: August 2001

Engaging Learners: Techniques To Make training stick 9. Guided Discussions: This method is useful when a trainer is trying to help students develop their ability to asses a situation and “think on their feet” “Thinking is the hardest a person can do that is why so few engage in it.” – Henry Ford Source: Professional Safety: August 2001

Engaging Learners: Techniques To Make training stick 10. Simulations: A training environment set up to produce a comprehensive “workplace-like” experience. 11. Storytelling: “The single most effective training is telling relevant stories and having students reflect on them” (Blair & Seo. 2007) Source: Professional Safety: August 2001

Engaging Learners: Techniques To Make training stick 11. Storytelling: Cullen (2007) Four types: Hero Stories: larger than life characters who saves another worker or prevents a crisis. Villain stories: one who is opposite of hero and causes the loss of life or crisis. Adventure stories: tell of a specific event drama. Fool stories: a character who does things wrong and creates loss of life or crisis. Source: Professional Safety: August 2001

Les Brown’s 3 step process of giving value in a story a. Distract: From the present story they are currently listening to (emotionally, mentally, physically etc.) b. Dispute: Strategy to have individual back-away from their present limited belief. –Having a good strategy makes you stand out. c. Inspire: To Behave different differently. Inspire to do more, challenge, think outside their present thinking – add value. Don’t simply tell it, Experience it. Only then will you draw the audience in with you by using your emotions, tone, and body language. You want to take the audience there and experience the moment with you – that’s connecting.

Other Resources 1.“Everyone Communicates, Few Connect.” – John C. Maxwell 2.“Tribal Leadership: Levering groups to Build a Thinking Organization” – Dr. Dave Logan 3. Blooms Taxonomy: taxonomy.htm taxonomy.htm 4.Les Brown video: tell-your-story-series?r=y tell-your-story-series?r=y

Heat Illness Campaign Fact Sheets, Posters [English/Spanish], PSA

OSHA Training resources Employee training must be provided in a language that employees understand: training-standards-policy-statement.pdfhttps:// training-standards-policy-statement.pdf OSHA Construction training: Intro to OSHA: Construction Focus 4: dex.html dex.html Susan Harwood Grants: ic.html ic.html

Safety Resources Business Case for Safety: safetyhealth/index.html safetyhealth/index.html s/topics/businesscase/index.htmlhttp:// s/topics/businesscase/index.html OSHCON: /oshcon.html#WrittenPrograms /oshcon.html#WrittenPrograms Safety Pays: siness/safetypays/index.html siness/safetypays/index.html

Compliance Assistance Resources Quick Takes: ml Compliance Assistance Quick Start: 1910, 1926, Healthcare, & Hispanic stance/quickstarts/index.html stance/quickstarts/index.html OSHA Publications: ation.html ation.html BLS Incident Rate calculator:

Emergency Preparedness Hurricane eMatrix: ndex.html ndex.html Evacuation Plan & Procedures eTool: n/index.html n/index.html Incident Command eTool: tml tml Floods & Tornadoes: recovery.html recovery.html NIEHS: Hurricanes & Floods:

Where is OSHA Located? Houston North Area Office: 507 N. Sam Houston Pkwy E. Ste. 400 Houston, TX Houston South Area Office: El Camino Real Ste. 400 Houston, TX

Disclaimer This information has been developed by an OSHA Compliance Assistance Specialist and is intended to assist employers, workers, and others as they strive to improve workplace health and safety. While we attempt to thoroughly address specific topics [or hazards], it is not possible to include discussion of everything necessary to ensure a healthy and safe working environment in a presentation of this nature. Thus, this information must be understood as a tool for addressing workplace hazards, rather than an exhaustive statement of an employer’s legal obligations, which are defined by statute, regulations, and standards. Likewise, to the extent that this information references practices or procedures that may enhance health or safety, but which are not required by a statute, regulation, or standard, it cannot, and does not, create additional legal obligations. Finally, over time, OSHA may modify rules and interpretations in light of new technology, information, or circumstances; to keep apprised of such developments, or to review information on a wide range of occupational safety and health topics, you can visit OSHA’s website at