INFORMATION SHEET 2.1-4
Delivery Plans
CBT is a learner-centered and a learner based approach to training. The delivery should, however, be well-prepared and well-planned for it to become effective since it is different from the traditional approach that trainees experienced from their education outside of TVET.
This information sheet provides you with trainers’ guides to make teaching and learning more effective using the Competency-Based Training delivery approach. These guides will help you plan the delivery of training.
Your role as a trainer in CBT is more of a facilitator. More than a presenter of contents, you serve as a guide that teaches trainees how to learn. You should seek and provide suitable opportunities, resources and guidance to your trainees. The success of the teaching-learning activities depends very much on how you have prepared and how you delivered. “If the learner have not learned, it’s because you have not prepared and failed to perform your role.”
The following activities are useful guides for a facilitator like you:
Explain the objectives and the outcomes of the training
The participants of your training activities should know where they are going, what goals they need to achieve and what outcomes they are supposed attain. By sharing understanding of the objectives, they will better understand the relevance of the activities they will undergo.
Explain the learning and assessment process
As a part of the orientation process, the CBT process flow, the use of the CBLM and other learning materials should be explained extensively to the trainees. Since trainees came from a traditional way of learning, they would expect the same activities like sitting down while listening to their teacher who is expected to be always in front of them explaining every lesson that they should learn. It is your role to explain to them how they would learn in your workshop.
Trainees would also expect for a grade. The evaluation or assessment process should be fully explained to make them understand that every competency requires for an institutional competency evaluation which consists of a written test, a performance test and an interview.
This explanation would empower your trainees because they deserve to know they will learn and how they shall be assessed.
Ensure that presentation and training methods are appropriate
The TNA forms you developed in the module Plan Training Sessions should be used to know the learning styles, capabilities and aptitudes of your individual trainees. This will help you select the right methods and materials to be used by the individual trainee. Since CBT is individualized learning, a method for one trainee may not be appropriate for the other. Inappropriate method used may have adverse effects on your trainees.
Use training equipment and materials correctly
Training equipment when used correctly adds value and efficiency in the learning experiences. When they see and actually practice proper use of these equipment, their learnings will be enhanced. Visuals and other learning materials should be properly used and reviewed so that they can be enhanced periodically.
Provide frequent advice and feedback to facilitate the learning process
Facilitators should be in constant contact with the trainees. Continuous and immediate feedback is critical to the acquisition of knowledge and skills. The CBLM is designed to provide this kind of feedback. Answer keys to self-checks are provided so that immediate feedback on knowledge practice is offered. Performance criteria checklist always goes with task sheets, job sheets and operation sheet to provide for self-evaluation and peer-evaluation while the task is being practiced. But ultimately, the trainer should always evaluate the performance of trainees so that corresponding feedback is provided and trainees are guided through the learning process.
Provide ample practice opportunities
Competency-based training is teaching what to do, how and why to do it and then being given the opportunity for guided practice. The task sheets, job sheets and the operation sheets provided in the CBLMs provide guides for the practice of skill. The performance objectives should be carefully stated so that the objectives of the practice are specific for the learning situation.
Before the practice, however, the trainee should actually see how the skill is being done so that the practice reinforces the correct approach to the task. The procedures should be stated so that it can be understood and followed easily.
While trainees are practicing skills, feedback and diagnostic aspects of guidance should be properly managed so as to ensure both confidence and competence.
Monitor trainees’ readiness for assessment
Monitoring achievements of trainees is a very important aspect of the delivery of training. Your role as a trainer here is to see to it that the activities and requirements are properly sequenced and accomplished to achieve outcomes desired. Recording of accomplishments would motivate trainees to achieve learning outcomes based on standards set. If the trainees sees that you are closely monitoring their achievements, this will give them the signal that you are serious about your set goals and standards in the training program.
You can establish the trainee’s readiness for assessment only if you monitor achievements of your individual trainee.
As a guide, the nine events of instruction should be considered when planning for delivery of training.
The Nine Events of Instruction
In 1965, Robert Gagné published The Conditions of Learning, which identified the mental conditions for learning. These were based on the information processing model of the mental events that occur when adults are presented with various stimuli. Gagné’s theory stipulates that there are several different types or levels of learning and that each specific type requires unique types of instruction.
