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Welingkar’s Distance Learning Division

Effective HR
CHAPTER-9

Challenges faced in Training

We Learn – A Continuous Learning Forum
Objectives
• After completing this chapter, you should be
able to:
– Understand the different challenges faced ¡n
training.
– Understand Learning Organization theory
advocated by Peter Senge.
Challenges faced in training
• Some of the challenges faced in training are:
– Schedule
• Scheduling training can be one of the most difficult
challenges a human resource department can face.
Many managers are reluctant to let employees take
much time away from their duties for training.

– Rapid changes
• Rapid changes in technology, corporate initiatives and
programs can make it difficult to adequately prepare
training materials and deliver training before
employees need information and new skills.
Challenges faced in training
• Some of the challenges faced in training are:
– Age, gender, and professional status
• Different cultures give different regard to age, gender,
and professional qualification. Similarly, some countries
are also biased about the gender. Like in Gulf countries,
women’s role is limited to households only. Same is
with high professional status - the higher the
qualification of the trainer, the more will be the
importance attached to the information.
Challenges faced in training
• Some of the challenges faced in training are:
– Language problem in training and development
• Language comprises of both spoken and unspoken
means of communication. The best of the best training
programs will fail if trainer is not well versed in
communicating trainees’ language. Language is one of
the most important ingredients of culture.
Challenges faced in training
• Some of the challenges faced in training are:
– Organizational barriers to learning
• Typically, as organizations grow and mature they develop
more rigid systems and processes and ways of thinking. This
has an impact on the organizational learning. When
problems arise in the company, the solutions that are
proposed often turn out to be only short term.

– Individual barriers to learning
• Resistance to learning can occur within an organization if
there is not sufficient buy in at an individual level. Learning
and personal mastery is a question of individual choice and
cannot 5e forced.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory
• Peter M. Senge (1947)
was named a ‘Strategist of
the Century’ by the
Journal of Business
Strategy, one of 24 men
and women who have
‘had the greatest impact
on the way we conduct
business today’.
• While he has studied how
firms and organizations
develop adaptive
capabilities for many

years at MLT
(Massachusetts Institute
of Technology), it was
Peter Senge’s 1990 book
The Fifth Discipline that
brought him firmly into
the limelight and
popularized the concept
of the learning
organization’.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory

• According to Peter Senge
learning organizations are
organizations where

people continually expand
their capacity to create
the results they truly
desire, where new and
expansive patterns of
thinking are nurtured,
where collective
aspiration is set free, and
where people are
continually learning to see
the whole together.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory
• The dimension that distinguishes learning from
more traditional organizations is the mastery of
certain basic disciplines or ‘Component
technologies’.
• The five that Peter Senge identifies are said to be
converging to innovate learning organizations.
–
–
–
–
–

Systems thinking
Personal mastery
Mental models
Building shared vision
Team learning
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory
• Alongside systems
•
thinking, there stand
four other ‘component
technologies’ or
disciplines.
• A ‘discipline’ is viewed
by Peter Senge as a
series of principles and
practices that we study,
master and integrate
into our lives.

The five disciplines can
be approached at one
of three levels:
– Practices:
• what you do

– Principles:
• guiding ideas and
insights.

– Essences:
• the state of being those
with high levels of
mastery in the discipline.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Systems Thinking
• Systemic thinking is the conceptual cornerstone
of his approach.
• It is the discipline that integrates the others,
fusing them into a coherent body of theory and
practice.
• Systems theory’s ability to comprehend and
address the whole and to examine the
interrelationship between the parts provides, for
Peter Senge, both the incentive and the means to
integrate the disciplines.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Systems Thinking
• Peter Senge concludes:
– The systems viewpoint is generally oriented toward
the long-term view.
– That’s why delays and feedback loops are so
important.
– In the short term, you can often ignore them; they’re
inconsequential.
– They only come back to haunt you in the long term.

