This document discusses Grelling's Paradox, which is a semantic paradox similar to the liar paradox. It defines the terms "heterological" and "autological" and examines whether the term "heterological" is itself heterological. It leads to a contradiction, as both assuming that "heterological" is and is not heterological results in a contradiction. The document then shifts topics to discuss future trends in training and development, including increased use of new technologies, sustainability initiatives, and advances in areas like neuroscience and data analysis that will influence the field.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is the intelligence exhibited by machines and the branch of computer science which develops it. The document defines AI and its history, compares human and computer intelligence, outlines the main branches of AI including logical AI, pattern recognition, and natural language processing. It discusses current applications such as expert systems, speech recognition, computer vision, robotics, and the potential outcomes, advantages, and disadvantages of AI. The future of AI could see more human-like robots assisting with daily tasks but may also carry risks if robots gain full cognitive abilities and power similar to humans.
The document discusses the past, present, and future of programming from a human-computer interaction perspective. It provides a historical overview of programming and discusses challenges in translating how people think and solve problems into computer terms. It also suggests that lessons may come from other fields beyond HCI and that not all problems need to be solved through programming computers.
A DEVELOPMENT FRAMEWORK FOR A CONVERSATIONAL AGENT TO EXPLORE MACHINE LEARNIN...mlaij
This study aims to introduce a discussion platform and curriculum designed to help people understand how
machines learn. Research shows how to train an agent through dialogue and understand how information
is represented using visualization. This paper starts by providing a comprehensive definition of AI literacy
based on existing research and integrates a wide range of different subject documents into a set of key AI
literacy skills to develop a user-centered AI. This functionality and structural considerations are organized
into a conceptual framework based on the literature. Contributions to this paper can be used to initiate
discussion and guide future research on AI learning within the computer science community.
Define artificial intelligence.
Mention the four approaches to AI.
What are the capabilities of AI that have to process with computer?
Mention the foundations of AI?
Mention the crude comparison of the raw computational resources available to computer and human brain.
Briefly explain the history of AI.
What are rational action and intelligent agent?
The document discusses various present and future applications of artificial intelligence including helping the aging population through robots, using rescue robots during disasters, developing speech recognition and reading tutorials, creating robots that can learn and adapt like humans, developing telepresence robots for communication, developing automated therapists and conversational search engines, and considerations around whether AI poses a threat to humanity.
Emotional intelligence and artificial intelligence (A comparative analysis)Rumbidzai Faith Matanga
The document discusses a seminar paper on a comparative analysis of emotional intelligence and artificial intelligence. It outlines the objectives of analyzing whether the two are complementary and which is more relevant today. It discusses how each have distinct functions, with emotional intelligence giving humans abilities like empathy that AI currently lacks. The implications are that AI may replace some jobs but emotional skills will remain important. It suggests cultivating creativity and human qualities rather than focusing on skills that computers can replace.
Artificial intelligence is the area of computer science focused on creating intelligent machines. The document discusses the history and branches of AI. It provides examples of early successes in games like chess. It also discusses the knowledge needed to learn AI, such as mathematics and programming languages. Finally, it outlines several applications of AI in fields like medicine, transportation, and games.
Cloud Computing Essay | Essay on Cloud Computing for Students and .... Sample essay on cloud computing. Cloud Computing essay. Essay on cloud computing for students. Cloud Computing Essay Topics - Recent Master S Research Topic Ideas For .... Le Cloud Computing, une meilleure solution ? – Communication et édition .... Cloud Computing Research Paper Example | Topics and Well Written Essays .... Cloud Computing Essay | PDF | Cloud Computing | Software As A Service. ≫ Understanding of Cloud Computing Free Essay Sample on Samploon.com. Cloud Computing Essay | Cyberspace | Geography. Advantages and Disadvantages of Cloud Computing - Read a Free .... Cloud computing essay. Cost Benefits of Cloud Computing in the Company Essay Example | Topics .... Cloud Computing Assignment Example | Topics and Well Written Essays .... ≫ Benefits of Cloud Computing Free Essay Sample on Samploon.com. Cloud Computing Essays. Cloud Computing - Australias Queensland University of Technology Essay ....
Artificial intelligence (AI) is the intelligence exhibited by machines and the branch of computer science which develops it. The document defines AI and its history, compares human and computer intelligence, outlines the main branches of AI including logical AI, pattern recognition, and natural language processing. It discusses current applications such as expert systems, speech recognition, computer vision, robotics, and the potential outcomes, advantages, and disadvantages of AI. The future of AI could see more human-like robots assisting with daily tasks but may also carry risks if robots gain full cognitive abilities and power similar to humans.
The document discusses the past, present, and future of programming from a human-computer interaction perspective. It provides a historical overview of programming and discusses challenges in translating how people think and solve problems into computer terms. It also suggests that lessons may come from other fields beyond HCI and that not all problems need to be solved through programming computers.
A DEVELOPMENT FRAMEWORK FOR A CONVERSATIONAL AGENT TO EXPLORE MACHINE LEARNIN...mlaij
This study aims to introduce a discussion platform and curriculum designed to help people understand how
machines learn. Research shows how to train an agent through dialogue and understand how information
is represented using visualization. This paper starts by providing a comprehensive definition of AI literacy
based on existing research and integrates a wide range of different subject documents into a set of key AI
literacy skills to develop a user-centered AI. This functionality and structural considerations are organized
into a conceptual framework based on the literature. Contributions to this paper can be used to initiate
discussion and guide future research on AI learning within the computer science community.
Define artificial intelligence.
Mention the four approaches to AI.
What are the capabilities of AI that have to process with computer?
Mention the foundations of AI?
Mention the crude comparison of the raw computational resources available to computer and human brain.
Briefly explain the history of AI.
What are rational action and intelligent agent?
The document discusses various present and future applications of artificial intelligence including helping the aging population through robots, using rescue robots during disasters, developing speech recognition and reading tutorials, creating robots that can learn and adapt like humans, developing telepresence robots for communication, developing automated therapists and conversational search engines, and considerations around whether AI poses a threat to humanity.
Emotional intelligence and artificial intelligence (A comparative analysis)Rumbidzai Faith Matanga
The document discusses a seminar paper on a comparative analysis of emotional intelligence and artificial intelligence. It outlines the objectives of analyzing whether the two are complementary and which is more relevant today. It discusses how each have distinct functions, with emotional intelligence giving humans abilities like empathy that AI currently lacks. The implications are that AI may replace some jobs but emotional skills will remain important. It suggests cultivating creativity and human qualities rather than focusing on skills that computers can replace.
Artificial intelligence is the area of computer science focused on creating intelligent machines. The document discusses the history and branches of AI. It provides examples of early successes in games like chess. It also discusses the knowledge needed to learn AI, such as mathematics and programming languages. Finally, it outlines several applications of AI in fields like medicine, transportation, and games.
Cloud Computing Essay | Essay on Cloud Computing for Students and .... Sample essay on cloud computing. Cloud Computing essay. Essay on cloud computing for students. Cloud Computing Essay Topics - Recent Master S Research Topic Ideas For .... Le Cloud Computing, une meilleure solution ? – Communication et édition .... Cloud Computing Research Paper Example | Topics and Well Written Essays .... Cloud Computing Essay | PDF | Cloud Computing | Software As A Service. ≫ Understanding of Cloud Computing Free Essay Sample on Samploon.com. Cloud Computing Essay | Cyberspace | Geography. Advantages and Disadvantages of Cloud Computing - Read a Free .... Cloud computing essay. Cost Benefits of Cloud Computing in the Company Essay Example | Topics .... Cloud Computing Assignment Example | Topics and Well Written Essays .... ≫ Benefits of Cloud Computing Free Essay Sample on Samploon.com. Cloud Computing Essays. Cloud Computing - Australias Queensland University of Technology Essay ....
The paper must have the following subheadings which is not include.docxoreo10
The paper must have the following subheadings which is not included in word count:
Introduction
Analysis
Rationale to support the response [1 and 2 separately]
Description of key job types
Conclusions
Week 11 Discussion 1
"The Future of Training" Please respond to the following:
From the first e-Activity, analyze the views of Cross and Jarche about the “Golden Age of Training” and its future. Then, assess the claims Miller makes about training in the article “Training is Not an Option.” Take a position on which views you agree with most. Provide a rationale to support your response.
From the second e-Activity, describe three key job types and competencies that professional organizations such as ISPI and ASTD claim that professionals in the field of organizational training and development should possess. Provide a rationale to support your response.
e-Activity Bottom of Form
Read the article by Cross and Jarche titled “The Future of the Training Department” published in Training Magazine (June 2009). Then, read the article titled, “Training is Not an Option,” by Adrian Miller. Be prepared to discuss.
Search the Internet for a professional organization (e.g., ISPI, ASTD) and review the primary job types and job competencies listed. Be prepared to discuss.
Article: “The Future of the Training Department”
URL: https://www.polleverywhere. com/blog/the-future-of-the- training-department/
Article: “Training is Not an Option,”
URL: http://ezinearticles.com/? Training-is-Not-an-Option&id= 157604
Post 1 AW
Referencing the Learning Resources for this module, choose any question in the research project list and answer it in relation to posthumanism. In other words treat posthumanism as a new technology or technological way of being.
Posthumanism is essentially the interlinking of humans and technology. This could range from artificial intelligence to a human that has prosthetics or technological enhancements fused into their bodies. But how did this term even come about? What is so wrong with humans and their ability to function that we need to incorporate such technology into our lives? What is the problem for which posthumanism is the solution?
The answer is everything. All aspects of our lives involve problems and solutions. This technology that is being referred to as posthumanism has the ability to solve a vast majority of the problems humans encounter and create. Steven Poole, although a strong supporter against posthumanism, discusses a few of these problems as well as new problems that could be created in his article “Slaves to the algorithm”. First referring to a chess match between world champions, then to vehicle automation, crime algorithms and psychotherapy applications, Poole is able to illustrate the involvement posthumanism already has in our present day. Before he argues that humans are quickly rationing off our conscious thoughts and judgements he recognizes the need for imp ...
NHH - FRONT LINES ON ADOPTION OF DIGITAL AND AI-BASED SERVICES
November 5, 2023
Speaker: Jim Spohrer (https://www.linkedin.com/in/spohrer/)
Host: Tor Andreassen (https://www.linkedin.com/in/tor-wallin-andreassen-1aa9031/)
Companion presentation: https://www.slideshare.net/issip/nhh-20231105-v6pptx
From Humanities to Metahumanities: Transhumanism and the Future of Education....eraser Juan José Calderón
From Humanities to Metahumanities: Transhumanism and the Future of Education. Poppy Frances Gibson
Abstract
Educational policy and provision is ever-changing; but how does pedagogy need to adapt to respond to transhumanism? This opinion piece discusses transhumanism, questions what it will mean to be posthuman, and considers the implications of this on the future of education. This piece aims to identify some key questions in the area of transhumanism and education as four themes are considered: teachers, human hardware, curriculum and lifelong learning.
24 April 2016, Volume 53, Number 4We Feel a Change Comin’ .docxtamicawaysmith
24 April 2016, Volume 53, Number 4
We Feel a Change Comin’ On:
I-O’s Rôle in the Future of Work
We in I-O are fairly sporting when it comes to discussing the
ambiguities and contradictions and inconsistencies associated
with the nuances of human behavior in the workplace—cheers
to us. We seem to falter, though, when it comes to talking
about the future: the future of work, of organizations, of SIOP,
of our own jobs. Our narratives become jumbled; we start
talking past each other, focusing on different criteria, making
different assumptions. Our background in science doesn’t
prepare us to have meaningful conversations about specula-
tion, prophecy, conjecture. This may be a point to our credit
on most days, but it will not serve us if and when the world
changes and we are caught off guard and unprepared.
Hence the focus for this edition of the I-Opener: Where is the
world of work going and where will we fit in it? The discussion
below is imperfect: It represents a single narrative among
many possible narratives, a few perspectives among a myriad,
many questionable assumptions. We simplified and filtered
the prophecies; we asked leading and targeted questions; we,
to some extent, knew what we were going to write before we
began interviewing experts.
But this serves our purpose adequately. We want to start
SIOP’s membership down this path of thought—and the more
varied the conclusions at which members arrive, the better.
We want to reveal the changes that are being anticipated.
Instead of simply wondering at the forward march of technol-
ogy, let’s start thinking (and talking) about what this means for
us, not in the narrow sense of job security and personal leisure
time but in terms of how I-O psychology will adapt to continue
to serve humanity in the coming decades.1
What: The (Possible) Brave New World
A continual influx of new technology has become rather com-
monplace these days, and most of us are comfortable with
and even dependent upon the rôle technology has assumed
in our lives, but what about its rôle in our work? How and to
Olivia Reinecke
Louisiana Tech University
Steven Toaddy
Louisiana Tech University
25 The Industrial-Organizational Psychologist
what extent is technology improving the
human work experience? How and at what
point will technology become dangerous?
Dangerous to whom or to what? Questions
such as these are at the forefront of our
field’s development, and the answers will
transform I-O psychology as we know it.
Upon reading the preceding paragraph,
one is likely to consider one of a few cat-
egories of technologies: telework, collab-
orative cloud services, and automation.
“Telework” captures a variety of (in this
case electronic) technologies that allow
humans to better coördinate with each
other in their work activities—and has sib-
lings in the cloud in the form of electronic
workflow-management suites, collabora-
tive-document services, shared calendar ...
Artificial Intelligence an Amazing presentation By Group4.
Group4 is a unique group of Govt.postgraduate College sheikhupura affiliated with Punjab University of Punjab,Pakistan..
Contact details..
Shamimaqsoodulhassan@yahoo.com or Shamimaqsood@gmail.com
Phone Number: 03045128753
Midwest km pugh conversational ai and ai for conversation 190809Katrina (Kate) Pugh
Conversational AI (chat bots) is here to stay, and it's teaching us a lot about transactions, human language patterns, and the limits of computer-human interaction. But what about AI for Conversation? Can we learn from the Conversational AI research and improve how human-to-human conversation works? Where can we use pattern recognition and predictive analytics to improve how we are present as managers, coaches, analysts, family members or diplomats?
Harry Collins - Testing Machines as Social Prostheses - EuroSTAR 2013TEST Huddle
This document discusses the use of Hawk-Eye technology in tennis line judging and whether humans or machines can make more accurate judgments. It describes an experiment where a blind person pretends to be a tennis fan and discusses Hawk-Eye with a sighted tennis expert to test their knowledge. The expert expresses uncertainty around human ability to accurately judge ball flights within millimeters but acknowledges Hawk-Eye is still imperfect. A second blind respondent judges the interaction, finding inconsistencies that suggest the first was actually sighted.
Artificial intelligence uses in productive systems and impacts on the world...Fernando Alcoforado
This essay aims to present the scientific and technological advances of artificial intelligence, their uses in productive systems and their impacts in the world of work.
