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Training and development needs assessment

The first step in achieving full capability for staff is a comprehensive training and development
needs assessment. Too often, staff development programmes are offered simply because
someone has requested them or because they have been done in the past to address a situation
that may not still exist. Considering the demands placed on staff already, it is imperative to
target staff development carefully where it is most needed. Systematic assessment of development
needs based on organisational goals can be used as a basis for developing specific
content and appropriate methods.
The ultimate purpose of staff development is to change practices and behaviours in clinical
settings. Practices and behaviours that are appropriate for staff development are ones
that:

  • can be made more effective and efficient (e .g. a different way of managing patient appointments,
    a revised clinical procedure] ;
  • need maintenance usually because they are not done very often in the normal course of
    work but are essential to be done well when called upon to do so [e.g. health and safety
    updates, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, hazardous materials and infection control];
    • new employees need to learn (e.g. department-specific practices and standards] ;
  • employees who are new to a role need to learn (e .g. a staff member who transfers to an outpatient
    setting after working in the acute setting];
    • are needed as a result of new knowledge or new technology (e .g. a new piece of equipment];
    • have been identified as a result of information gathered from complaints, near misses, clinical
    incidents, audits and patient surveys.
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    CHAPTER 8 MOTIVATING AND DEVELOPING OTHERS
    Development planning
    After needs have been determined, the next step is to plan staff development programmes.
    Development planning entails identifying learner objectives and matching them with educational
    methods. Learner objectives should be specific, measurable statements about desired
    behaviours, skills or knowledge to be acquired within a specific time frame. The strategy used
    to affect the desired outcome should be based on learning needs, the employee and available
    resources.
    Department managers and team leaders have a variety of options for meeting the development
    needs of their staff. As mentioned above, the staff development department within the
    organisation will typically offer induction programmes and mandated training and often more.
    Progressive staff development departments are increasingly using a variety of techniques for
    staff development, such as computer-based learning and self-paced learning packages as well
    as traditional lectures, demonstrations and workshops.
    Work-based learning is also an option. Many departments tap into the expertise within and
    outside the organisation by inviting staff to present topics for discussion during staff meetings
    or team meetings. Some clinics have regular educational times where clinic appointments are
    not scheduled and formal training occurs.
    Three main questions should be considered in assessing learning needs and planning for
    staff development: Can the learner do what is required? What is the best method to facilitate
    learning? What can be done to ensure that what is learned will be transferred into practice? As
    well as underpinning the design of staff development with learning theories, theories of motivation
    can be applied to build the individual’s desire to learn and to apply skills and concepts
    learned. Three learning theories help guide what we know about staff development: social
    learning theory, relapse prevention and adult education theory.
    Learning theories
    Social learning theory
    Bandura described social learning theory in 19??. It is a behavioural theory based on reinforcement.
    Bandura believed that people learn new skills and behaviours through direct
    experience or by watching other people. The observer learns that some behaviours are
    rewarded and therefore should be retained, while other behaviours are punished or go unnoticed
    or unrewarded and should therefore be abandoned.
    According to social learning theory, the anticipation of reward influences what the person
    does or does not observe. This response suggests that observational learning is more effective
    when the observer has a good reason to pay attention rather than simply being rewarded for
    imitating what is seen. For example, a student may be asked to observe a qualified member of
    staff conducting an initial assessment. Owing to the student being most interested in developing
    her capability in the role, she is likely to focus mainly on the staff member’s actions. The student
    may not pay as much attention to the patient, therefore missing vital cues. If the qualified staff
    member had asked the student to focus on the patient, looking for hesitation and noting the questions
    the patient asked, she would have learned something very different from the experience.
    Figure 8.4 illustrates this theory.
    146
    Anticipated
    reinforcement
    Choosing and
    observing a
    model
    Figure 8.4 Social learning theory
    Relapse prevention
    LEARNING THEORIES
    Attitude change
    if behaviour is
    consistently
    effective
    Relapse prevention emphasises learning a set of self-control and coping strategies to
    increase retention of newly learned behaviours. This type of strategy is often used to prevent
    relapse into harmful personal habits, such as overeating, smoking or other addictive
    behaviour. However, it can also be useful in changing work-related behaviours, such as