• Peter Senge advocates the use of ‘systems maps’diagrams that show the key elements of systems
and how they connect.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Personal Mastery
• Organizations learn only through individuals who
learn. Individual learning does not guarantee
organizational learning. But without it no
organizational learning occurs.
• Personal mastery is the discipline of continually
clarifying and deepening our persona[ vision, of
focusing our energies, of developing patience,
and of seeing reality objectively’.
• It goes beyond competence and skills, although it
involves them. It goes beyond spiritual opening,
although it involves spiritual growth.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Mental Models
• Mental Models, according to
Peter Senge, are ‘deeply
ingrained assumptions,
generalizations, or even
pictures and images that
influence how we
understand the world and
how we take action
• The discipline of mental models starts with turning the
mirror inward; learning to unearth our internal pictures
of the world, to bring them to the surface and hold
them rigorously to scrutiny.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Mental Models
• It also includes the ability to carry on ‘learningful’
conversations that balance inquiry and advocacy,
where people expose their own thinking
effectively and make that thinking open to the
influence of others.
• If organizations are to develop a capacity to work
with mental models then it will be necessary for
people to learn new skills and develop new
orientations, and for there to be institutional
changes that foster such change.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Building Shared Vision
• Peter Senge starts from the position that if any
one idea about leadership has inspired
organizations for thousands of years, ‘it is the
capacity to hold a share picture of the future we
seek to create’.
• Such a vision has the power to be uplifting — and
to encourage experimentation and innovation.
• Crucially, it is argued, it can also foster a sense of
the long-term, something that is fundamental to
the ‘fifth discipline’.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Building Shared Vision
• The practice of shared vision involves the skills
of unearthing shared ‘pictures of the future’
that foster genuine commitment and
enrolment rather than compliance.
• In mastering this discipline, leaders learn the
counter-productiveness of trying to dictate a
vision, no matter how heartfelt.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Team Learning
• According to Peter Senge, team learning is
viewed as ‘the process of aligning and developing
the capacities of a team to create the results its
members truly desire’.
• It builds on personal mastery and shared vision
but these are not enough.
• People need to be able to act together. When
teams learn together, Peter Senge suggests, not
only can there be good results for the
organization; members will grow more rapidly
than could have occurred otherwise.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Leading the learning
organization

• Peter Senge argues that learning organizations require
a new view of leadership.
• He sees the traditional view of leaders as special
people who set the direction, make key decisions and
energize the troops as deriving from a deeply
individualistic and non-systemic worldview.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Leading the learning
organization

• At its center the traditional view of leadership,
is based on assumptions of people’s
powerlessness, their lack of personal vision
and inability to master the forces of change,
deficits which can be remedied only by a few
great leaders.
• Against this traditional view he sets a ‘new’
view of leadership that centers on subtler and
more important tasks.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Leading the learning
organization

• Leader as Designer

– The organization’s policies, strategies and systems are
key areas of design, but leadership goes beyond this.
Integrating the five component technologies is
fundamental.
– However, the first task entails designing the governing
ideas — the purpose, vision and core values by which
people should live.
– Building a shared vision is crucial early on as it fosters
a long-term orientation and an imperative for
learning.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory: Leading the learning
organization

• Leader as teacher

– Peter Senge starts here with the injunction that the
first responsibility of a leader is to define reality.
– While leaders may draw inspiration and spiritual
reserves from their sense of stewardship, much of the
leverage leaders can actually exert lies in helping
people achieve more accurate, more insiglitful and
more empowering views of reality.
– Building on an existing ‘hierarchy of explanation’
leaders.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory
• Conclusion
– It has been suggested that Peter Senge has been
ahead of his time and that his arguments are
insightful and revolutionary.
– It is a matter of regret that more organizations
have not taken his advice and have remained
geared to the quick fix.
Peter Senge’s learning organization
theory
• Conclusion
– The emphases on building a shared vision, team
working, personal mastery and the development
of more sophisticated mental models and the way
he runs the notion of dialogue through these does
have the potential of allowing workplaces to be
more genial and creative