1. Gain attention
The first step is to arouse the student’s interest with novelty or surprise. You may also want to appeal to the learner by asking questions, so that they will be further motivated to engage with the content.
In CBT, it is then essential to gather trainees every morning to achieve this purpose. Orientation every start of the competency is also an essential part of the training in order to motivate trainees to learn and achieve learning outcomes.
2. Inform learner of objectives
It is important to inform the learner of the expectations that you have of them. This will help reduce anxiety in students who would otherwise not know what they should be studying.
During the morning activities trainees are reminded of the overall goal of their training as well as the objectives of the days activities. Since they are working on different competencies and different activities, the Competency Based Learning Material should have objectives, learning objectives for Information Sheets and Performance Objectives for the activities that need practice of skill.
3. Stimulate recall of prior learning
Trainees, especially adult learners, retain concepts and new information better if the concepts are related to something they already know. In this way, they can make the connection to their personal experiences and the learning will be more meaningful.
This step is essentially the recall and rejoinder. The facilitator should be able to point out the interconnection between the concepts previously learned to the skill that needs to be practiced and the importance of single tasks with the bigger Job that needs to be honed. Relationship of the competency to the overall qualification should also be emphasized to motivate trainees to learn all concepts and skills of the qualification.
4. Present stimulus material
At this point in the learning process, the content is presented to the students. For the student to retain information it is preferable that the content be organized into meaningful chunks, and that a variety of methods appealing to all learning styles be used. Using examples and real-life situations is also a great way to enhance the retention of information, as learners can apply the material to their own life experiences and internalize the content.
Contents that are directly related to the attainment of the learning outcomes are carefully selected.
5. Provide learner guidance
Communication between the instructor and the learner is an essential means of providing guidance. Not only does communication help the learner stay on track, but it also ensures that the instructor has an idea of how the trainees are doing.
This step is the development of the lesson. Different methodologies should be prepared by the trainer to capture the trainees with different learning styles. Trainers should provide every opportunity for trainees to
actually see how skills are done. Actual demonstration of skills either by the trainer, by advanced students or through video presentations are essential methods in the acquisition of skills.
Step number 4 and 5 are carefully planned in the session plan. These steps are dependent on what content is presented and what method of training is employed. It is recommended that methods should vary depending on the learning styles of the trainee. These would allow learning to fit to the trainee and would provide for self-paced learning.
6. Elicit performance
The contents in your session plan is classified as knowledge based and skills based. Contents that are classified as knowledge are practiced through the self-checks or through face to face questioning depending on the the method used. For modular self-paced method, self-shecks are provided every after Information Sheet to provide frequent and immediate practice.
Skills that need to be practiced are presented in the CBLM as Task Sheets for single Tasks, Operation Sheet for the operation of equipment and Job Sheets for combination of tasks and operations required in performing a Job which usually requires an output or a service.
7. Provide feedback
Immediate, frequent and continuous feedback is essentially additional guidance. If the learner has not yet grasped a concept or idea, this is the time to provide more information and different examples.
In CBT, you provide feedback for the practice of knowledge using the self-check answer keys. Asking trainees to check their own answers against a key would allow self-paced learning of knowledge.
While practicing skills, the trainees should be able to check against standards whether he is doing the skill as required. The performance criteria checklist is a list of required standards for judging both performance and outputs. Instruct your trainees to always check the criteria while they are practicing. When they are confident that they can perform the task based on set criteria, the trainee should be instructed to let you check his performance. During this time, additional feedback can be provided by you.
8. Assess performance
Assessment should be a very important step in the teaching learning process. In CBT it is recommended that written test, performance test and interview are the methods of assessment for every competency learned. Assessment should cover the four dimensions of competency – task skills, task management skills, job role and environment and contingency management skills.
9. Enhance retention and transfer
Learning should not stop with the institutional competency evaluation. Integration of knowledge learned from other competencies to skills in the other competencies of the qualification should be provided to enhance retention and transfer.
Providing for supervised industry training or On-the-Job training would be a very important practice.