Crowdsourced topic rankings at Snowforce 2017 in Salt Lake City drove this one-hour "Top 10" -- from evolving role of CIO, up through AI-leveraged connection, into a culture of innovation. (Peter Coffee, VP for Strategic Research at Salesforce)
Humans have augmented themselves with technology throughout history, blurring the line between human and machine. While replacing body parts like hips and hearts don't diminish humanity, augmenting the brain poses complex questions. Some experts argue sentient AI is possible if an artificial mind can sustain and grow knowledge on its own. However, fully transferring human consciousness into a computer raises ethical dilemmas around whether such an entity should be considered human. Responsible development of AI requires understanding both its philosophical assumptions and potential impacts, aiming to create technologies that help humans flourish.
Conversation and Conversational AI are both changing the modern organization. We discuss parallel tracks in transformational conversation (e.g., the "conversational firm"), and commercial intelligent agents, and ask how they can cross-pollinate for better learning, better understanding, and better innovation.
In the next 10 years, smart machines will augment humans in many tasks like assisting doctors, fighting in battles, manufacturing, and assisting in various professions. While machines will replace humans in some routine tasks, the partnership between humans and machines will build on our respective strengths. Humans have advantages in tasks requiring thinking, creativity, social/emotional skills, and improvisation, while machines are better suited for repetitive, dangerous, large/small-scale, and data-driven tasks. An optimal partnership is emerging where humans and machines collaborate to achieve more than either could alone.
Summary Of Defending Against The Indefensible EssayBrenda Zerr
Postman suggests that language can be manipulated, and provides seven principles of critical thinking to help avoid manipulation: definitions can be biased; questions help understand purpose and bias; simplicity obscures; metaphors shape thought; words can conceal ideas; style influences perception; and media are non-neutral. Understanding these principles helps recognize manipulation in language used by media, politicians, and others.
IBM Watson & Cognitive Computing - Tech In Asia 2016Nugroho Gito
1. The document provides an overview of cognitive computing, including a brief history of artificial intelligence and significant events that have shaped the evolution of cognitive computing.
2. It discusses what cognitive computing is, how it differs from traditional analytics by addressing ambiguous problems and interacting with humans in a natural way.
3. The document outlines how cognitive computing adoption has increased, providing examples of IBM Watson's applications in various industries and technologies like the Watson Developer Cloud that allow developers to access cognitive capabilities through APIs and tools.
What really is Artificial Intelligence about? Harmony Kwawu
AI systems are growing. But what is AI, where did the idea behind it come from, what is intelligence, how does expert level intelligence work, and perhaps most importantly, would AI systems eventually make human beings redundant?
Cognitive computing aims to address complex problems characterized by ambiguity and uncertainty by learning from and interacting with people. The document discusses several topics related to cognitive computing and tacit knowledge, including:
- The history and traditions of cognitive science from the 1950s onward.
- How early experiments in the 1990s explored using computer-mediated telepresence to enable real-time collaborative creative work across distances, finding it can achieve similar results to physical presence.
- Questions around how cognitive computing systems today can help individuals and groups create value and preserve identity while working together.
- Whether true real-time collaborative creative work engaging tacit knowledge is possible digitally, or if physical presence is still needed.
Can we morally justify the replacement of humans by artificial intelligence i...Kai Bennink
1) The document discusses whether artificial intelligence can morally replace humans in cancer treatment by analyzing the case of IBM Watson Oncology.
2) IBM Watson Oncology uses AI and machine learning to analyze patient data and provide treatment options to help doctors, achieving similar or better diagnosis rates than doctors.
3) However, some argue that AI systems like Watson are "black boxes" that we don't fully understand, and they could fail or make decisions in unexpected ways, so strict principles are needed to ensure AI aligns with human values and responsibilities.
This document discusses different definitions and approaches to artificial intelligence (AI). It begins by defining AI as helping machines solve complex problems like humans by applying human-like algorithms. It then discusses AI's links to other fields and its history. The rest of the document explores definitions of AI and different goals or approaches in AI research, including systems that think or act like humans and systems that think or act rationally. It focuses on the Turing Test approach of acting humanly and the cognitive modeling approach of thinking humanly by modeling human cognition.
4.1 EXPLORING INCENTIVE PAY4-1 Explore the incentive pay a.docxlorainedeserre
4.1 EXPLORING INCENTIVE PAY
4-1 Explore the incentive pay approach.
Incentive pay
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/bm01#bm01goss212) or
variable pay
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/bm01#bm01goss462)
rewards employees for partially or completely attaining a predetermined work objective.
Incentive or variable pay is defined as compensation, other than base wages or salaries that
fluctuate according to employees’ attainment of some standard, such as a preestablished
formula, individual or group goals, or company earnings.
Effective incentive pay systems are based on three assumptions:
Individual employees and work teams differ in how much they contribute to the
company, both in what they do as well as in how well they do it.
The company’s overall performance depends to a large degree on the performance of
individuals and groups within the company.
To attract, retain, and motivate high performers and to be fair to all employees, a
company needs to reward employees on the basis of their relative performance.
Much like seniority and merit pay approaches, incentive pay augments employees’ base pay,
but incentive pay appears as a one-time payment. Employees usually receive a combination
of recurring base pay and incentive pay, with base pay representing the greater portion of
core compensation. More employees are presently eligible for incentive pay than ever before,
as companies seek to control costs and motivate personnel continually to strive for exemplary
performance. Companies increasingly recognize the importance of applying incentive pay
programs to various kinds of employees as well, including production workers, technical
employees, and service workers.
Some companies use incentive pay extensively. Lincoln Electric Company, a manufacturer of
welding machines and motors, is renowned for its use of incentive pay plans. At Lincoln
Electric, production employees receive recurring base pay as well as incentive pay. The
company determines incentive pay awards according to five performance criteria: quality,
output, dependability, cooperation, and ideas. The company has awarded incentive payments
every year since 1934, through prosperous and poor economic times. In 2014, the average
profit sharing payment per employee was $33,984.
Coupled with average base
pay, total core compensation for Lincoln employees was $82,903. Over the past 10 years,
Lincoln’s profit-sharing payments averaged approximately 40 percent of annual salary.
1
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/ch04lev1sec11#ch04end1)
2
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/ch04lev1sec11#ch04end2)
3
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/ch04lev1sec11#ch04end3)
4
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/ch04lev1sec11#ch04end4)
4.1 Exploring Incentive Pay
4/15/20, 8:49 PM
Page 1 ...
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The paper must have the following subheadings which is not include.docxoreo10
The paper must have the following subheadings which is not included in word count:
Introduction
Analysis
Rationale to support the response [1 and 2 separately]
Description of key job types
Conclusions
Week 11 Discussion 1
"The Future of Training" Please respond to the following:
From the first e-Activity, analyze the views of Cross and Jarche about the “Golden Age of Training” and its future. Then, assess the claims Miller makes about training in the article “Training is Not an Option.” Take a position on which views you agree with most. Provide a rationale to support your response.
From the second e-Activity, describe three key job types and competencies that professional organizations such as ISPI and ASTD claim that professionals in the field of organizational training and development should possess. Provide a rationale to support your response.
e-Activity Bottom of Form
Read the article by Cross and Jarche titled “The Future of the Training Department” published in Training Magazine (June 2009). Then, read the article titled, “Training is Not an Option,” by Adrian Miller. Be prepared to discuss.
Search the Internet for a professional organization (e.g., ISPI, ASTD) and review the primary job types and job competencies listed. Be prepared to discuss.
Article: “The Future of the Training Department”
URL: https://www.polleverywhere. com/blog/the-future-of-the- training-department/
Article: “Training is Not an Option,”
URL: http://ezinearticles.com/? Training-is-Not-an-Option&id= 157604
Post 1 AW
Referencing the Learning Resources for this module, choose any question in the research project list and answer it in relation to posthumanism. In other words treat posthumanism as a new technology or technological way of being.
Posthumanism is essentially the interlinking of humans and technology. This could range from artificial intelligence to a human that has prosthetics or technological enhancements fused into their bodies. But how did this term even come about? What is so wrong with humans and their ability to function that we need to incorporate such technology into our lives? What is the problem for which posthumanism is the solution?
The answer is everything. All aspects of our lives involve problems and solutions. This technology that is being referred to as posthumanism has the ability to solve a vast majority of the problems humans encounter and create. Steven Poole, although a strong supporter against posthumanism, discusses a few of these problems as well as new problems that could be created in his article “Slaves to the algorithm”. First referring to a chess match between world champions, then to vehicle automation, crime algorithms and psychotherapy applications, Poole is able to illustrate the involvement posthumanism already has in our present day. Before he argues that humans are quickly rationing off our conscious thoughts and judgements he recognizes the need for imp ...
NHH - FRONT LINES ON ADOPTION OF DIGITAL AND AI-BASED SERVICES
November 5, 2023
Speaker: Jim Spohrer (https://www.linkedin.com/in/spohrer/)
Host: Tor Andreassen (https://www.linkedin.com/in/tor-wallin-andreassen-1aa9031/)
Companion presentation: https://www.slideshare.net/issip/nhh-20231105-v6pptx
From Humanities to Metahumanities: Transhumanism and the Future of Education....eraser Juan José Calderón
From Humanities to Metahumanities: Transhumanism and the Future of Education. Poppy Frances Gibson
Abstract
Educational policy and provision is ever-changing; but how does pedagogy need to adapt to respond to transhumanism? This opinion piece discusses transhumanism, questions what it will mean to be posthuman, and considers the implications of this on the future of education. This piece aims to identify some key questions in the area of transhumanism and education as four themes are considered: teachers, human hardware, curriculum and lifelong learning.
24 April 2016, Volume 53, Number 4We Feel a Change Comin’ .docxtamicawaysmith
24 April 2016, Volume 53, Number 4
We Feel a Change Comin’ On:
I-O’s Rôle in the Future of Work
We in I-O are fairly sporting when it comes to discussing the
ambiguities and contradictions and inconsistencies associated
with the nuances of human behavior in the workplace—cheers
to us. We seem to falter, though, when it comes to talking
about the future: the future of work, of organizations, of SIOP,
of our own jobs. Our narratives become jumbled; we start
talking past each other, focusing on different criteria, making
different assumptions. Our background in science doesn’t
prepare us to have meaningful conversations about specula-
tion, prophecy, conjecture. This may be a point to our credit
on most days, but it will not serve us if and when the world
changes and we are caught off guard and unprepared.
Hence the focus for this edition of the I-Opener: Where is the
world of work going and where will we fit in it? The discussion
below is imperfect: It represents a single narrative among
many possible narratives, a few perspectives among a myriad,
many questionable assumptions. We simplified and filtered
the prophecies; we asked leading and targeted questions; we,
to some extent, knew what we were going to write before we
began interviewing experts.
But this serves our purpose adequately. We want to start
SIOP’s membership down this path of thought—and the more
varied the conclusions at which members arrive, the better.
We want to reveal the changes that are being anticipated.
Instead of simply wondering at the forward march of technol-
ogy, let’s start thinking (and talking) about what this means for
us, not in the narrow sense of job security and personal leisure
time but in terms of how I-O psychology will adapt to continue
to serve humanity in the coming decades.1
What: The (Possible) Brave New World
A continual influx of new technology has become rather com-
monplace these days, and most of us are comfortable with
and even dependent upon the rôle technology has assumed
in our lives, but what about its rôle in our work? How and to
Olivia Reinecke
Louisiana Tech University
Steven Toaddy
Louisiana Tech University
25 The Industrial-Organizational Psychologist
what extent is technology improving the
human work experience? How and at what
point will technology become dangerous?
Dangerous to whom or to what? Questions
such as these are at the forefront of our
field’s development, and the answers will
transform I-O psychology as we know it.
Upon reading the preceding paragraph,
one is likely to consider one of a few cat-
egories of technologies: telework, collab-
orative cloud services, and automation.
“Telework” captures a variety of (in this
case electronic) technologies that allow
humans to better coördinate with each
other in their work activities—and has sib-
lings in the cloud in the form of electronic
workflow-management suites, collabora-
tive-document services, shared calendar ...
Artificial Intelligence an Amazing presentation By Group4.
Group4 is a unique group of Govt.postgraduate College sheikhupura affiliated with Punjab University of Punjab,Pakistan..
Contact details..
Shamimaqsoodulhassan@yahoo.com or Shamimaqsood@gmail.com
Phone Number: 03045128753
Midwest km pugh conversational ai and ai for conversation 190809Katrina (Kate) Pugh
Conversational AI (chat bots) is here to stay, and it's teaching us a lot about transactions, human language patterns, and the limits of computer-human interaction. But what about AI for Conversation? Can we learn from the Conversational AI research and improve how human-to-human conversation works? Where can we use pattern recognition and predictive analytics to improve how we are present as managers, coaches, analysts, family members or diplomats?
Harry Collins - Testing Machines as Social Prostheses - EuroSTAR 2013TEST Huddle
This document discusses the use of Hawk-Eye technology in tennis line judging and whether humans or machines can make more accurate judgments. It describes an experiment where a blind person pretends to be a tennis fan and discusses Hawk-Eye with a sighted tennis expert to test their knowledge. The expert expresses uncertainty around human ability to accurately judge ball flights within millimeters but acknowledges Hawk-Eye is still imperfect. A second blind respondent judges the interaction, finding inconsistencies that suggest the first was actually sighted.
Artificial intelligence uses in productive systems and impacts on the world...Fernando Alcoforado
This essay aims to present the scientific and technological advances of artificial intelligence, their uses in productive systems and their impacts in the world of work.
Crowdsourced topic rankings at Snowforce 2017 in Salt Lake City drove this one-hour "Top 10" -- from evolving role of CIO, up through AI-leveraged connection, into a culture of innovation. (Peter Coffee, VP for Strategic Research at Salesforce)
Humans have augmented themselves with technology throughout history, blurring the line between human and machine. While replacing body parts like hips and hearts don't diminish humanity, augmenting the brain poses complex questions. Some experts argue sentient AI is possible if an artificial mind can sustain and grow knowledge on its own. However, fully transferring human consciousness into a computer raises ethical dilemmas around whether such an entity should be considered human. Responsible development of AI requires understanding both its philosophical assumptions and potential impacts, aiming to create technologies that help humans flourish.
Conversation and Conversational AI are both changing the modern organization. We discuss parallel tracks in transformational conversation (e.g., the "conversational firm"), and commercial intelligent agents, and ask how they can cross-pollinate for better learning, better understanding, and better innovation.
In the next 10 years, smart machines will augment humans in many tasks like assisting doctors, fighting in battles, manufacturing, and assisting in various professions. While machines will replace humans in some routine tasks, the partnership between humans and machines will build on our respective strengths. Humans have advantages in tasks requiring thinking, creativity, social/emotional skills, and improvisation, while machines are better suited for repetitive, dangerous, large/small-scale, and data-driven tasks. An optimal partnership is emerging where humans and machines collaborate to achieve more than either could alone.
Summary Of Defending Against The Indefensible EssayBrenda Zerr
Postman suggests that language can be manipulated, and provides seven principles of critical thinking to help avoid manipulation: definitions can be biased; questions help understand purpose and bias; simplicity obscures; metaphors shape thought; words can conceal ideas; style influences perception; and media are non-neutral. Understanding these principles helps recognize manipulation in language used by media, politicians, and others.
