edited by Leslie Steven May, Carol Ann Moore, Stephen J. Zammit.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
Dordrecht
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Springer Netherlands
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
1987
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
(320 pages)
SERIES
Series Title
Evaluation in education and human services, 17.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
I Organizational Context of Training Evaluation --; 1 The Role of Training in Implementing Strategic Change --; 2 Strategic Evaluation of Training --; 3 The Organizational Context of Training Evaluation for Staff Development --; 4 Evaluating Training Programs for Decision Making --; 5 Management Education: Articulating the Unspoken, Riding the Herd, Wasting Money, or Preparing for Tomorrow? --; II Evaluation of Training Products --; 6 Evaluation Issues in the Educational Product Life-Cycle --; 7 Applying Quality Management Concepts and Techniques to Training Evaluation --; 8 Content Validity as an Evaluation Strategy for Examining Training Programs --; 9 The Role of Media in the Evaluation of Training --; 10 Management Education: An Emerging Role for Systematic Evaluation --; III Evaluating and Maximizing the Use of Evaluation Results --; 11 Establishing Corporate Evaluation Policy: Cost Versus Benefit --; 12 Communicating Evaluation Results: The External Evaluator Perspective --; 13 Communicating Evaluation Results: The Internal Evaluator Perspective --; 14 Implementing a Testing Strategy Within a Training Program --; 15 Use of Training Data in Personnel Decision Making.
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
In the abstract, training is seen as valuable by most people in business and industry. However, in the rush of providing training programs "on time" and "within budget," evaluation of training is frequently left behind as a "nice to have" addition, if practical. In addition, the training function itself is left with the dilemma of proving its worth to management without a substantive history of evaluation. This book is designed to provide managers, educators, and trainers alike the opportunity to explore the issues and benefits of evaluating business and industry training. The purpose is to motivate more effective decisions for training investments based on information about the value of training in attaining business goals. Without evaluation, the value of specific training efforts cannot be adequately measured, the value of training investments overall cannot be fully assessed, and the contributions of the training function to the corporation's goals cannot be duly recognized. Articles are grouped into three sections, althou~h many themes appear across sections. The first section estabhshes the context of training evaluation in a business organization. The second section emphasizes evaluation of training products and services; and the third section discusses costs and benefits of evaluation, and communication and use of evaluation results in decision making. In Section I, the context of training evaluation is established from a variety of perspectives. First, training and trainin~ evaluation are discussed in the context of corporate strateglc goals.
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Education.
Educational tests and measurements.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CLASSIFICATION
Class number
HF5549
.
5
.
T7
Book number
E358
1987
PERSONAL NAME - PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITY
edited by Leslie Steven May, Carol Ann Moore, Stephen J. Zammit.