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Why Training Needs Change. Carol J. Merry, Ph.D. Education and Information Division National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Overall Training Goals:. Impart information that is remembered Build skills- “self-efficacy”
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Why Training Needs Change Carol J. Merry, Ph.D. Education and Information Division National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Overall Training Goals: • Impart information that is remembered • Build skills- “self-efficacy” • Instill motivation for “safe work practices”
In a Nutshell, Training Needs to Evolve... • Because of changes in your audience • Because of changes in your work environment • Because of changes in regulations or recommendations • Because your training evaluations indicate a need for change • Because you want to try new media, technology, approaches, etc...
Respond to Changes in Your Audience • A stable, homogeneous workforce will move through “Stages of Change” as you continue to interact with them over time. • A diverse &/or changing workforce challenges you to re-assess where they are each time you offer training!
Stages of Change • Precontemplation- not on my radar screen! • Contemplation- considering change • Preparation- planning how to try changes in safe work behavior • Action- Actually making changes in behavior • Maintenance- continuing to use new safe work behaviors • Relapse- Struggling with “relapse” to unsafe behaviors
What are precontemplators like? • Sometimes lack knowledge about issue • Have no interest in changing their behavior or beliefs • Have no intention of changing • even in a future time frame
How to move precontemplators to contemplation • Get their attention • Raise their consciousness • Create environments to help people do the right thing
What are Contemplators Like? • They know about and are aware of the problem, so more “facts” won’t make much difference • They are thinking about changing behavior • they are not sure how much the problem affects them personally or their significant others • there has been no actual movement to change
What moves Contemplators to the Preparation stage? • Emotional arousal helps here too! • Direct Consequences for Self & others 1. Imagery- “imagine your life if…” 2. Consequences to family and friends 3. Thinking actively about solutions 4. Case studies & testimonials
Wear this now... Or wear this later! It’s Really Pretty Simple…..
What are Preparers Like? • Increasing belief in “pro’s” • Decreasing concern about “con’s” • Start taking small steps toward new behavior (do a sound survey, read up on HPDs) • Increased confidence about making changes • Make a plan or “intend” to adopt new, safer behavior
What moves Preparers to Action? • Setting reasonable goals • making specific plans to overcome specific barriers • making public pledges • continuing to believe there are more pro’s than con’s for the new behaviors
What Are People in the Action Stage Like? • Firmly believe benefits of new, safer behavior • Have a consistent plan for action and have been following it for several months • “Intend” to maintain the behavior • Recognize success of small steps
How Do We Encourage Action? • Environmental controls-reminders, cues • Respond to negative thoughts and actions as soon as they crop up • Model alternate behaviors when needed • Engage in a “contract” to maintain behavior • Provide extrinsic and intrinsic rewards
Who are Maintainers? • Very strong champions of safe behaviors • publicly identify themselves as proponent of safe work behaviors • Support a meaningful reward system • know and use strategies for dealing with relapse in self and co-workers • long term change has occurred (at least 6 months)
How Do We Help Maintainers? • Continue environmental controls- cues • Continue modeling safe work behaviors • Continue countering negative thoughts & actions • Continue reinforcement systems that are meaningful • Develop a plan to deal with “relapses”
What About Relapse? • Usually happens when people are frustrated - failed attempts/barriers • people (supervisors!) may not realize that behavior change takes practice & patience • people are often not well prepared for complications or the strength of barriers Don’t give up!
How to Overcome Relapses: • Assure people that change takes practice • Encourage ongoing efforts at safe work behaviors • plan & communicate ways to handle stress • help others avoid negative coping strategies • help overcome people and things that undermine the desired behaviors
Keep in Mind….. • Work “culture” shapes behavior, values, & overall receptivity to your training Are you in tune with your workplace’s culture? • Appreciating the diversity within a group is just as important as recognizing diversity between groups.
Modify Training to Reflect Changes on the Job • Work changes- new equipment, new management goals, new processes, new responsibilities, etc.
Changes in Regulations, Technology, or Recommendations • De-rating of hearing protectors based on Subject Fit testing-ANSI • 3 dB vs. 5 dB exchange rate for TWA -new NIOSH criteria • Audiometric database analysis • 1 on 1 fit-testing
Show and describe: plug & muff real vs. lab fit-testing of plugs overhead Have some plug samples to discuss fit problems
Your Training Program Evaluation Indicates Changes Are Needed: • Do you have evidence that… • the audience is paying attention? • The audience can recall the important information? • The audience is responding appropriately with safe work behaviors? • You have addressed any barriers important to your audience?
Changes Can Energize Your Training: Stamp Out Boredom! • Jazzy new videos? • Interactive, “real-life” problem solving/table top exercises • Using Employees to make “home grown” training materials
Tools of the trade: digital cameras, camcorders, use scenarios from plant history, case study re-enactments, etc...
Just a Few Web Resources: • www.cdc.gov/niosh/noise.html • www.nih.gov/nidcd • www.osha.gov • www.aiha.org • www.caohc.org • www.lhh.org • www.hearingconservation.org • www.nsc.org