IBM Watson & Cognitive Computing - Tech In Asia 2016Nugroho Gito
1. The document provides an overview of cognitive computing, including a brief history of artificial intelligence and significant events that have shaped the evolution of cognitive computing.
2. It discusses what cognitive computing is, how it differs from traditional analytics by addressing ambiguous problems and interacting with humans in a natural way.
3. The document outlines how cognitive computing adoption has increased, providing examples of IBM Watson's applications in various industries and technologies like the Watson Developer Cloud that allow developers to access cognitive capabilities through APIs and tools.
What really is Artificial Intelligence about? Harmony Kwawu
AI systems are growing. But what is AI, where did the idea behind it come from, what is intelligence, how does expert level intelligence work, and perhaps most importantly, would AI systems eventually make human beings redundant?
Cognitive computing aims to address complex problems characterized by ambiguity and uncertainty by learning from and interacting with people. The document discusses several topics related to cognitive computing and tacit knowledge, including:
- The history and traditions of cognitive science from the 1950s onward.
- How early experiments in the 1990s explored using computer-mediated telepresence to enable real-time collaborative creative work across distances, finding it can achieve similar results to physical presence.
- Questions around how cognitive computing systems today can help individuals and groups create value and preserve identity while working together.
- Whether true real-time collaborative creative work engaging tacit knowledge is possible digitally, or if physical presence is still needed.
Can we morally justify the replacement of humans by artificial intelligence i...Kai Bennink
1) The document discusses whether artificial intelligence can morally replace humans in cancer treatment by analyzing the case of IBM Watson Oncology.
2) IBM Watson Oncology uses AI and machine learning to analyze patient data and provide treatment options to help doctors, achieving similar or better diagnosis rates than doctors.
3) However, some argue that AI systems like Watson are "black boxes" that we don't fully understand, and they could fail or make decisions in unexpected ways, so strict principles are needed to ensure AI aligns with human values and responsibilities.
This document discusses different definitions and approaches to artificial intelligence (AI). It begins by defining AI as helping machines solve complex problems like humans by applying human-like algorithms. It then discusses AI's links to other fields and its history. The rest of the document explores definitions of AI and different goals or approaches in AI research, including systems that think or act like humans and systems that think or act rationally. It focuses on the Turing Test approach of acting humanly and the cognitive modeling approach of thinking humanly by modeling human cognition.
4.1 EXPLORING INCENTIVE PAY4-1 Explore the incentive pay a.docxlorainedeserre
4.1 EXPLORING INCENTIVE PAY
4-1 Explore the incentive pay approach.
Incentive pay
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/bm01#bm01goss212) or
variable pay
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/bm01#bm01goss462)
rewards employees for partially or completely attaining a predetermined work objective.
Incentive or variable pay is defined as compensation, other than base wages or salaries that
fluctuate according to employees’ attainment of some standard, such as a preestablished
formula, individual or group goals, or company earnings.
Effective incentive pay systems are based on three assumptions:
Individual employees and work teams differ in how much they contribute to the
company, both in what they do as well as in how well they do it.
The company’s overall performance depends to a large degree on the performance of
individuals and groups within the company.
To attract, retain, and motivate high performers and to be fair to all employees, a
company needs to reward employees on the basis of their relative performance.
Much like seniority and merit pay approaches, incentive pay augments employees’ base pay,
but incentive pay appears as a one-time payment. Employees usually receive a combination
of recurring base pay and incentive pay, with base pay representing the greater portion of
core compensation. More employees are presently eligible for incentive pay than ever before,
as companies seek to control costs and motivate personnel continually to strive for exemplary
performance. Companies increasingly recognize the importance of applying incentive pay
programs to various kinds of employees as well, including production workers, technical
employees, and service workers.
Some companies use incentive pay extensively. Lincoln Electric Company, a manufacturer of
welding machines and motors, is renowned for its use of incentive pay plans. At Lincoln
Electric, production employees receive recurring base pay as well as incentive pay. The
company determines incentive pay awards according to five performance criteria: quality,
output, dependability, cooperation, and ideas. The company has awarded incentive payments
every year since 1934, through prosperous and poor economic times. In 2014, the average
profit sharing payment per employee was $33,984.
Coupled with average base
pay, total core compensation for Lincoln employees was $82,903. Over the past 10 years,
Lincoln’s profit-sharing payments averaged approximately 40 percent of annual salary.
1
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/ch04lev1sec11#ch04end1)
2
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/ch04lev1sec11#ch04end2)
3
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/ch04lev1sec11#ch04end3)
4
(http://content.thuzelearning.com/books/Martocchio.7916.16.1/sections/ch04lev1sec11#ch04end4)
4.1 Exploring Incentive Pay
4/15/20, 8:49 PM
Page 1 ...
38 u December 2017 January 2018The authorities beli.docxlorainedeserre
38 u December 2017 / January 2018
T
he authorities believe he slipped across the United States-Mexico
border sometime during the summer of 2016, likely deep in the
night. He carried no papers. The crossing happened in the rugged
backcountry of southeastern Arizona, where the main deterrent to
trespassers is the challenging nature of the terrain—not the metal
walls, checkpoints, and aerial surveillance that dominate much of the border.
But the border crosser was des-
ert-hardy and something of an expert
at camouflage. No one knows for cer-
tain how long he’d been in the United
States before a motion-activated cam-
era caught him walking a trail in the
Dos Cabezas Mountains on the night
of November 16. When a government
agency retrieved the photo in late Feb-
ruary, the image was plastered across
Arizona newspapers, causing an imme-
diate sensation.
The border crosser was a jaguar.
Jaguars once roamed throughout
the southwestern United States, but
are now quite rare. A core population
resides in the mountains of northern
Mexico, and occasionally an adventur-
ous jaguar will venture north of the bor-
der. When one of these elusive, graceful
cats makes an appearance stateside,
Mrill Ingram is The Progressive’s online media editor.
‘The Border Is
a Beautiful Place’
For Many, Both Sides of the
Arizona-Mexico Border Are Home
B
O
R
D
ER
A
R
TS
C
O
R
R
ID
O
R
By Mrill Ingram
Artists Ana Teresa Fernández in Agua Prieta, Mexico, and Jenea Sanchez in Douglas, Arizona, worked with dozens of community members to paint sections
of the border fence sky blue, “erasing” it as a symbolic act of resistance against increasing violence and oppression of human rights along the border.
https://apnews.com/79c83219af724016b8cfa2c505018ac4/agency-reports-rare-jaguar-sighting-mountains-arizona
The Progressive u 39
usually via a motion-triggered camera,
it may get celebrity status.
“We’ve had positive identifications
of seven cats, alive and well, in the last
twenty years in the United States,” says
Diana Hadley of the Mexico-based
Northern Jaguar Project, which works
with people in both countries to pro-
tect the big cat. One of those cats be-
came known as El Jefe, after he took
up residence in 2011 in the Santa Rita
Mountains south of Tucson, Arizona.
His presence was proof that the United
States still had enough wild habitat to
support a jaguar.
The new cat was especially excit-
ing because, based on size and shape,
observers initially thought it might
be female. “A lot of people in Arizona
would be very happy to have jaguars
from Mexico breeding in Arizona,” re-
marks Hadley.
In September 2017, the Arizo-
na-based Center for Biological Di-
versity released new video of the cat,
apparently a male, caught on a mo-
tion-triggered camera ambling through
the oak scrub forest in the Chiricahua
Mountains. He’s been named Sombra,
or Shadow, by schoolkids in Tucson.
Such things will no longer ...
3Prototypes of Ethical ProblemsObjectivesThe reader shou.docxlorainedeserre
This document outlines key concepts related to recognizing and analyzing ethical problems. It discusses how to distinguish ethical questions from clinical or legal ones, and introduces the common features of ethical problems - a moral agent, a course of action, and an outcome. It uses the story of a veteran, Bill, missing therapy appointments as an example, with his therapist Kate feeling uncertain about what to do.
4-5 Annotations and Writing Plan - Thu Jan 30 2111Claire Knaus.docxlorainedeserre
4-5 Annotations and Writing Plan - Thu Jan 30 21:11
Claire Knaus
Annotations:
Bekalu, M. A., McCloud, R. F., & Viswanath, K. (2019). Association of Social Media Use With Social Well-Being, Positive Mental Health, and Self-Rated Health: Disentangling Routine Use From Emotional Connection to Use. Health Education & Behavior, 46(2_suppl), 69S-80S. https://doi.org/10.1177/1090198119863768
It seems that this source is arguing the effect of social media on mental health. This source uses this evidence to support the argument: Provided studies focusing on why individuals use social media, types of social network platforms, and the value of social capital. A counterargument for this source is: Studies that focus more on statistical usage rather than emotion connection. Personally, I believe the source is doing a good job of supporting its arguments because it provides an abundance of study references and clearly portrays the information and intent. I think this source will be very helpful in supporting my argument because of the focus on emotional connection to social media and its effects on mental health.
Matsakis, L. (2019). How Pro-Eating Disorder Posts Evade Filters on Social Media. In Gale Opposing Viewpoints Online Collection. Farmington Hills, MI: Gale. (Reprinted from How Pro-Eating Disorder Posts Evade Filters on Social Media, Wired, 2018, June 13) Retrieved from https://link-gale-com.ezproxy.snhu.edu/apps/doc/UAZKKH366290962/OVIC?u=nhc_main&sid=OVIC&xid=2c90b7b5
It seems that this source is arguing that social media platforms are not doing enough to eliminate harmful pro-ED posts. This source uses this evidence to support the argument: Information about specific platforms and what they have done to moderate content, links for more information, and what constitutes as harmful content. A counterargument for this source is that it is too difficult for platforms to remove the content and to even find it. In addition, it is believed there may be harmful effects on vulnerable people posting this type of content. Personally, I believe the source is doing a good job of supporting its arguments because it provides opposing viewpoints as well as raising awareness of some of the dangers of social media posts. I think this source will be very helpful in supporting my argument because it provides information on specifically what is being done to moderate this type of content on social media, and what some of the difficulties in moderating are.
Investigators at University of Leeds Describe Findings in Eating Disorders (Pro-ana versus Pro-recovery: A Content Analytic Comparison of Social Media Users' Communication about Eating Disorders on Twitter and Tumblr). (2017, September 4). Mental Health Weekly Digest, 38. Retrieved from https://link-gale-com.ezproxy.snhu.edu/apps/doc/A502914419/OVIC?u=nhc_main&sid=OVIC&xid=5e60152f
It seems that this source is arguing that there are more positive, anti-anorexia posts on social media than harmful, pro-ED content. ...
3Moral Identity Codes of Ethics and Institutional Ethics .docxlorainedeserre
This document discusses codes of ethics and institutional ethics structures in healthcare organizations. It begins by outlining the key learning objectives which focus on understanding the importance of codes of ethics and how they reflect an organization's values. It then discusses the role of codes of ethics in shaping an organization's moral identity and standards of conduct. The document provides examples of codes from the American Medical Association and Trinity Health. It emphasizes that codes of ethics should apply to all healthcare workers and cover areas like cultural competence, privacy, and nondiscrimination. Institutional ethics committees and review boards also help address ethical issues.
3NIMH Opinion or FactThe National Institute of Mental Healt.docxlorainedeserre
3
NIMH: Opinion or Fact
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) was formed in 1946 and is one of 27 institutes that form the National Institute of Health (NIH) (NIMH, 2019). The mission of the NIMH is “To transform the understanding and treatment of mental illnesses through basic and clinical research, paving the way for prevention, recovery, and cure.” (NIMH, 2019). There are many different mental illnesses discussed on the NIMH website to include Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). The NIMH website about ADHD is effective at providing the public general information and meets the criteria of authority, objectivity, and currency.
The NIMH website about ADHD provides an overview of ADHD, discusses signs and symptoms, and risk factors. The NIMH continues with information about treatment and therapies. Information provided by the NIMH is intended for both children and adults. The NIMH concludes on the page with studies the public can join and more resources for the public such as booklets, brochures, research and clinical trials.
As described by Jim Kapoun authority can be identified by who or what institution/organization published the document and if the information in the document is cited correctly (Cornell, 2020). The information on the website is published by the NIMH which is the lead research institute related to mental health for the last 70 plus years (NIMH, 2019). On the page related to ADHD the NIMH references the program of Children and Adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (CHADD) and provides a hyperlink to access the resources available with the agency (NIMH,2019). This link can be found under the support groups section in the treatment and therapies. On the website to the right of the area describing inattention the NIMH has a section on research. In this block there is a link to “PubMed: Journal Articles about Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)” which will take you to a search of the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) published by PubMed on ADHD (NIMH, 2019). Throughout the entire page the NIMH provides sources and hyperlinks to the sources as citations. Based on the reputation of the NIMH and the citations to the source material the website meets the criteria of authority.
According to Kapoun objectivity can be identified looking for areas where the author expresses his or her opinion (Cornell, 2020). Information provided on the NIMH page about ADHD does not express the opinion of the author. The author produces only factual information based on research. The NIMH makes it a point not to mention the names of medications when discussing treatments and only explains the medications fall in two categories stimulants and non-stimulants (NIMH, 2019). In this same area the NIMH provides hyperlinks to the NIMH Mental Health Medication and FDA website for information about medication. The extent at which the NIMH goes to not provide an opinion on the website meet ...
4.1
Updated April-09
Lecture Notes
Chapter 4
Enterprise Excellence
Implementation
ENTERPRISE EXCELLENCE
4.2
Updated April-09
Learning Objectives
• Management & Operations Plans
• Enterprise Excellence Projects
• Enterprise Excellence Project decision Process
• Planning the Enterprise Excellence Project
• Tollgate Reviews
• Project Notebook
4.3
Updated April-09
MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONS PLANS
• The scope and complexity of the
implementation projects will vary from the
executive level, to the management level, to
the operational level
• Each plan, as it is developed and deployed,
will include projects to be accomplished
• Conflicts typically will occur amongst
requirements of quality, cost, and schedule
when executing a project
4.4
Updated April-09
ENTERPRISE EXCELLENCE PROJECTS
• An Enterprise Excellence project will be one of three
types:
1. Technology invention or innovation
2. New product, service, or process development
3. Product, service, or process improvement
• Enterprise Excellence uses the scientific method
• The scientific method is a process of organizing
empirical facts and their interrelationships in a
manner that allows a hypothesis to be developed and
tested
4.5
Updated April-09
ENTERPRISE EXCELLENCE PROJECTS
• The scientific method consists of the
following steps:
1. Observe and describe the situation
2. Formulate a hypothesis
3. Use the hypothesis to predict results
4. Perform controlled tests to confirm the hypothesis
4.6
Updated April-09
ENTERPRISE EXCELLENCE PROJECTS
• Figure 4.1 shows the project decision process
4.7
Updated April-09
ENTERPRISE EXCELLENCE PROJECT
DECISION PROCESS
• Inventing/Innovating Technology:
Technology development is accomplished using
system engineering
This system approach enables critical functional
parameters and responses to be quickly transferred
into now products, services, and processes
The process is a four-phase process (I2DOV):
Invention & Innovation – Develop – Optimize – Verify
4.8
Updated April-09
ENTERPRISE EXCELLENCE PROJECT
DECISION PROCESS
• Development of Products, Services, and
Processes
The Enterprise Excellence approach for developing
products, services, and processes is the Design for
Lean Six Sigma strategy.
