Reengineering Corporate Training: Intellectual Capital and Transfer of Learning
By (Author) Robert E. Haskell
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
18th February 1998
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
658.3124
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
454g
Haskell emphasizes that traditional, industry-based methods of training are inappropriate, and in fact, unworkable in today's complex, knowledge-based organizations. Instead of simple rote, task-limited, short-run training, organizations must find ways to give their employees thought-based, task-extended, high-performance, and long-run learning. Haskell thus shows that the goal of training is the transfer of learning, and this is not just simple training. What it is, how it works, and how organizations can achieve it are explained in a highly readable, thought-provoking and challenging way. Traditionalists may be skeptical, but Haskell's approach provides a general framework to help understand how to think in terms of learning transfer. His book will be important, compelling reading not only for those in the academic community, but for training and development professionals throughout the public and private sectors. Haskell argues that the training function must be reorganized from the traditional format that most organizations use to one that emphasized the true acquisition of knowledge. In order to make this change, a fundamental concept--"transfer" of learning--must be understood. Based on a review of 90 years of research as well as his own experiences and findings, Haskell presents a new transfer of learning framework intergrating all of the current training systems, mental models, systems archetypes, and generic thinking in the workplace. In doing so he provides the missing instructional foundations for all training and learning, and especially for what have come to be called "learning organizations". He argues that half the $70 billion spent on training in business and industry is wasted, simply because what people are taught in "class" is not transferred to and maintained on the job.
The stress on learning is timely and welcome. A growing awareness that "instruction" does not equal "learning" is sweeping both the business and academic worlds....Attention to the whats, whens, whys, and how-tos of learning and knowledge must be patiently and seriously addressed. This book can help.-National Productivity Review
"The stress on learning is timely and welcome. A growing awareness that "instruction" does not equal "learning" is sweeping both the business and academic worlds....Attention to the whats, whens, whys, and how-tos of learning and knowledge must be patiently and seriously addressed. This book can help."-National Productivity Review
ROBERT E. HASKELL is Founder and Director of TransLearn Associates, a consultancy in Old Orchard Beach, Maine, that specializes in the design of business training and educational courses. He is also Professor of Psychology at the University of New England.