| Reducing Costs
and Increasing Training Quality
With Strategic Testing
by Steven B. Just
Prove the value of
training!
Demonstrate training ROI!
Show a correlation between training and
corporate profits!
Justify your training budget to senior
management!
You should be spending more
money on leadership development, not less!
Desperate times breed desperate attempts to
justify why you need to keep your training budget from being
cut (if not actually getting it increased!). But let’s
be realistic: Most companies view training as a cost center
not a profit center, and if 20% of your workforce is being
let go and your stock price has dropped by 30% it is highly
unlikely that senior executives in your company are spending
a lot of time thinking about how much to increase your training
budget.
So, what to do? How can you maintain the quality
of your training while spending less money? May we suggest
some strategic testing?
When most trainers think of testing they think
of the summative variety (testing after a learning
experience). But there’s also the formative variety
(testing before and during a learning experience).
You can test strategically to streamline and improve your
training programs. Let’s look at a few examples:
Does everyone need to be trained
in lockstep?
We know that learners enter training programs with different
levels of knowledge (entering behaviors). You can use diagnostic
testing for training placement (this works especially well
with eLearning, but is more problematic with instructor-led
training), saving time from your training programs. Some learners
might be able to place out of a course altogether.
Guarantee mastery with objectives-based
testing.
Most tests are given with a single passing score. But the
ultimate goal of corporate testing is mastery of a domain
of content. It is possible to attain a high score on a test
but still have unmastered content domains. As we previously
(September,
2008) wrote:
Let’s assume you have a 100 question
“classic” test where the passing score is 90%.
Let’s further assume that those 100 questions are drawn
evenly from 10 objectives. This means it is possible (though
perhaps not likely) for a student to get ALL of the questions
wrong in one of the objectives and still pass the test! It
is certainly possible, and perhaps even likely, that a student
scoring at or just about passing for the test as a whole will
have some serious weaknesses on one or more objectives.
Testing by objective works particularly well
for module-level tests within a mastery learning strategy.
It enables learners to proceed through the material at their
own pace while guaranteeing mastery of ALL of the learning
objectives.
Use high stakes testing to
quickly identify possible poor performers.
This isn’t pleasant and it has to be done properly to
avoid legal jeopardy, but isn’t it best to identify
new employees who might not have the potential to succeed
in your company sooner rather than later? If a new employee
going through an initial training program cannot demonstrate
job-required competency, use high stakes testing to find out
as quickly as possible.
Use testing to improve your
training programs.
By reviewing question level data from test results you can
determine if your learning materials (or instructors) are
conveying incorrect information or correct information in
a confusing manner to the learners. Look for questions with
high difficulty levels compared to the test scores as a whole.
Look for questions that negatively discriminate against the
stronger students. Study the choice distribution of the questions
and look for incorrect choices that are frequently selected.
Bottom line: Proper use of strategic testing
can reduce training costs while increasing learning quality.
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