This strategy helps to incorporate customer
requirements and expectations into the product
and/or service.
Concept – Design – Optimize - Verify (CDOV) is a
specific sequential design & development process
used to execute the design strategy.
4.9
Updated April-09
ENTERPRISE EXCELLENCE PROJECT
DECISION PROCESS
• Improving Products, Services, and Processes:
Improving products, services and processes usually
involves the effectiveness and efficiency of operations.
A product or service is said to be effective when it meets
all of its customer requirements.
Effectiveness can be simply expressed as "doing the
right things the first time ...
3Type your name hereType your three-letter and -number cours.docxlorainedeserre
3
Type your name here
Type your three-letter and -number course code here
The date goes here
Type instructor’s name here
Your Title Goes Here
This is an electronic template for papers written in GCU style. The purpose of the template is to help you follow the basic writing expectations for beginning your coursework at GCU. Margins are set at 1 inch for top, bottom, left, and right. The first line of each paragraph is indented a half inch (0.5"). The line spacing is double throughout the paper, even on the reference page. One space after punctuation is used at the end of a sentence. The font style used in this template is Times New Roman. The font size is 12 point. When you are ready to write, and after having read these instructions completely, you can delete these directions and start typing. The formatting should stay the same. If you have any questions, please consult with your instructor.
Citations are used to reference material from another source. When paraphrasing material from another source (such as a book, journal, website), include the author’s last name and the publication year in parentheses.When directly quoting material word-for-word from another source, use quotation marks and include the page number after the author’s last name and year.
Using citations to give credit to others whose ideas or words you have used is an essential requirement to avoid issues of plagiarism. Just as you would never steal someone else’s car, you should not steal his or her words either. To avoid potential problems, always be sure to cite your sources. Cite by referring to the author’s last name, the year of publication in parentheses at the end of the sentence, such as (George & Mallery, 2016), and page numbers if you are using word-for-word materials. For example, “The developments of the World War II years firmly established the probability sample survey as a tool for describing population characteristics, beliefs, and attitudes” (Heeringa, West, & Berglund, 2017, p. 3).
The reference list should appear at the end of a paper (see the next page). It provides the information necessary for a reader to locate and retrieve any source you cite in the body of the paper. Each source you cite in the paper must appear in your reference list; likewise, each entry in the reference list must be cited in your text. A sample reference page is included below; this page includes examples (George & Mallery, 2016; Heeringa et al., 2017; Smith et al., 2018; “USA swimming,” 2018; Yu, Johnson, Deutsch, & Varga, 2018) of how to format different reference types (e.g., books, journal articles, and a website). For additional examples, see the GCU Style Guide.
References
George, D., & Mallery, P. (2016). IBM SPSS statistics 23 step by step: A simple guide and reference. New York, NY: Routledge.
Heeringa, S. G., West, B. T., & Berglund, P. A. (2017). Applied survey data analysis (2nd ed.). New York, NY: Chapman & Hall/CRC Press.
Smith, P. D., Martin, B., Chewning, B., ...
3Welcome to Writing at Work! After you have completed.docxlorainedeserre
3
Welcome to Writing at Work! After you have completed the reading for the week, write an email to introduce yourself to your peers. The name of your thread should be what you would include in the subject of the email.
As you compose your email, keep in mind the following:
· You are addressing a group you will work with in a professional capacity for at least 15 weeks. Let us know something about you, but don't share anything you wouldn't want repeated.
· You should include what you perceive to be your relative strengths with regard to writing at work. What types of tasks would you feel most comfortable taking on?
· You should also include what aspects of writing at work make you feel least comfortable. What types of tasks would you not be as suited for?
· What do you hope to learn in the next several months?
Next, in an attachment, choose one of the following two prompts and write a letter, taking into account the purpose, audience, and appropriate style for the task.
1. Your organization has been contracted to complete a project for an important client, and you were charged with managing the project. It has unfortunately become clear that your team will not meet the deadline. Your supervisor has told you to contact the client in writing to alert them to the situation and wants to be cc'd on the message. Write a letter, which you will send via email, addressing the above.
2. After a year-long working relationship, your organization will no longer be making use of a freelancer's services due to no fault of their own. Write a letter alerting them to this fact.
Name:
HRT 4760 Assignment 01
Timeliness
First, you will choose one particular organization where you will conduct each of your 15 different observational assignments. Stick with this same organization throughout your coursework. (Do not switch around assignment locations at different organizations or locations.) The reason for continuing your observational assignments at the same organization is to give you a deeper understanding of this particular organization across the 15 different assignments. As you read on, you will get a more complete understanding as to how these 15 assignments come together.
Tip: Many students choose the organization where they are currently working. This works particularly well. If you are working there, you have much opportunity to gain access to the areas that will give you a more complete understanding of the quality of entire service package (the 15 different elements) that the organization offers to its customers.
This is one of a package of 15 different assignments that comprise the Elements of Service, which you will study this term. For this assignment, you will observe elements of service in almost any particular service establishment. A few examples of service establishments would include, but not be limited to these: Hotel, resort, private club, restaurant, airline, cruise line, grocery store, doctor’s office, coffee house, and scores of oth ...
3JWI 531 Finance II Assignment 1TemplateHOW TO USE THIS TEMP.docxlorainedeserre
3
JWI 531 Finance II Assignment 1Template
HOW TO USE THIS TEMPLATE:
This is a template and checklist corresponding to your Assignment 1 paper: Enterprise Risk Management and Moat Strength. See below for an explanation of the color-coding in this template:
· All green text includes instructions to support your writing. You should delete all green text before submitting your final paper.
· All blue text indicates areas where you need to replace text with your own information. Replace the blue text with your own words in black.
· Headings and subheadings are written in black, bold type. Keep these in your paper.
TIPS:
· Write in the third person, using “he” or “she” or “they”, or using specific names. Do not use the second person “you”.
· The body of this paper has one-inch margins and uses a professional font (size 10-12); we recommend Arial or Times New Roman fonts.
· The Assignment template is already formatted with all needed specifications like margins, appropriate font, and double spacing.
· Before submitting your paper, use Grammarly to check for punctuation and usage errors and make the required corrections. Then read aloud to edit for tone and flow.
· You should also run your paper through SafeAssign to ensure that it meets the required standards for originality.
FINALIZING YOUR PAPER
Your submission should be a maximum of 4 pages in length. The page count doesnotinclude the Cover Page at the beginning and the References page at the end. The final paper that you submit for grading should be in black text only with all remaining green text and blue text removed. Assignment 1: Enterprise Risk Analysis and Moat Strength
Author’s Name
Jack Welch Management Institute
Professor’s Name
JWI 531
Date
Introduction
An Introduction should be succinct and to the point. Start your Introduction with a general and brief observation about the paper’s topic. Write a thesis statement, which is the “road map” for your paper - it helps your reader to navigate your work. In your thesis statement, be specific about the major areas you plan to address in your paper.
The headings below should guide your introduction, since they identify the topics to be addressed in your paper. The introduction is not a graded part of your rubric but it helps your reader to understand what your assignment will be about. We recommend that you write this part of your Introduction after you complete the other sections of your paper. It only needs to be one paragraph in length.
Analysis and Recommendations
You must answer each of the following questions in your paper. Keep your responses focused on the topic. Straying off into additional areas, even if they are interesting, will not earn additional marks, and may actually detract from the clarity of your responses.
I. Where is each company in its corporate lifecycle (startup, growth, maturity or decline)? Explain.
Before writing your response to this question, make sure you understand what characterizes ea ...
3Big Data Analyst QuestionnaireWithin this document are fo.docxlorainedeserre
3
Big Data Analyst Questionnaire
Within this document are four different questions. Each question is structured in the following manner:
1) Premise
- Contains any needed background information
2) Request
- The actual question, what you are to solve
3) Notes
- A space if you feel like including notes of any kind for the given question
Please place your answer for each question in a separate file, following this naming convention:
Name_Qn.docx, where n = the question number (i.e., 1, 2 ...). So the file for the first question should be named ‘Name_Q1.docx’.
When complete, please package everything together and send email responses to the designated POCs.
Page | 1
Premise:
You have a table named “TRADES” with the following six columns:
Column Name
Data Type
Description
Date
DATE
The calendar date on which the trade took place.
Firm
VARCHAR(255)
A symbol representing the Broker/Dealer who conducted the trade.
Symbol
VARCHAR(10)
The security traded.
Side
VARCHAR(1)
Denotes whether the trade was a buy (purchase) or a sell (sale) of a security.
Quantity
BIGINT
The number of shares involved in the trade.
Price
DECIMAL(18,8)
The dollar price per share traded.
You write a query looking for all trades in the month of August 2019. The query returns the following:
DATE
FIRM
SYMBOL
SIDE
QUANTITY
PRICE
8/5/2019
ABC
123
B
200
41
8/5/2019
CDE
456
B
601
60
8/5/2019
ABC
789
S
600
70
8/5/2019
CDE
789
S
600
70
8/5/2019
FGH
456
B
200
62
8/6/2019
3CDE
456
X
300
61
8/8/2019
ABC
123
B
300
40
8/9/2019
ABC
123
S
300
30
8/9/2019
FGH
789
B
2100
71
8/10/2019
CDE
456
S
1100
63
Questions:
1) Conduct an analysis of the data set returned by your query. Write a paragraph describing your analysis. Please also note any questions or assumptions made about this data.
2) Your business user asks you to show them a table output that includes an additional column categorizing the TRADES data into volume based Tiers, with a column named ‘Tier’. Quantities between 0-250 will be considered ‘Small’, quantities greater than ‘Small’ but less than or equal to 500 will be considered ‘Medium’, quantities greater than ‘Medium’ but less than or equal to 500 will be considered ‘Large’, and quantities greater than ‘Tier 3’ will be considered ‘Very Large’ .
a. Please write the SQL query you would use to add the column to the table output.
b. Please show the exact results you expect based on your SQL query.
3) Your business user asks you to show them a table output summarizing the TRADES data (Buy and Sell) on week-by-week basis.
a. Please write the SQL query you would use to query this table.
b. Please show the exact results you expect based on your SQL query.
Notes:
1
Premise:
You need to describe in writing how to accomplish a task. Your audience has never completed this task before.
Question:
In a few paragraphs, please describe how to complete a task of your choice. You may choose a task of your own liking or one of the sample tasks below:
1) How to make a p ...
3HR StrategiesKey concepts and termsHigh commitment .docxlorainedeserre
3
HR Strategies
Key concepts and terms
High commitment management •
High performance management •
HR strategy •
High involvement management •
Horizontal fi t •
Vertical fi t •
On completing this chapter you should be able to defi ne these key concepts.
You should also understand:
Learning outcomes
T • he purpose of HR strategy
Specifi c HR strategy areas •
How HR strategy is formulated •
How the vertical integration of •
business and HR strategies is
achieved
How HR strategies can be set out •
General HR strategy areas •
The criteria for a successful HR •
strategy
The fundamental questions on •
the development of HR strategy
How horizontal fi t (bundling) is •
achieved
How HR strategies can be •
implemented
47
48 Human Resource Management
Introduction
As described in Chapter 2, strategic HRM is a mindset that leads to strategic actions and reac-
tions, either in the form of overall or specifi c HR strategies or strategic behaviour on the part
of HR professionals. This chapter focuses on HR strategies and answers the following ques-
tions: What are HR strategies? What are the main types of overall HR strategies? What are the
main areas in which specifi c HR strategies are developed? What are the criteria for an effective
HR strategy? How should HR strategies be developed? How should HR strategies be
implemented?
What are HR strategies?
HR strategies set out what the organization intends to do about its human resource manage-
ment policies and practices and how they should be integrated with the business strategy and
each other. They are described by Dyer and Reeves (1995) as ‘internally consistent bundles of
human resource practices’. Richardson and Thompson (1999) suggest that:
A strategy, whether it is an HR strategy or any other kind of management strategy must
have two key elements: there must be strategic objectives (ie things the strategy is sup-
posed to achieve), and there must be a plan of action (ie the means by which it is pro-
posed that the objectives will be met).
The purpose of HR strategies is to articulate what an organization intends to do about its
human resource management policies and practices now and in the longer term, bearing in
mind the dictum of Fombrun et al (1984) that business and managers should perform well in
the present to succeed in the future. HR strategies aim to meet both business and human needs
in the organization.
HR strategies may set out intentions and provide a sense of purpose and direction, but they are
not just long-term plans. As Gratton (2000) commented: ‘There is no great strategy, only great
execution.’
Because all organizations are different, all HR strategies are different. There is no such thing as
a standard strategy and research into HR strategy conducted by Armstrong and Long (1994)
and Armstrong and Baron (2002) revealed many variations. Some strategies are simply very
general declarations of intent. Others go into much more detail. ...
3Implementing ChangeConstruction workers on scaffolding..docxlorainedeserre
3
Implementing Change
Construction workers on scaffolding.
hxdbzxy/iStock/Thinkstock
Learning Objectives
After reading this chapter, you should be able to do the following:
Summarize the nine steps in Ackerman and Anderson’s road map for change.
Analyze Cummings and Worley’s five dimensions of leading and managing change.
Describe how to align an organization with its new vision and future state.
Explain how roles/relationships and interventions are used to implement change.
Examine ways to interact with and influence stakeholders.
Change is the law of life and those who look only to the past or present are certain to miss the future.
—John F. Kennedy
Alan Mulally was selected to lead Ford in 2006 after he was bypassed as CEO at Boeing, where he had worked and was expected to become CEO. Insiders and top-level managers at Ford, some of whom had expected to become CEO, were initially suspicious and then outraged when Mulally was hired. They questioned what someone from the airplane industry would know about the car business (Kiley, 2009).
Chair William (Bill) Clay Ford, Jr.—who selected Mulally as CEO—told Ford’s officers that the company needed a fresh perspective and a shake-up, especially since it had lost $14.8 billion in 2008—the most in its 105-year history—and had burned through $21.2 billion, or 61%, of its cash (Kiley, 2009). Because Ford knew that the company’s upper echelon culture was closed, bureaucratic, and rejected outsiders and new ways of thinking, he was not surprised by his officers’ reactions. However, Ford’s managers had no idea that the company was fighting for its life. To succeed, Mulally would need Chair Ford’s full endorsement and support, and he got it.
The company’s biggest cultural challenge was to break down the silos that various executives had built. As we will discuss more in Chapter 4, silos are specific processes or departments in an organization that work independently of each other without strong communication between or among them. A lack of communication can often stifle productivity and innovation, and this was exactly what was happening at Ford.