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Challenges faced in Training

  • 1. Welingkar’s Distance Learning Division Effective HR CHAPTER-9 Challenges faced in Training We Learn – A Continuous Learning Forum
  • 2. Objectives • After completing this chapter, you should be able to: – Understand the different challenges faced ¡n training. – Understand Learning Organization theory advocated by Peter Senge.
  • 3. Challenges faced in training • Some of the challenges faced in training are: – Schedule • Scheduling training can be one of the most difficult challenges a human resource department can face. Many managers are reluctant to let employees take much time away from their duties for training. – Rapid changes • Rapid changes in technology, corporate initiatives and programs can make it difficult to adequately prepare training materials and deliver training before employees need information and new skills.
  • 4. Challenges faced in training • Some of the challenges faced in training are: – Age, gender, and professional status • Different cultures give different regard to age, gender, and professional qualification. Similarly, some countries are also biased about the gender. Like in Gulf countries, women’s role is limited to households only. Same is with high professional status - the higher the qualification of the trainer, the more will be the importance attached to the information.
  • 5. Challenges faced in training • Some of the challenges faced in training are: – Language problem in training and development • Language comprises of both spoken and unspoken means of communication. The best of the best training programs will fail if trainer is not well versed in communicating trainees’ language. Language is one of the most important ingredients of culture.
  • 6. Challenges faced in training • Some of the challenges faced in training are: – Organizational barriers to learning • Typically, as organizations grow and mature they develop more rigid systems and processes and ways of thinking. This has an impact on the organizational learning. When problems arise in the company, the solutions that are proposed often turn out to be only short term. – Individual barriers to learning • Resistance to learning can occur within an organization if there is not sufficient buy in at an individual level. Learning and personal mastery is a question of individual choice and cannot 5e forced.
  • 7. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory • Peter M. Senge (1947) was named a ‘Strategist of the Century’ by the Journal of Business Strategy, one of 24 men and women who have ‘had the greatest impact on the way we conduct business today’. • While he has studied how firms and organizations develop adaptive capabilities for many years at MLT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), it was Peter Senge’s 1990 book The Fifth Discipline that brought him firmly into the limelight and popularized the concept of the learning organization’.
  • 8. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory • According to Peter Senge learning organizations are organizations where people continually expand their capacity to create the results they truly desire, where new and expansive patterns of thinking are nurtured, where collective aspiration is set free, and where people are continually learning to see the whole together.
  • 9. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory • The dimension that distinguishes learning from more traditional organizations is the mastery of certain basic disciplines or ‘Component technologies’. • The five that Peter Senge identifies are said to be converging to innovate learning organizations. – – – – – Systems thinking Personal mastery Mental models Building shared vision Team learning
  • 10. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory • Alongside systems • thinking, there stand four other ‘component technologies’ or disciplines. • A ‘discipline’ is viewed by Peter Senge as a series of principles and practices that we study, master and integrate into our lives. The five disciplines can be approached at one of three levels: – Practices: • what you do – Principles: • guiding ideas and insights. – Essences: • the state of being those with high levels of mastery in the discipline.
  • 11. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Systems Thinking • Systemic thinking is the conceptual cornerstone of his approach. • It is the discipline that integrates the others, fusing them into a coherent body of theory and practice. • Systems theory’s ability to comprehend and address the whole and to examine the interrelationship between the parts provides, for Peter Senge, both the incentive and the means to integrate the disciplines.
  • 12. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Systems Thinking • Peter Senge concludes: – The systems viewpoint is generally oriented toward the long-term view. – That’s why delays and feedback loops are so important. – In the short term, you can often ignore them; they’re inconsequential. – They only come back to haunt you in the long term. • Peter Senge advocates the use of ‘systems maps’diagrams that show the key elements of systems and how they connect.