    coming to work late or losing your temper with a colleague. The premise behind this model is
    that learners are:
  • taught to anticipate high-risk situations;
  • taught coping strategies for avoiding high-risk situations;
  • taught that slight slips or relapses are predictable and need not become failures.
    As a result, the learner’s effectiveness increases because the learner anticipates potential
    problems and is confident in using coping strategies. In addition, this model minimises the possibility
    of small relapses turning into absolute failure. Based on this model, learners should be
    encouraged to identify possible failure situations and ways to cope with them, and practise
    such situations using new skills in the neutral environment of education. Training for response
    to fire or clinical emergency incorporates this idea. If a fire were to break out in a building, fear
    would cause most people to react instinctively, putting themselves and others in danger. Fire
    training is designed to help people to anticipate this high-risk situation [potential for panic]
    and to respond in a predictable, patterned way that minimises danger.
    Adult learning theory
    Knowles [ 19 50] proposed the adult learning theory, which described differences in the
    learning styles of adults and children. Prior to Knowles’ work, it was assumed that the same
    teaching principles could be used for both children and adults. Knowles suggests four basic
    conceptual differences between adult and child education: self-concept, experience, readiness
    to learn and time perspective. These characteristics are described in Table 8.1.
    147
    CHAPTER 8 MOTIVATING AND DEVELOPING OTHERS
    Table 8.1 Characteristics of adult learners and educational implication
    Adult learner
    characteristics Implications for adult learning
  1. The need to Adults need to know why they need to learn something before they will engage with
    know learning. The first task of the teacher or facilitator of learning is to help the learners become
    aware of the ‘need to know’. At the very least, facilitators can make an intellectual case for
    the value of the learning in improving the effectiveness of the learners’ performance or the
    quality of their lives. Even more potent tools for raising the level of awareness of the need
    to know are real or simulated experiences in which the learners discover for themselves
    the gaps between where they are now and where they want to be. Exposure to new or
    unusual experiences, working with a mentor, undertaking clinical supervision and staff
    review are all processes that can bring the need for the learning to awareness.
  2. The learners’ Adults see themselves as responsible for their own decisions, for their own lives. Once
    self-concept they have arrived at that self-concept, they develop a deep psychological need to be seen
    by others and treated by others as being capable of self-direction. They resent and resist
    situations in which they feel others are imposing their wills on them. This presents a
    serious problem in adult education: the minute some adults walk into an activity labelled
    ‘education’, ‘training’ or anything synonymous, they tend to revert to the conditioning
    provided by their experience of school, and sit passively waiting for the teacher to teach.
  3. The role of Adults come into an educational activity with both a vast quantity and varying quality
    the learners’ of life and work experiences. The emphasis in adult education is on experiential
    experiences techniques- techniques that tap into the experience of the learners, such as group
    discussion, simulation exercises, problem-solving activities, case studies and handson
    practice. Adult learners also benefit from learning from peers and using their
    experience to benefit others.
  4. Readiness to Adults become ready to learn those things they need to know and be able to do in order
    learn to cope effectively with their real-life situations. An especially rich source of ‘readiness
    to learn’ are the developmental tasks associated with moving from one developmental
    stage to the next. The critical implication of this assumption is the importance of timing
    learning experiences to coincide with those developmental tasks.
  5. Orientation There are ways to induce readiness through exposure to models of superior
    to learning performance, career counselling, simulation exercises and other techniques.
    In contrast to children’s and youths’ subject-centred orientation to learning [at
    least in school]. adults are life-centred [or task-centred or problem-centred] in their
    orientation to learning. Adults are motivated to learn to the extent that they perceive
    that learning will help them perform tasks or deal with problems that they confront in
    their life situations. Furthermore, they gain new knowledge, understandings, skills,
    values and attitudes most effectively when they are presented in the context of
    application to real-life situations.
  6. Motivation Whilst adults are responsive to some external motivators [better jobs, promotions,
    higher salaries and the like). the most potent motivators are internal [the desire for
    increased job satisfaction, self-esteem, quality of life and the like). Motivation is often
    eroded by factors such as not wanting to admit that they have something to learn,
    lack of opportunity for development, time constraints, competing commitments and
    experience of poorly designed programmes that fail to consider the unique needs of
    the adult learner, being afraid that, if they have been out of ‘formal’ education for a
    long period, they may have lost that skill and, thereby, show themselves up

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