Mulally devised a turnaround strategy and developed it into the Way Forward Plan. The plan centralized and modernized plants to handle several models at once, to be sold in several markets. The plan was designed to break up the fiefdoms of isolated cultures, in which leaders independently developed and decided where to sell cars. Mulally’s plan also kept managers in positions for longer periods of time to deepen their expertise and improve consistency of operations. The manager who ran the Mazda Motor affiliate commented, “I’m going into my fourth year in the same job. I’ve never had such consistency of purpose before” (as cited in Kiley, 2009, “Meetings About Meetings,” para. 2).
Mulally’s leadership style involved evaluating and analyzing a situation using data and facts and then earning individuals’ support with his determinatio ...
3Assignment Three Purpose of the study and Research Questions.docxlorainedeserre
3
Assignment Three: Purpose of the study and Research Questions
RES 9300
Recently, Autism has become a serious health concern to parents. According to Center for Disease Control and Prevention (2018), about one in fifty nine United States children has been identified with autism spectrum disorder with one in six children developing developmental disability ranging from mild disabilities such as speech and language impairments to serious developmental disabilities, such as intellectual disabilities, cerebral palsy, and autism (CDC,2018). World Health Organization (2019) estimates that 1 in 160 children globally has autism making it one of the most prevalent diseases. Despite the disease prevalence, most population has little knowledge about the disease. Many health practitioners have proposed early care as a means to control the disease effects.
Purpose Statement
The purpose of this study is to determine whether early intervention services can help improve the development of children suffering from autism. This study also aims to explore the general public awareness and perception about autism disorder.
Research Questions
(1) How should service delivery for autistic patients be improved to promote their health? (2) What impact does early intervention services have on development of children suffering from autism? (3) How can public knowledge on autism improve support and care for autistic patients? (4) What effect will early intervention have on patient’s social skills?
References
Center for Disease Control and Prevention. (2018). Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Data & Statistics. Retrieved From https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/autism/data.html
World Health Organization. (2019). Autism Spectrum Disorders. Fact Sheet. Retrieved From https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/autism-spectrum-disorders
3
Assignment Two: Theoretical Perspective and Literature Review
RES 9300
Literature Map
Parenting an Autism Child
(Dependent Variable)
9
Mothers/Father Role
Education
Religious Beliefs
Gender/Age
Financial Resources
Maternal Relationship
Region
Public Awareness
Support
Ethnicity
Independent Variables
Secondary Source I Will Be Using In My Literature Review
Mother/Father Roles
Glynn, K. A. (2015). Predictors of parenting practices in parents of children with autism spectrum disorder.
Religious Beliefs
Huang, C. Y., Yen, H. C., Tseng, M. H., Tung, L. C., Chen, Y. D., & Chen, K. L. (2014). Impacts of autistic behaviors, emotional and behavioral problems on parenting stress in caregivers of children with autism. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 44(6), 1383-1390.
Education
Brezis, R. S., Weisner, T. S., Daley, T. C., Singhal, N., Barua, M., & Chollera, S. P. (2015). Parenting a child with autism in India: Narratives before and after a parent–child intervention program. Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry, 39(2), 277-298.
Financial Resources
Zaidm ...
380067.docxby Jamie FeryllFILET IME SUBMIT T ED 22- .docxlorainedeserre
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380067by Jamie Feryll380067ORIGINALITY REPORT380067WRITECHECK REPORT
Interpretations of Iron Age Architecture Brochs in Society/Social Identity
Archaeology is a historical field which has advanced over the years based on more discoveries still being experienced by the archaeologists who seek them. According to Kelly and Thomas (2010; p.5), the concession that life existed in more ancient times than stipulated by biblical scholars and human culture allowed the archaeologists to dig deeper into genealogical data. Iron Age architecture and social/society identity relate to one another. For instance, the population, based on their identity and perception will construct buildings that directly reflect their beliefs. This essay will discuss these archaeological concepts of Iron Age architecture and society/social identity. Need a paragraph on brochs and how many and where they are across Scotland with patcialur focus on the atlantc region, this is not relevant for masters essay. Must define broch from its architecture and how long it would take to build and note famous ones and note the ones that will be referred to in this essay – this could be Perhaps incorpated into the next paragraph.
Iron Age architecture has over the years been dominated by differing archaeological concepts and debates. It was defined by settlements and settlement structures such as duns, brochs, wheelhouses, hillforts, stone-built round houses and timber. The social and societal identity which is identified through material remains indicates aspects of differentiation, regional patterns and segregation. According to Kelly and Thomas (2010; p.28), people who existed in Iron Age Scotland were isolated. This is demonstrated by the presence of a burial followed by an assembled chariot at Newbridge. Northern and western Scotland have been the source of the well-structured developments that have provided cultural, architectural and social data over time. Maes Howe, which is the largest Orkney burial cairn, located between Stromne ...
39Chapter 7Theories of TeachingIntroductionTheories of l.docxlorainedeserre
This document summarizes theories of teaching from several influential learning theorists. It discusses how theorists like Thorndike, Guthrie, Skinner, Hull, Tolman, and Gagné viewed the role of the teacher based on their behavioral and cognitive learning theories derived from animal and child studies. They generally saw teaching as managing external conditions to ensure specified behavioral changes in learners. The document then contrasts this with theories of teaching from adult learning theorists like Rogers, who rejected the notion that teaching is controlling learning and saw the teacher's role differently.
38 Monthly Labor Review • June 2012TelecommutingThe.docxlorainedeserre
38 Monthly Labor Review • June 2012
Telecommuting
The hard truth about telecommuting
Telecommuting has not permeated the American workplace, and
where it has become commonly used, it is not helpful in reducing
work-family conflicts; telecommuting appears, instead, to have
become instrumental in the general expansion of work hours,
facilitating workers’ needs for additional worktime beyond the
standard workweek and/or the ability of employers to increase or
intensify work demands among their salaried employees
Mary C. Noonan
and
Jennifer L. Glass
Mary C. Noonan is an Associate
Professor at the Department of
Sociology, The University of Iowa;
Jennifer L. Glass is the Barbara
Bush Regents Professor of Liberal
Arts at the Department of Sociol-
ogy and Population Research
Center, University of Texas at
Austin. Email: [email protected]
uiowa.edu or [email protected]
austin.utexas.edu.
Telecommuting, defined here as work tasks regularly performed at home, has achieved enough
traction in the American workplace to
merit intensive scrutiny, with 24 percent
of employed Americans reporting in recent
surveys that they work at least some hours
at home each week.1 The definitions of
telecommuting are quite diverse. In this ar-
ticle, we define telecommuters as employ-
ees who work regularly, but not exclusively,
at home. In our definition, at-home work
activities do not need to be technologically
mediated nor do telecommuters need a
formal arrangement with their employer to
work at home.
Telecommuting is popular with policy
makers and activists, with proponents
pointing out the multiple ways in which
telecommuting can cut commuting time
and costs,2 reduce energy consumption
and traffic congestion, and contribute to
worklife balance for those with caregiving
responsibilities.3 Changes in the structure
of jobs that enable mothers to more effec-
tively compete in the workplace, such as
telecommuting, may be needed to finally
eliminate the gender gap in earnings and
direct more earned income to children,
both important public policy goals.4
Evidence also reveals that an increasing num-
ber of jobs in the American economy could be
performed at home if employers were willing
to allow employees to do so.5 Often, employees
can perform jobs at home without supervision
in the “high-tech” sector, in the financial sector,
and many in the communication sector that are
technology dependent. The obstacles or barriers
to telecommuting seem to be more organiza-
tional, stemming from the managers’ reluctance
to give up direct supervisory control of workers
and from their fears of shirking among workers
who telecommute.6
Where the impact of telecommuting has
been empirically evaluated, it seems to boost
productivity, decrease absenteeism, and increase
retention.7 But can telecommuting live up to its
promise as an effective work-family policy that
helps employees meet their nonwork responsi-
bilities? To do so, tel ...
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
Gender and Mental Health - Counselling and Family Therapy Applications and In...PsychoTech Services
A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
Beyond Degrees - Empowering the Workforce in the Context of Skills-First.pptxEduSkills OECD
Iván Bornacelly, Policy Analyst at the OECD Centre for Skills, OECD, presents at the webinar 'Tackling job market gaps with a skills-first approach' on 12 June 2024
Communicating effectively and consistently with students can help them feel at ease during their learning experience and provide the instructor with a communication trail to track the course's progress. This workshop will take you through constructing an engaging course container to facilitate effective communication.
BÀI TẬP BỔ TRỢ TIẾNG ANH LỚP 9 CẢ NĂM - GLOBAL SUCCESS - NĂM HỌC 2024-2025 - ...
2820181Phil 2 Puzzles and ParadoxesProf. Sven B.docx
1. 2/8/2018
1
Phil 2: Puzzles and Paradoxes
Prof. Sven Bernecker
University of California, Irvine
Grelling‘s Paradox
2
Kurt Grelling (1886 – 1942)
Grelling was a German
logician and philosopher and
member of the Berlin Circle.
Grelling‘s Paradox
Grelling’s Paradox is similar to the liar paradox. To begin with,
let’s consider a principle like Disquotation:
“F” applies to x = x is F
3
2. Autological and Heterological
The analogue of the liar statement in Grelling’s paradox is the
new
term “heterological” defined as follows:
And we can define autological, as follows:
4
x is heterological = x does not apply to x
x is autological = x does apply to x
LiYuxi
2/8/2018
2
Examples of autological terms:
“Short” is short
“Red” is red
“Unhyphenated” is unhyphenated
“English” is English
“Adjectival” is adjectival
3. “Polysyllabic” is polysyllabic
Examples of heterological terms:
“Monosyllabic” is not monosyllabic
“Long” is not long
“Spanish” is not Spanish
“Nominal” is not nominal
5
Question: Is “heterological” heterological?
If “heterological” is heterological, then the term must describe
itself, and therefore not be heterological.
If “heterological” isn’t heterological, then the term must not
describe itself, and therefore be heterological.
6
1) “H” applies to “H” Assumption
2) “H” is H (1) Disquotation
C) “H” does not apply to “H” (2) Def of H
1) “H” does not apply to “H” Assumption
2) “H” is H (1), Def of H
4. C) “H” applies to “H” (2), Disquotation
We are led into a contradiction.
7
The Future of Training and Development
Objectives
After reading this chapter, you should be able to
1. Identify the future trends that are likely to influence training
departments and trainers.
2. Discuss how these future trends may affect training delivery
and administration, as well as the strategic role of the training
department.
3. Discuss how rapid instructional design differs from
traditional training design.
4. Discuss the advantages of embedded learning.
5. Discuss how training can contribute to a company’s
sustainability initiative.
6. Discuss the implications of cloud computing for learning,
training, and development.
Welcome to the Office of the Future!
What might the office of the future look like? Physically, it will
look the same as today’s offices. Employees still will have
desks, meet in conference rooms, and eat in the cafeteria. There
likely will be new technology, such as smaller tablet computers.
Teleconferences will provide instantaneous language
translations, making it easier for employees who do not speak
each other’s language to talk to each other. “Tables” will be
able to make three-dimensional holograms of real-world objects
without requiring special glasses to see them. Holographic
technology (like that used to have such late entertainers as
rapper Tupac Shakur or Frank Sinatra “appear” at parties and
music festivals) can be used for CEOs to communicate messages
to a global company “in person,” employees to virtually appear
5. in meetings, and learners to interact with complex products and
equipment in a way that makes it easier to understand how they
work. Offices will have special window glass that can change
from a solar panel to a multimedia screen to a frosted privacy
shade. Technology like that found in game consoles will allow
employees to navigate computer screens just by moving their
wrists. Computer programs will be available to tell employees
who they should work with on their next project. People will
also work with computers491that capitalize on the innate
strengths of humans—computers are strong on routine
processing, repetitive arithmetic, and error-free consistency,
while at least for now we humans are better at complex
communications, pattern matching, intuition, and creativity. For
example, consider two examples of how people and computers
can capitalize on each other’s strengths to help make the
workplace more efficient and effective. In 2011, Watson, a
specially programmed computer, was able to beat the best
human Jeopardy! players (including Ken Jennings, who won
more consecutive episodes of the game show than anyone in
history) by quickly extracting the correct answer from huge
datasets of information. Watson can understand natural
language, including puns, slang, and jargon. It “learns” by
reprogramming itself as more information is presented and it
makes mistakes. Watson provides not one but multiple answers
ranked by the probability they are correct. A pop-up window
provides support for each answer. Since its debut in 2011,
Watson has slimmed down in size and increased it capacity. It
once took up the space of a large room. Now, Watson fits into a
computer server the size of four pizza boxes and it is 240 times
faster! Watson was the first step in the development of “Search
bots,” which can be used to review the web to find information
that fits a profile provided by employees. This will include
major developments, news feeds and alerts, and searches of
relevant professional publications. For example, Watson helped
IBM develop an adviser for oncologists who treat lung cancer.
Watson was given more than 600,000 medical files and 2
6. million pages of medical journals and results of clinical drug
trials. Doctors can ask Watson a question and Watson will
provide treatment recommendations. The search bot will
improve with feedback telling it that you like some content but
not other content.
Keep in mind that regardless of current advances in computer
pattern recognition and complex communication, human skills
in applied math and statistics, negotiation and group dynamics,
writing, solving open-ended problems, persuasion, nurturing,
and interaction cannot be replaced by a computer and will
remain in demand. For example, driverless cars, self-driving
trucks at iron ore mines that need no human operators, and
computers that perform legal research are recent advances in
automation. But computing technology has been unable to
replicate human skills and abilities used to fold laundry! Unlike
humans, robots have been unable to make the distinctions
between fabric types and weights and irregular clothes sizes that
are needed to neatly fold clothes. Researchers are working to
narrow the gap between the human mind and the robot mind.
Cyberconsciousness, an awareness of feelings, caring, and
living, is being developed for software. Cyberconsciousness
will allow us to download our brains to create virtual people
and “mindclones.” For example, the Siri app on i-Phones is a
crude version of a virtual person. The development of virtual
people is currently limited because of the lack of power of
software, but research is under way to develop virtual versions
of historical people. Cyberconsciousness will allow robots to
take over jobs and become our workplace partners. For example,
Sophie, a robot developed jointly by NEC Corporation in Japan
and La Trobe University Business School in Australia, is
intended to be used to interview job candidates. Sophie can ask
and respond to questions, assess a candidate’s physiological
responses, and compare their results with the top 10 percent of
the existing workforce.
492
Nanotechnology advances will be available to help us enhance
7. our learning and computational skills. Three-atom-wide
nanobots injected into the brain could assist in memory and
cognition. We may also pop ampakine pills to enhance our
attention spans and aid learning and memory without
experiencing the side effects of sleeplessness. Learning will
likely occur 24/7 using mobile devices such as smart phones,
tablets such as the iPad, and netbooks. This learning will be
brief and available wherever we need it. Using global
positioning system (GPS) sensitivity, we will be able to set our
social networking profile to alert us when topic experts are
available and tell us their physical proximity from our location.
Social learning via shared workspaces, social networks, and
wikis (learning from others) will supplement traditional
training, encouraging employees to learn from each other, from
trainers and instructors, and from other work experts.