  • 13. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Personal Mastery • Organizations learn only through individuals who learn. Individual learning does not guarantee organizational learning. But without it no organizational learning occurs. • Personal mastery is the discipline of continually clarifying and deepening our persona[ vision, of focusing our energies, of developing patience, and of seeing reality objectively’. • It goes beyond competence and skills, although it involves them. It goes beyond spiritual opening, although it involves spiritual growth.
  • 14. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Mental Models • Mental Models, according to Peter Senge, are ‘deeply ingrained assumptions, generalizations, or even pictures and images that influence how we understand the world and how we take action • The discipline of mental models starts with turning the mirror inward; learning to unearth our internal pictures of the world, to bring them to the surface and hold them rigorously to scrutiny.
  • 15. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Mental Models • It also includes the ability to carry on ‘learningful’ conversations that balance inquiry and advocacy, where people expose their own thinking effectively and make that thinking open to the influence of others. • If organizations are to develop a capacity to work with mental models then it will be necessary for people to learn new skills and develop new orientations, and for there to be institutional changes that foster such change.
  • 16. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Building Shared Vision • Peter Senge starts from the position that if any one idea about leadership has inspired organizations for thousands of years, ‘it is the capacity to hold a share picture of the future we seek to create’. • Such a vision has the power to be uplifting — and to encourage experimentation and innovation. • Crucially, it is argued, it can also foster a sense of the long-term, something that is fundamental to the ‘fifth discipline’.
  • 17. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Building Shared Vision • The practice of shared vision involves the skills of unearthing shared ‘pictures of the future’ that foster genuine commitment and enrolment rather than compliance. • In mastering this discipline, leaders learn the counter-productiveness of trying to dictate a vision, no matter how heartfelt.
  • 18. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Team Learning • According to Peter Senge, team learning is viewed as ‘the process of aligning and developing the capacities of a team to create the results its members truly desire’. • It builds on personal mastery and shared vision but these are not enough. • People need to be able to act together. When teams learn together, Peter Senge suggests, not only can there be good results for the organization; members will grow more rapidly than could have occurred otherwise.
  • 19. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Leading the learning organization • Peter Senge argues that learning organizations require a new view of leadership. • He sees the traditional view of leaders as special people who set the direction, make key decisions and energize the troops as deriving from a deeply individualistic and non-systemic worldview.
  • 20. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Leading the learning organization • At its center the traditional view of leadership, is based on assumptions of people’s powerlessness, their lack of personal vision and inability to master the forces of change, deficits which can be remedied only by a few great leaders. • Against this traditional view he sets a ‘new’ view of leadership that centers on subtler and more important tasks.
  • 21. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Leading the learning organization • Leader as Designer – The organization’s policies, strategies and systems are key areas of design, but leadership goes beyond this. Integrating the five component technologies is fundamental. – However, the first task entails designing the governing ideas — the purpose, vision and core values by which people should live. – Building a shared vision is crucial early on as it fosters a long-term orientation and an imperative for learning.
  • 22. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory: Leading the learning organization • Leader as teacher – Peter Senge starts here with the injunction that the first responsibility of a leader is to define reality. – While leaders may draw inspiration and spiritual reserves from their sense of stewardship, much of the leverage leaders can actually exert lies in helping people achieve more accurate, more insiglitful and more empowering views of reality. – Building on an existing ‘hierarchy of explanation’ leaders.
  • 23. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory • Conclusion – It has been suggested that Peter Senge has been ahead of his time and that his arguments are insightful and revolutionary. – It is a matter of regret that more organizations have not taken his advice and have remained geared to the quick fix.
  • 24. Peter Senge’s learning organization theory • Conclusion – The emphases on building a shared vision, team working, personal mastery and the development of more sophisticated mental models and the way he runs the notion of dialogue through these does have the potential of allowing workplaces to be more genial and creative