Is Your Training Truly Participant Centered (PC)?
Posted by EdmontonPMJan 24
Online Webinar – Recorded December 3 rd, 2019
Activity Type: Education – Online or Digital Media 1 PDU – Free
Provider: Training Magazine Network
4 Vital Signs to Measure
Participant Centered (PC) Health!
Ever noticed how physical examinations always start with the doctor or nurse checking your pulse rate, respiration, and temperature?
Those vital signs of health are critical to the body working, so we start there.
In your training world, there are also vital signs of health.
- Is your content truly participant centered?
- Do your learners experience the power to choose and a sense of belonging?
- Does training feel like a mandated requirement or an anticipated event?
When you PC vitals are healthy, retention and application improve dramatically.
In this one-hour webinar you will:
- Examine 4 vital signs of participant-centered training
- Explore 6 ideas you can use to put people in charge of their own learning.
- Discover the biggest threats to engagement and retention
Presenter: Becky Pike Pluth (LinkedIn profile) President and CEO, The Bob Pike Group Becky has more than 17 years of exposure to Bob Pike’s Creative Training Techniques (CTT) and vast experience in cross-functional training design and delivery, project management and business operations. She easily employs a participant-centered approach to classroom training, one-on-one training and blended e-learning and author of numerous professional development training materials including:
- 101 Movie Clips that Teach and Train
- Webinars with WOW Factor: Tips, Tricks and Interactivities for Virtual Training
- SCORE 3: Super Closers, Openers, Revisiters, Energizers
- SCORE for Technical Training, volume 4
- SCORE! for Webinar Training, volume 5
Click to register for:
Is Your Training Truly Participant Centered (PC)?
0 | 1.0 | 0 |
Technical Project Management | Leadership | Strategic & Business Management |
NOTE: For PMI® Audit Purposes – Print Out This Post! Take notes on this page during the presentation and also indicate the Date & Time you attended. Note any information from the presentation you found useful to your professional development and place it in your audit folder.
Leave a Reply