Sources: Based on J. Faragher, “Could holographic technology
revolutionize training and development?” Personnel
Today (February 14, 2013), from www.personnelltoday.com,
accessed February 21, 2013; M. Mihelich, “Welcome to
cyberia,” Workforce (January 2015): 40–43, 49; G. Colvin, “In
the future, will there be any work left for people to
do?” Fortune (June 2, 2014), from www.fortune.com, accessed
April 21, 2015); J. Hempel, “IBM’s massive bet on
Watson,” Fortune (October 7, 2013): 81–88; T. Aeppel, “Jobs
and the clever robot,” The Wall Street Journal (February 25,
2015): A1, A10; G. Colvin, “Brave new work: The office of
tomorrow,” Fortune (January 16, 2012): 34–41; 49–54; P.
Galagan, “How would you train a transhuman?” T+D (January
2012): 27–29; P. Ketter, “2010 six trends that will change
workplace learning forever,” T+D (December 2010): 34–40; E.
Brynjolfsson and A. McAfee, “Winning the race with ever-
smarter machines,” MIT Sloan Management Review (Winter
2012): 53–60.
INTRODUCTION
The previous ten chapters discussed training design and
delivery, development and career management, and training’s
8. role in contributing to social responsibility through managing
diversity and inclusion and helping the multigenerational
workforce prepare and successfully deal with career challenges.
This chapter takes a look at what the future of training and
development might look like. The chapter opener highlights
how technological advancements will shape where and how we
work and learn. Technological advances represent one trend that
is likely to influence the future of training and development and
your future as a trainer. Table 11.1 shows the future trends
discussed in this chapter that will influence training.
TABLE 11.1 Future Trends That Will Affect Training
· Need to contribute to sustainability
· Use of new technologies for training delivery at instruction
· Breakthroughs in neuroscience about learning
· Greater emphasis on speed in design, focus on content
· Increased emphasis on capturing and sharing intellectual
capital and social learning
· Increased use of just-in-time learning and performance support
· Increased emphasis on performance analysis, Big Data, and
learning for business enhancement
· Increased use of stakeholder-focused learning, training
partnerships, and outsourcing training
493
Training for Sustainability
Sustainability refers to a company’s ability to make a profit
without sacrificing the resources of its employees, the
community, or the environment. A growing number of
companies have made sustainability an important part of their
business strategy. Training and development can contribute to
companies’ sustainability initiatives by providing learning
opportunities for employees in organizations in developing
countries that lack the resources, providing development
experiences for employees in poor and emerging countries that
benefit the local community, and teaching employers to protect
the environment. Consider how training at Novartis and
Ingersoll Rand is helping these companies reach their
9. sustainability goals.1
Novartis, the pharmaceutical company, is actively involved in
improving health care in Africa by helping the fight against
infectious diseases that have made life expectancy in Africa
fifteen years less than the global average.1 The Novartis
Malaria Initiative has delivered more than 500 million free
treatments. To support health professionals working with sick
children, Novartis worked with the World Health Organization
to develop e-learning for managing childhood illnesses. Alcon,
the eye division of Novartis, has trained eye care professionals
in Sierra Leone. Also, Novartis supports the Regional
Psychosocial Support Initiative (REPSSI), an African-based
philanthropic organization that provides emotional and
psychological support to children affected by the HIV/AIDS
epidemic. The company’s trainers provide REPSSI’s employees
with leadership development training. To help meet the
organization’s goal of helping children and youth so that they
can live with hope and dignity, REPSSI managers need training
in communication skills, providing feedback, intercultural
skills, and project management. Novartis has transformed its
corporate training programs into a form useful for REPSSI. The
training content is delivered through instructor-led courses and
e-learning. Novartis and training vendor partners, including
business schools, send speakers at their own expense to Africa.
Instructors are also available for follow-up after each course is
completed.
Ingersoll Rand, a global industrial company, wanted employees
to understand how to reduce energy consumption and waste and
to lower emissions. The company has several target goals for
becoming more sustainable by 2020, including reducing
greenhouse gas emissions of its operations 35 percent and a 50
percent reduction in the greenhouse gases produced by its
heating, ventilation, air-conditioning, and refrigeration
products. To accomplish these goals, Ingersoll Rand developed
the Design for Sustainability training program. The training
emphasizes understanding sustainability and incorporating it in
10. product design and how to analyze and communicate the value
of sustainability in product markets. Employees can receive two
levels of credentials in the program. The silver level requires
seven hours of self-paced online learning and focuses on
understanding why Ingersoll Rand focuses on design
sustainability. The gold level includes ten hours of self-paced
online learning. It also includes three ninety-minute sessions
led by a virtual instructor from UL Environment, a consulting
firm. To receive either the silver- or gold-level certification
requires employees to pass an exam. The first participants in the
program included design and manufacturing engineers, product
managers, and other employees working in product
development. To evaluate the program, Ingersoll Rand is
collecting data on the number of new products developed using
materials to reduce greenhouse gases, the use of new material to
reduce product weight (which reduces shipping costs and
increases fuel494efficiency), and employee engagement. Based
on the positive feedback it received from the first participants
in the program, Ingersoll Rand is planning to offer it to all
employees.
INCREASED USE OF NEW TECHNOLOGIES FOR TRAINING
DELIVERY AND INSTRUCTION
The use of social media, smartphones, and other new
technologies will likely increase in the future for several
reasons. First, the cost of these technologies will decrease.
Second, companies can use technology to better prepare
employees to serve customers and generate new business. Third,
use of these new technologies can substantially reduce the
training costs related to bringing geographically dispersed
employees to one central training location (e.g., travel, food,
and housing). Fourth, these technologies allow trainers to build
into training many of the desirable features of a learning
environment (e.g., practice, feedback, reinforcement). Fifth, as
companies employ more contingent employees (e.g., part-timers
and consultants) and offer more alternative work arrangements
(e.g., flexible work schedules and working from home),
11. technology will allow training to be delivered to any place and
at any time. Sixth, new technologies will make it easier for
training and performance support to be accessible to learners
anytime and anyplace.
Table 11.2 shows technological advances that will likely
influence training delivery and instruction. Wearable
technology is being used for consumer applications. For
example, guests at Walt Disney World wear MagicBands that
substitute for their park tickets, charge cards, and hotel room
keys.2 MagicBands link to a phone app (My Disney
Experience), which tracks groups visiting the park, allowing
them to see the location of others in their group in order to
arrange meeting places. Wearable bands such as FitBits allow us
to track how many steps we walk each day; our heart rate
before, during, and after exercise; and how many calories we
burned. Smart eyewear allows images to be projected directly
onto the retina of the eye. The technology takes what can be
shown on a computer screen, reduces it, and projects it on the
retina where it can be seen in full color. Wearables are just
beginning to be developed and used for training and
performance support solutions. Wearable Intelligence provides
smart eyewear technology and camera technology that gives
employees hands-free, voice-activated access to procedures and
checklists; live access to experts using tablet computers that
allow data and live video sharing; the opportunity to review
best-practice videos before or during the performance of
complex procedures495and operations; and real-time
notifications and alerts.3 The technology is currently being used
in energy and health care. An operator who might be working on
a remote oil rig or a surgeon in a sterile operating room can
share live video with experts and get their advice needed to fix
a broken valve or complete a medical procedure, while
remaining focused on the equipment or patient. Wearable
technologies can also potentially be used to provide useful
needs assessment data by tracking what tasks employees
perform the most. For example, a health club could track how
12. much time fitness trainers spend in their offices, working in the
gym providing personal training, or conducting group exercise
classes. This helps managers and trainers identify how
frequently tasks are performed, which is useful information for
determining what tasks and skills should receive the most
attention in training programs. Also, this information could be
useful for evaluating if fitness trainers are spending too much
time performing certain tasks, for example, administrative tasks
in their offices. This could trigger further needs assessment to
determine if this is a training problem. That is, fitness trainers
may be spending more time on administrative tasks because
they lack the sales and interpersonal skills needed to interact
with customers and convince them to sign up for personal
training. Smartwatches, such as the Apple Watch, could be used
to provide training and help make sure employees complete
it.4 For example, an employee’s smartwatch can deny them
access to certain areas of a manufacturing plant until they
successfully complete a required safety compliance course.
TABLE 11.2 New Technological Advances That Will Influence
Training
Wearables (smartwatches, bands, smart eyewear)
Gamification
Wireless Tablet-Based Technology
Mobile Learning
Augmented Reality
Virtual Communications
Tin Can API (or Experience API)
Learning Records Store (LRS)
Artificial Intelligence
Source: Based on K. Everson, “Special report: Learning is all in
the wrist,” Chief Learning Officer (March 15, 2015),
from www.clomedia.com, accessed March 18, 2015; “Overview
Tin Can API,” www.tincanapi.com/overview, accessed April 20,
2015; J. Ford and T. Meyer, “Advances in training technology:
Meeting the workplace challenges of talent development, deep
specialization, and collaborative learning.” In The Psychology
13. of Workplace Technology, eds. M. Coovert and L. Thompson,
(New York: Routledge, 2014): 43–76.
PlayerLync, a training and development software company, has
developed wireless tablet–based technology.5 This technology
shrinks video and documents with integrated, interactive
messaging to miniscule sizes and delivers them quickly and
automatically, even in low-bandwidth environments.
Professional and college sports teams have used the tablet-based
technology to develop digital playbooks and game preparation
video, including the coaches’ comments. This technology is
beginning to be used in companies for training retail,
construction, and restaurant teams.
Augmented reality refers to a live direct or indirect view of a
physical, real-world environment whose elements are
supplemented by computer-generated sound, video, graphics, or
GPS data. Augmented reality can allow a learner to enter books,
magazines, and training rooms and experience them in three-
dimensional form as in real life. An intelligent agent such as
Apple’s Siri can help the learner navigate their learning
experience.
On-demand learning and message boards allow employees to
choose what they want to learn and to interact with their peers
and experts. Employees will be able to see job openings and
career paths and have the freedom to choose courses to develop
the skills and knowledge required for these opportunities. They
can share and communicate with peers about what they find fun
and challenging in their positions.
Artificial intelligence will become even more humanlike and
accessible at a lower cost. Amelia is a computer who learns
from textbooks, transcriptions of conversations, e-mail chains,
and other texts.6 As long as the answer is in the data she
receives, she can solve problems. She also has the ability to
learn. Programmers have tried to provide her with the human
ability to think. Amelia is already being tested at working in
customer call centers. Customer service depends on providing
the right answer to the same question, regardless of who calls.
14. Amelia can provide the correct answer because prior to working
on her own, she has worked alongside a human customer service
rep, listening to every support request received and the answers
given. Amelia helps automate tasks but she is not alive.
However, she does have three emotional states—arousal,
dominance, and pleasure—that are496influenced by how
customers communicate with her. These emotions affect her
decision making in dealing with customers. Robots with
artificial intelligence such as Amelia will likely provide
performance support increasingly in the future or entirely
replace employees in nonexpert repetitive jobs.
The Tin Can API (or Experience API) is a specification for
learning technology that makes it possible to collect data about
an employee’s or a team’s online and face-to-face learning
experiences.7 The Tin Can API allows the collection of data
based in the reality that learning occurs everywhere using
different tools and methods, including simulations, virtual
worlds, serious games, social collaboration, and through real-
world experiences and formal training programs. When an
employee engages in learning, the Tin Can API sends statements
in the form of a learner, an action, and an activity such as “I did
this” to a Learning Records Store. The Learning Records Store
(LRS) collects and stores all of the learning experiences in the
form of statements that can be organized and presented in a
meaningful way. LRSs can communicate with each other,
allowing data about learning activities to be easily shared across
organizations. Also, LRSs can be accessed by learning
management systems and reporting tools. Employees can have
their own “personal lockers,” which include their personal
learning history. Enabled devices can automatically send Tin
Can API statements when learning is ongoing and completed.
The LRS can be used to show the relationship between learning
experiences and business outcomes such as sales, revenue,
customer satisfaction, safety, and employee engagement (recall
our discussion of Big Data in Chapter Six, “Training
Evaluation”). For example, Devereux is a nonprofit behavioral
15. health-care organization that provides services for individuals
with emotional, developmental, and educational
disabilities.8 Devereux wanted to improve treatment outcomes
for individuals served by enhancing employee performance. An
LRS developed by Watershed allowed this by tracking the
experiences that happen to employees during training as well as
during performance monitoring on the job, and correlating that
experience data to the real-world outcomes of individuals
served.
The use of games and mobile learning is likely to increase as
companies seek to make training fun, maximize the learning
experience, and appeal to millennials’ and other learners’
expectations that learning is quick, includes short interactive
lessons, is available at their fingertips, and allows them to ask
their peers questions, share experiences, and seek
advice.9 Several surveys of business and learning leaders have
found that companies not currently using games for training are
considering using them in the next few years and mobile
learning is expected to contribute significantly to how their
organizations learn in the future.10 The gamification experience
might include advanced simulations that learners can explore in
a three-dimensional environment.
BREAKTHROUGHS IN NEUROSCIENCE ABOUT LEARNING
Advances in neuroscience are increasing researchers’ ability to
study the brain and its functioning.11 This is leading to a better
understanding of how we learn which can be used to design
more effective training and development programs. For
example, researchers have shown that whether an idea can be
easily recalled is linked to the strength of activating the
hippocampus, located in the lower section of the brain, during a
learning task. The stronger the hippocampus is stimulated
during learning, the greater the recall of the idea.497Further
research on the hippocampus has identified the conditions that
are necessary for learning to occur (attention, generation,
emotion, and spacing). From a training design perspective, this
means that learners have to eliminate distractions, they need to
16. make their own connections to new ideas, they need some but
not overwhelming emotional stimulation, and long-term recall
of learning is better when we learn information over several
different time periods rather than all at once. Time Warner
Cable Enterprises applied results of the hippocampus research
to a leadership development program that included weekly
videos, practice exercises, and a two-hour webinar. Learning in
short, engaging bursts held managers’ attention. Immediate,
one-page practice tools were provided to help managers use
what they saw in the videos. The entire program was spaced out
over thirty days. The managers’ emotions were stimulated by
the communications about the sense of urgency for the program
and the realization that thousands of their peers were
participating in the program at the same time. There are many
other areas of ongoing neuroscience research that can
potentially influence training and development program design.
For example, research is helping us understand the conditions
that are necessary for learners to make creative insights between
learning content and its application to work issues and
problems. Other research is investigating the biological markers
of cognitive processes that are known to accelerate learning
(e.g., self-explanation or other meaning-based processing
methods), which can help us understand how feedback can be
provided to learners to help them consistently use the most
effective cognitive processes for learning.12
INCREASED EMPHASIS ON SPEED IN DESIGN, FOCUS ON
CONTENT, AND USE OF MULTIPLE DELIVERY METHODS
Because of new technology, trainers are being challenged to
find new ways to use instructional design.13 Shifts are taking
place in who is leading the learning (from the instructor to the
employee), as well as where learning is taking place (from
workplace to mobile learning). For example, trainers need to
determine the best way to design an effective training course for
a smartphone. Despite the use of new technology for learning,
the fundamental questions remain: Why is training occurring?
Who is the audience? What resources are necessary so that
17. employees can learn what they need to know?
