6. Training Evaluation (Chapter 6)
Logic model
Process used to identify the relationship between training resources, training activities, and program outcomes
Net Promoter Score (NPS)
Score designed to measure employees' satisfaction with a course offering by asking them to rate the likelihood of recommending it to a peer by using a 0-10 point scale
Training effectiveness
The benefits that the company and the trainees receive from training
Practicality
The ease with which the outcome measures can be collected
Skill-based outcomes
Used to assess the level of technical or motor skills and behaviors
Cognitive outcomes
Used to determine the degree to which trainees are familiar with the principles, facts, techniques, procedures, and processes emphasized in the training program
Results
Used to determine the training program's payoff for the company
Workforce analytics
Using quantitative methods and scientific methods to analyze data from HR databases, corporate financial statements, employee surveys, and other data sources to make evidence-based decision and show that HR practices influence important company metrics
Benefits
Value a company gains from the training program
Criterion contamination
Extent that training outcomes measure inappropriate capabilities or are affected by extraneous conditions
Criteria relevance
Extent to which training outcomes are related to the learned capabilities emphasized in the training program
Threats to validity
Factors that will lead an evaluator to question either (1) the believability of the study results or (2) the extent to which the evaluation results are generalizable to other groups of trainees and situations
Criterion deficiency
Failure to measure training outcomes that were emphasized in the training objectives
External validity
Generalizability of the study results to other groups and situations
Affective outcomes
Include attitudes and motivation
Direct costs
Include salaries and benefits for all employees involved in training, including trainees, instructors, consultants, and employees who design the program; materials and supplies; equipment or classroom rentals or purchases; and travel costs
Self-assessments
Learners' estimates of how much they know or have learned from training
Post-training measure
Measure of outcomes taken after training
Training outcomes/criteria
Measures that the trainer and the company use to evaluate training programs
Training evaluation
Process of collecting the outcomes needed to determine whether training is effective
Cost-benefit analysis
Process of determining the economic benefits of a training program using accounting methods that look at training costs and benefits
Pilot testing
Process of previewing the training program with potential trainees and managers or with other customers (persons who are paying for the development of the program)
Return on expectations (ROE)
Process through which evaluation demonstrates to key business stakeholders that their expectations about training have been satisfied
Pretraining measure
A baseline measure taken before training begins
Dashboard
A computer interface designed to receive and analyze the data from departments within the company to provide information to managers an other decision makers
Utility analysis
A cost-benefit analysis method that involves assessing the dollar value of training based on estimates of the difference in job performance between trained and untrained employees, the number of individuals trained, the length of time a training program is expected to influence performance, and the variability in job performance in the untrained group of employees
Comparison group
A group of employees who participate in the evaluation study but do not attend the training program
Reversal
A time period in which participants no longer receive the training intervention
Summative evaluation
An evaluation conducted to determine the extent to which trainees have changed as result of participating in the training program
Pretest/post-test
An evaluation design in which both pretraining and post-training outcome measures are collected
Post-test only
An evaluation design in which only post-training outcomes are collected
Time series
An evaluation design in which training outcomes are collected at periodic intervals both before and after training
Pretest/post-test with comparison group
An evaluation design that includes trainees and ac comparison group
Random assignment
Assigning employees to the training or comparison group on the basis of chance alone
Internal validity
Believability of study results
Evaluation design
Collection of information - including what , when, how, and from whom - that will be used to determine the effectiveness of the training program
Solomon four-group
Combines the pretest/post-test comparison group and the post-test-only control group design
Return on Investment (ROI)
Comparing the training's monetary benefits with the cost of training
Big data
Complex data sets developed by compiling data across different organizational systems, including marketing and sales, HR, finance, etc.
Success cases or stories
Concrete examples of the impact of training that show how learning has led to results that the company finds worthwhile and the managers find credible
Indirect costs
Costs that are not related directly to design, development or delivery of the training program
Reliability
Degree to which outcomes can be measured consistently over time
Discrimination
Degree to which trainees' performance on the outcome actually reflects true differences in performance
Hawthorne effect
Employees in an evaluation study performing at a high level simply because of the attention they are receiving
Formative evaluation
Evaluation of training that takes place during program design and development