As discussed in Chapter One, “Introduction to Employee
Training and Development,” the traditional training design
model has been criticized for several reasons. First, it is a linear
approach driven by subject-matter experts (SMEs). Second, the
instructional system design model uses a rational, step-by-step
approach that assumes that the training content is stable. Third,
given the accelerated demand for training to be delivered just in
time, traditional training takes too long. Rapid instructional
design (RID) is a group of techniques that allows training to be
built more quickly. RID modifies the training design model,
which consists of needs analysis, design, development,
implementation, and evaluation (recall the discussion of
training design in Chapter One). There are two important
principles in RID.14 One is that instructional content and
process can be developed independently of each other. The
second is that resources that are devoted to design and delivery
of instruction can be reallocated as appropriate. Design includes
everything that happens before the training
experience; delivery is what happens during the training
experience. For example, if a company has limited resources for
training delivery, such as498large groups of trainees and a tight
schedule, extra time should be allocated to the design
process. Table 11.3 lists RID strategies. For example, learning
preferences make it difficult to develop a training program that
maximizes learning for all employees. As a result, if possible,
training content can be offered through books, manuals,
audiotapes, videotapes, and online learning. It may also be
possible to combine some steps of the design process, such as
analyses and evaluation. For example, knowledge tests and
other evaluation outcomes may be based on task analysis and
other needs analysis results. There is no need to conduct
separate analyses of training needs and learning outcomes. If
the client is convinced that there is a training need and if the
trainer can quickly confirm this need, then there is no reason to
conduct a full needs analysis (e.g., new regulations that affect
18. business transactions in financial services, or product changes).
Job aids such as checklists, worksheets, and performance
support tools can be provided to employees based on the results
of a task analysis to identify activities and decisions needed to
complete a procedure. Job aids can be chosen to help employees
complete the procedure, and training can be provided to teach
employees how to use the job aid. The point to keep in mind is
that use of a training design process (or instructional design
process), as discussed in Chapter One, should not be abandoned.
Rather, in the future, trainers will further develop RID
techniques to reduce the time and cost and to increase the
efficiency of training design in order to better meet business
needs.
TABLE 11.3 Examples of RID Strategies
Focus on accomplishment and performance.
Develop a learning system instead of an instructional system.
Use shortcuts (e.g., use existing records for needs assessment;
conduct focus groups).
Combine different steps of the instructional design process.
Implement training and continuously improve it.
Skip steps in the instructional design process.
Use existing course materials that can be customized with
examples, exercises, and assignments.
Develop instruction around job aids and performance support.
Use recording equipment, Internet, and e-mail to collect data
and exchange information with SMEs.
Source: Based on S. Thiagarajan, “Rapid Instructional
Development.” In The ASTD Handbook of Training Design and
Delivery, ed. G. Piskurich, P. Beckschi, and B. Hall (New York:
McGraw-Hill, 2000): 54–75.
Managers are demanding training courses that are shorter and
that focus only on the necessary content.15 Training
departments will be expected to reduce the number of courses
and programs that are offered without directly addressing a
business issue or performance problem. SMEs used as trainers
will be expected to focus their presentations on information that
19. is directly relevant to trainees. Seminars and classes that take
place over several days or half-days will have to be retooled to
be more accessible and individualized. Bass & Associates, P.C.,
is a law firm that specializes in debt recovery. In the debt
recovery business, employees spend much of the time on the
phone. Bass provides employees with Bits, mini-training videos
that take three to twelve minutes to watch.16 The videos are
available to employees on demand. After they complete the
videos, employees take short quizzes to assess their learning.
Other companies are asking trainees to complete more pre class
assignments and are using more post course job aids. The
development of focused content will become easier because of
blogs and podcasts that allow training content to be developed
without programming languages such499as Hypertext Markup
Language (HTML). Content-developed authoring tools will
likely continue to become more user-friendly. More companies
will consider using massive open online courses (MOOCs) for
training (MOOCs are discussed in Chapter Eight, “Technology-
Based Training Methods.”).17 MOOCs are an attractive training
delivery method because they provide consistent learning and
allow employees to learn through collaboration, observing
through videos, and listening to subject experts. Learning can
occur anytime or anyplace employees can access the online
course; credentials, certificates, or digital badges can be used as
incentives for completing the course.
Given the increased popularity of notebooks and tablets, new
types of apps for learning will continue to be developed. These
likely will include apps related to locating experts, the training
scheduler, retirement planners, and the development activities
chooser. For example, the Assessment and Development Group
International has developed apps to help increase coaching
success and facilitate behavioral change, engage and retain
employees, and improve sales and customer
relationships.18 Using a smartphone, the Coach app allows
users to identify their interaction style (driver, analytical,
expressive, and supportive). A graph of team members’
20. interaction styles is generated, and coaching tactics specific to
each style are provided. The app also suggests how to modify
behavior and be more responsive to team members and a
question-and-answer exercise to help address specific issues
that may occur during coaching.
INCREASED EMPHASIS ON CAPTURING AND SHARING
INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL AND SOCIAL LEARNING
Companies that recognize the strategic value of becoming a
learning organization and are concerned about the loss of
valuable knowledge because their baby boomer employees are
retiring (see the discussions in Chapters One and Five) will
continue to seek ways to turn employees’ knowledge (human
capital) into a shared company asset. As emphasized in Chapter
Two, “Strategic Training,” training functions will focus on
learning, with an emphasis on employee training and
development and the management and coordination of
organizational learning. Sharing knowledge and contributing to
the company’s intellectual capital is going to become more
common as collaborative social networking technology and Web
2.0 tools make this simpler to implement. The rise of intelligent
tutors and on-demand learning technologies will make
connections to information faster, more current and accurate,
and more easily customizable to employees’ needs and work.
More teams and groups of employees will make use of social
media and Web 2.0 tools to share links and content with each
other, participate in discussions, collaborate, and create
learning content.
Social learning refers to learning with and from others. We can
learn from others in face-to-face interactions occurring in
classrooms, conferences, and group meetings, as well as online
using social media such as Twitter, blogs, and social networks
such as Facebook. Potentially, through sharing ideas,
information, and experiences, we can learn more with others
than we can alone.19 For example, EMC upgraded its
collaboration platform and integrated its intranet to help
employees learn, share, and access company news.20 Within
21. two weeks of the upgrade, twenty thousand more employees
used the platform. Also, the number of documents created has
increased over 500 percent, 200 percent500more discussions
were created, and there has been over 100 percent increase in
replies to discussion. Tata Consultancy Services Limited
provides employees with a social learning application known as
Knome. Nearly half of Tata Consultancy employees actively
participate on Knome, forming communities to get work done
and discussing ideas.21
The increasing use of new technologies to deliver training and
to store and communicate knowledge means that trainers must
be technologically literate. That is, they must understand the
strengths and weaknesses of new technologies and
implementation issues such as overcoming users’ resistance to
change (which is discussed later in this chapter). Also, many
companies have created positions such as knowledge manager or
chief information officer, whose job is to identify reliable
knowledge and make sure it is accessible to employees.
INCREASED USE OF JUST-IN-TIME LEARNING AND
PERFORMANCE SUPPORT
Companies are moving away from courseware and classes as a
performance improvement method and are instead adopting true
performance support that is available during the work
process.22Just-in-time learning (or embedded learning) refers to
learning that occurs on the job as needed; it involves
collaboration and nonlearning technologies such as microblogs,
and it is integrated with knowledge management.23
Embedded learning may become increasingly prevalent in the
future because companies can no longer have employees attend
classroom instruction or spend hours on online learning that is
not directly relevant to their current job demands. Formal
training programs and courses will not disappear but will focus
more on the development of competencies that can benefit the
employee and the company over the long term, whereas
embedded learning will focus on providing the learning that the
employee needs to complete key job tasks. Embedded-learning
22. products include task-specific, real-time content and simulation
that are accessible during work, as well as real-time
collaboration in virtual workspaces. Recent, rapid adoption of
wireless technology is connecting employees directly to
business processes. For example, radio frequency identification
chips are implanted in products such as clothing, tires, and
mechanical parts. These chips contain information that is
beamed via radio waves to employees processing handheld
wireless devices. The device, the task context, and the
performance environment are incompatible with classroom or
courseware-based learning but with performance support.
Learning is a business process that is integrated with several
other business processes. Learning is expected as a result of
collaboration with employees and machines in the work process.
Employees can be provided with real-time performance support
through communications with experts and through automated
coaching.
More learning will become just-in-time, using mobile devices
such as notebooks and tablets such as the iPad. As a result,
instead of having to complete specific training classes, learning
functions will focus on setting standards required to achieve
accreditation, create systems to allow employees to meet
accreditation standards, and track completion of
standards.24 To achieve accreditation may involve having
specific job experiences, observing a expert-level employee,
contributing content for helping peers and less experienced
employees learn, and passing a test.
501
There is a new type of learner emerging, the “social cyborg,”
who integrates social networks into the way they think, learn,
and solve problems.25 As Facebook and other social networking
sites and smartphones with communications and Internet access
continue to spread and evolve, employees will spend more time
on computers and online playing games, working, and
connecting to friends and work associates using e-mail and text.
“Social cyborgs” are already prevalent among the millennial
23. generation who expect companies to accommodate their need to
access the latest tools and technologies at work including
tablets and mobile devices, Really Simple Syndication (RSS)
feeds, and social networking sites. This means that training,
development, and learning functions will need to adjust their
assumptions about how and where we learn. Design and
development strategies based on individual learners who learn
alone and without technology will continue to become obsolete.
Employees will expect training and development to include
simulations, games, and virtual reality, which will become more
realistic than they are today. For example, researchers are
developing wearable devices that allow the use of hand gestures
to interact with environment and contact lenses that act as a
computer display. Also, learners will expect training and
development to use social media, as well as learning that is
delivered when it is needed rather than during a scheduled
course.
A new set of learning strategies will be need to be adopted,
including learning environments that include online mentoring
and collaborative learning platforms. This means that companies
will need to consider how, when, and for which employees to
use social media such as Facebook and Twitter, as well as
mobile devices for learning. Social networking platforms will
be part of learning management systems. This will allow
managers to determine which learning content is in most
demand and take content developed by social network
contributors and use it in formal training courses. Not using or
forbidding the use of social media will no longer be an option to
attract, motivate, and retain talented employees (and
customers!). Instead, companies will need to establish policies
regarding the use of social media.
INCREASED EMPHASIS ON PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS:
BIG DATA AND LEARNING FOR BUSINESS
ENHANCEMENT
Because of an increasing focus on contributing to the
company’s competitive advantage, training departments will
24. have to ensure that they are seen as both helping the business
functions (e.g., marketing, finance, production) meet their needs
and contributing to overall business goals and the “bottom
line.”26
This means that you understand the business enough to ask the
right questions to develop an appropriate learning solution
(recall the discussion of needs assessment in Chapter Three,
“Needs Assessment”). Such questions might include how
success will be measured and why the company has not thus far
seen desired results. The role of the learning professional is to
understand business challenges and consistently work to fill
employee performance gaps. To enhance the business means
that learning professionals have to be aligned with the business
and take responsibility for the relationship and the business
outcomes from learning solutions, have an agreed-upon business
outcome that is included in the learning function and business
performance plan, attend business staff502meetings and
network with internal customers, and identify as a partner with
the business with the joint goal of improving performance.
Consider how companies in three different industries expect
training to influence their bottom line.27 The training offered at
TRX, a company that provides transaction processing and data
integration services, is expected to have a direct influence on
boosting customer satisfaction scores and agents’ productivity.
Metrics such as hours of training delivered are not as important
as showing how training is contributing to customer service,
productivity, and profitability. Supply-chain training for Coca-
Cola must be tied in some way to the company’s three-year
business plan or it will not be supported. At Ho-Chunk Casino
in Wittenberg, Wisconsin, the director of training spends time
educating managers on how the training unit adds value to the
business. One of the director’s biggest challenges is convincing
first-line supervisors to support transfer of training. The
training director has found that explaining Kirkpatrick’s
evaluation model (reaction, learning, behavior, results) to the
supervisors helps them understand that training is a process, not
25. an event, and that they play an important role in determining the
success or failure of training. (Kirkpatrick’s model is discussed
in more detail in Chapter Six.)
Training departments must shift the focus from training
as the solution to business problems to a performance analysis
approach. A performance analysis approach involves identifying
performance gaps or deficiencies and examining training as one
possible solution for the business units (the customers).
Training departments will need to continue instructing managers
to consider all potential causes of poor performance before
deciding that training is the solution. Poor employee
performance may be due to poor management, inefficient
technologies, or outdated technology rather than deficiencies in
skill or knowledge (recall the discussion of person analysis
in Chapter Three). Three ways that training departments will
need to be involved are (1) focusing on interventions related to
performance improvement, (2) providing support for high-
performance work systems, and (3) developing systems for
training administration, development, and delivery that reduce
costs and increase employees’ access to learning.
Training departments’ responsibilities will likely include a
greater focus on systems that employees can use for information
(such as expert systems or electronic performance support
systems) on an as-needed basis. This need is driven by the use
of contingent employees and the increased flexibility necessary
to adapt products and services to meet customers’ needs. For
example, companies do not want to spend money to train
employees who may be with the company only a few weeks.
Instead, through temporary employment agencies, companies
can select employees with the exact skill set needed. Training
departments need to provide mechanisms to support the
temporary employees once they are on the job and encounter
situations, problems, rules, and policies they are unfamiliar
with because they are not yet knowledgeable about the
company.
As was discussed in Chapter One, more companies are striving
26. to create high-performance workplaces because of the
productivity gains that can be realized through this type of
design. High-performance work requires that employees have
the interpersonal skills necessary to work in teams. High-
performance work systems also require employees to have high
levels of technical skills. Employees need to understand
statistical process control and the Total Quality Management
(TQM) philosophy. Employees also must understand the entire
production and service system so that they can better
serve503both internal and external customers. As more
companies move to high-performance work systems, training
departments will need to be prepared to provide effective
training in interpersonal, quality, and technical skills, as well as
to help employees understand all aspects of the customer-
service or production system.
Business competitiveness can be realized by quick change,
speed in delivery, and reductions in costs and time constraints.
LPL Financial uses a talent development council, composed of
company leaders from across the company’s functional areas, to
evaluate new learning and requested learning based on its talent
strategy.28 The group meets once a month to ensure that
learning is provided by the learning department only when it is
necessary. Because the council includes only senior-level
managers, it helps align learning with the business strategy and
outcomes. For learning to be approved, it has to support both
the business and the employees. Establishing the talent council
has helped get company leaders more involved in developing an
overall business learning strategy and managers encourage
employees to use available learning resources and programs for
development.
Just-in-time learning is many companies’ answer to quick
learning and the quick application of learning to the
business.29 La Quinta’s Q-Tubes are short, e-learning courses.
The Q-Tubes use conversational language to make trainees feel
as if they are being trained by their peers or a team leader. Each
Q-Tube includes a knowledge check and provides feedback.
27. Training completion rates have increased 92 percent for general
managers and 484 percent for team members since the Q-Tubes
were introduced. American Express designs its learning paths
around behavioral outcomes and emphasizes the importance of
how learners engage in learning, not just what they are
supposed to learn. A learning path usually includes workshops,
peer learning, and on-the-job learning. Also, American Express
emphasizes teaching employees how to best participate in
activities to maximize their learning.
Because the direction in training is away from learning as the
primary outcome and more toward learning as a way to enhance
business performance, companies will continue to purchase
learning management systems (LMSs) that provide training
administration, development tools, and online training. (LMSs
are discussed in Chapter Eight.) LMS is moving from its
historical emphasis on providing and track training to a broader
focus on talent management.30 This means that LMS will
include more career planning tools that will connect employees
with many different development resources, including mentors,
skills requirements for jobs, potential mentors, and competency
models. LMS can also include performance evaluations that can
be used by employees and managers to identify skill gaps. Also
there will be increased demand for LMS software that includes
learning analytics, or analysis tools, that can track learning
activity and costs and can relate learning results to product
revenues or sales goals.31
Today, most companies own their own software and hardware
and keep them on site in their facilities. However, cloud
computing allows companies to lease software and hardware,
and employees don’t know the location of computers, databases,
and applications that they are using (this is known as being in
the “cloud”). Cloud computing refers to a computing system
that provides information technology infrastructure over a
network in a self-service, modifiable, and on-demand.32 Clouds
can be delivered on-demand via the Internet (public cloud) or
restricted to use by a single company (private cloud). Cloud
28. computing gives companies and their employees access to
applications and information504from smartphones and tablets
rather than relying solely on personal computers. It also allows
groups to work together in new ways, can make employees more
productive by allowing them to more easily share documents
and information, and provide greater access to large company
databases. From a learning perspective, this means that tools for
conducting workforce analytics using metrics on learning,
training and development programs, and social media and
collaboration tools such as Twitter, blogs, Google documents,
and YouTube videos will be more easily accessible and
available for use. Cloud computing also can make it easier for
employees to access formal training programs from a variety of
vendors and educational institutions. Finally, the cloud can be
used to store learning data in a “warehouse” (such as Redshift),
which makes it easily available for analysis of trends and
predictions of business outcomes. In the future the emerging
interest in collecting and using big data related to learning,
training, and development will continue to grow. As we
discussed in Chapter Six, big data involves collecting data
about users activities, analyzing or mining the data to identify
patterns and trends, and understanding how these patterns and
trends link to business goals and outcomes. Big data can be
useful for understanding what training methods best deliver
what needs to be taught and identifying how employees learn,
who the experts and leaders are in social networks, and what
type of instruction will lead to positive reactions from learners
and results. For example, Intrepid Learning’s e-learning
programs include a “tile.” The “tile” is provided at the
beginning of the program to explain how the different parts of
the e-learning module fit together. Through tracking who has
read the tile, Intrepid was able to determine that 80 percent of
learners who read the “tile” completed the program, compared
to a 10 percent completion rate for learners who did not read
it.33 Saba’s data analytics platform tracks performance ratings,
succession planning activities, and learning data.34 It tracks
29. what information employees are accessing, identifies the topics
they are posting, and identifies who they are connecting with. It
provides social graphs that visually display employees who are
the center of social networks and most influential. The system is
linked to an intelligent search engine that recommends learning
activities. The system can also be linked to financial systems
and other business data. JPMorgan Chase is including employee
attendance at compliance training as one of several factors (the
other factors include violating personal trading rules and going
over market-risk limits) used in trying to predict which
employees may be likely to violate government regulations or
company policy.35 The increased use of big data will be aided
by the development of more user-friendly ways for data to be
accessed, analyzed, and the results displayed. For example,
Looker is a start-up company that provides web-based business
intelligence platform presenting data in a dashboard format.
INCREASED USE OF STAKEHOLDER-FOCUSED
LEARNING, TRAINING PARTNERSHIPS, AND
OUTSOURCING TRAINING
Chapter Two discussed the importance of making learning,
training, and development strategic by ensuring that it supports
the business strategy and the needs of different stakeholders,
including managers, employees, and customers. The emphasis
on strategic learning influencing different stakeholders will
continue in the future as learning professionals and companies
recognize that competitive advantage can come from developing
internal505human capital and providing learning services to
customers. This helps develop and retain a satisfied, skilled,
and innovative workforce and attract, keep, and satisfy
customers.
For example, STIHL produces outdoor power equipment
including chain saws, blowers, trimmers, and edgers.36 STIHL
has manufacturing facilities for its equipment, which are sold
through over eight thousand power equipment retailers. STIHL
only sells its products through dealers, so helping them satisfy
customers is critical for the business. Customers include
30. homeowners, professionals, landscaping and utility companies,
the military, government agencies such as the U.S. Forest
Service, and emergency first responders. This means that
learning programs need to include not only STIHL’s employees,
but also retail dealers and their customers. STIHL provides its
employees learning programs in technical areas such as
manufacturing and engineering as well as leadership
development. If there are open seats in its training courses,
STIHL’s training and development department allows smaller
companies to send their employees to its technical and
leadership courses at a low cost. The fees help reduce some of
the expenses of STIHL’s training department. At the retail
level, STIHL provides training programs that help dealers
understand how to sell and service the equipment. For example,
STIHL has a certification program for service technicians,
which must be renewed every three years. The certification
focuses on training the technicians to diagnose problems,
provide the correct repairs, and communicate to customers how
to care for their equipment. STIHL iCademy is a web-based
program that dealers can access. It covers topics such as
troubleshooting, in-store marketing, selling skills, and customer
service. STIHL also has a training seminar for high school and
college instructors of small engine repair classes, which teaches
students how to service products. In addition, to ensure that
customers correctly and safely use equipment, STIHL provides
training programs for professional landscaping tree services,
public utilities, first responders, and the military. Also,
consumers who use STIHL equipment can access blogs and
YouTube videos on the company’s website.
As discussed in Chapter One, the demographic, global, and
technological changes are creating a skills gap that presents
challenges for companies in the United States and around the
world. Also, the current education-to-employment system is not
preparing students and adults for the twenty-first-century
economy. Barriers between business and educational institutions
make it difficult for many employees to update their skills and
31. knowledge that they need for their current jobs or preparation
for jobs in another career. Recall our discussion of business and
education partnerships in Chapter Ten, “Social Responsibility:
Legal Issues, Managing Diversity, and Career Challenges.” To
cope with the skills gap, we will likely see more business,
education, and community partnerships working on rebuilding
education to employment systems.37 The goal of these
partnerships is to help individuals prepare for higher-skill and
higher-wage jobs and attract new companies to the area by
integrating employee retraining, elementary through high school
career education programs, career academies, and higher
education programs into a lifelong learning system. A lifelong
learning system can provide better opportunities for more
people to develop the talent needed to suit multiple jobs and
careers that they will likely hold during their lifetimes.
Also, due to an increased urgency to find ways to eliminate
unemployment, underemployment, and meet skill gaps, federal,
state, and local governments probably will provide more
economic incentives for retraining employees, including tax
credits and tax breaks for companies to invest in training and
the spread of lifelong learning accounts.506Lifelong Learning
Accounts (LiLAs) refer to an account for education to which
both the employee and company contribute. The employee keeps
the account even if they leave the company to pay for additional
education at vocational schools and colleges and universities.
For example, Walmart Stores donated $16 million in grants to
seven nonprofit groups (Achieving the Dream, The ACT
Foundation, Dress for Success, Goodwill Industries, Jobs for the
Future, McKinsey Social Initiative, and the National Able
Network) to try to improve the skills of more than twelve
thousand entry-level workers in retail and related industries
such as transportation and distribution.38 The nonprofits will
work with government agencies and employers to develop
training programs. For example, Achieving the Dream will use
its grant to create training programs at four community
colleges.
32. The Brose Group, a German manufacturer of systems such as
seat structures for car makers and suppliers, is actively involved
in the Michigan Advanced Technical Training Program.39 The
program uses classroom learning and on-the-job training to
prepare students for jobs in mechatronics, which requires
electrical, mechanical, and electronic competencies. The
program is a partnership between the Michigan Economic
Development Corporation, two community colleges, and eleven
businesses located in Michigan. Brose partnered with the
community to identify the necessary skills and competencies,
create courses that would develop the competencies, and build a
course curriculum. Program applicants are required to provide a
résumé and complete a test designed to measure their skills in
reading, writing, math, and English as a second language. Most
participants are from high schools and colleges, but the program
is open to all Michigan residents. Brose, like the other
companies who are participating in the program, pay for
students’ full cost of tuition and an hourly wage for time they
are working on the job. Brose sponsors four students who will
rotate between jobs and all three of the company’s Michigan
locations. After successfully completing the program,
participants receive an advanced associate’s degree and a
guaranteed job. They are required to work for two years at their
sponsoring company.
Chapter Two discussed several reasons for companies to
outsource their training. Two main reasons were that employees
need to learn specialized new knowledge and that companies
want to gain access to best practices and cost savings. External
suppliers may be consultants, academics, graduate students, or
companies in the entertainment and mass communications
industries. External suppliers can be partners or be sole
providers of training services. The key decision for companies
will not be whether to outsource but rather how much training
to outsource.
Trainers and other learning professionals will need to identify
outsource providers who can deliver effective training
33. solutions, particularly in technology-based learning solutions in
which they lack the internal expertise to develop in house.
McKesson, a health-care services company, was providing
customers with face-to-face instructor-led training on one of its
products, an evidence-based clinical decision support
system.40 However, customers began to negotiate to remove
training from their contracts. They were dissatisfied with the
quality of the program and lost productivity and disruption that
occurred because their employees had to leave their jobs to
attend training. McKesson recognized that the training was
important, but that changes were necessary. McKesson could
not redesign the program in-house because it lacked a
centralized learning function with all of the skills necessary to
do so. They outsourced most of the design of the new training to
Aptara, a training provider specializing in content development,
learning strategies, and digital conversion. Aptara worked with
McKesson’s instructional designers to develop new training that
included self-paced web-based training combined with the
option to have either an instructor-led classroom instruction or
a virtual instructor-led session. The new web-based course
engaged learners using assessments, role plays, and simulations.
Since the introduction of the new blended learning program,
customer training purchases and satisfaction have increased.
Also, McKesson has benefited, too. They can now deliver more
training requiring less staff; the program is easy to change and
add new content; and it allows them to work with their
customers to choose the blended learning approach that is best
for them.
Implications of Future Trends for Trainers’ Skills and
Competencies
A recent study found that the competencies and expertise
included in the ASTD competency model (see Figure
1.4 in Chapter One) are likely to be needed in the future.
However, increased emphasis will also be placed on the ability
of trainers to more effectively use technology. Also, as
companies become more global, they will need to adapt training
34. methods and content to local cultures.41Table 11.4 shows the
skills that trainers will need to develop in the future.
507
TABLE 11.4 Skills for Future Trainers
· Matching training content and methods to the local culture of
the workforce
· Designing learning space, as well as content in technology-
driven learning environments
· Use of multimedia tools, including audio, video, webcasts, and
live action
· Delivering and packaging training in different formats for
beginners and experts
· Use of assessments to determine trainees’ learning styles
· Developing search-and-identify techniques so employees can
find information and training when they need it
· Be a change agent: Facilitating learning and staying in touch
with employees, managers, and business units to identify what
they need and making suggestions regarding tools, processes, or
procedures that could help them work more effectively
· Developing and delivering learning that is integrated with the
job
· Understand how social media can be used for learning, the
limitations of social media, and ability to make a business case
for it
· Identify the root cause of job and business problems
Source: Based on C. Malamed, “What will your training role be
in the future?” (February 13, 2012), from www.astd.org,
accessed April 24, 2015; M. Laff, “Trainers skills
2020,” T+D (December 2008): 42; P. Galagan, “New skills for a
new work reality,” T+D (November 2011): 26–29.
Summary
This chapter discussed future trends that are likely to influence
training and development. These trends relate to training
delivery and structure of the training function. Training will
contribute to a company’s sustainability goals. Trainers will be
asked to design focused content more quickly and to deliver
35. training using multiple methods. New technology will have a
growing impact on training delivery in the future. Also, new
technology will allow training departments to store and share
human capital throughout the company. There will be an
increased emphasis on integrating training with other human
resource functions and showing how training helps the business.
Training departments are more likely to develop partnerships
with vendors and other companies in the future.
508
Key Terms
sustainability 494
augmented reality, 496
Tin Can API, 497
Learning Records Store (LRS), 497
rapid instructional design (RID), 498
social learning, 500
just-in-time learning, 501
performance analysis approach, 503
cloud computing, 504
Lifelong Learning Accounts (LiLAs), 507
Discussion Questions
1. Do you think this will lead to more (or less) effective
training/learning? Explain your perspective.
2. What new skills will trainers need to be successful in the
future?
3. What is rapid instructional design? How does it differ from
the traditional training design process discussed in Chapter
One? (See Figure 1.1.)
4. How does the use of a learning management system better
link training to business strategy and goals?
5. What is cloud computing? How does it enable just-in-time
training delivery?
6. How will social learning and social networks influence
employee expectations about learning, training, and
development?
7. Explain the excitement about using big data related to
36. learning, training, and development. What’s the usefulness of
big data?
8. How can training contribute to a sustainability initiative?
9. How is program design being influenced by neuroscience
research?
10. What are wearables? How might they be useful for learning
and training?
Application Assignments
1. Interview a manager. Ask this person to evaluate his or her
company’s training department in terms of training delivery,
service, expertise, and contribution to the business. Ask him or
her to explain the rationale for the evaluation. Summarize this
information. Based on the information you gathered, make
recommendations regarding how the training department can be
improved.
2. This chapter discussed several trends that will influence the
future of training. Based on future social, economic, political,
or technological factors, identify one or two additional trends
that you think will influence training. Write a two- to three-
page paper summarizing your ideas. Make sure you provide a
rationale for your trends. Many organizations are moving from a
training perspective to a performance perspective. That is, they
are interested in performance improvement, not training just for
the sake of training.509
3. Go to http://2oms.com/apps/ website for the Assessment and
Development Group International. Click on “Mobile Apps.”
Read about and install on your smartphone either Performance
Coach or Super Manager. What are the strengths and
weaknesses of the app?
4. Go to www.youtube.com website. First, watch the video
“IBM’s Watson Supercomputer Destroys All Humans on
Jeopardy.” Then watch the video IBM Watson: Watson After
Jeopardy! How can Watson and the technology that it uses help
make us “smarter” and improve performance?
5. Go to YouTube at www.youtube.com. Watch the video “10
Amazing Robots That Will Change the World.” What are the
37. advantages and disadvantages of using these robots in the
workplace? What types of training will human employees need
to work alongside robots?
6. What cost and benefits would you use to make the business
case for replacing face-to-face instructor-led training with
virtual instructor-led training in order to contribute to a
sustainability goal of reducing training’s carbon footprint?
Explain.
7. There are many different training providers that companies
can use. Review one of the training providers listed below:
Aptara (www.aptaracorp.com)
GP Strategies (www.gpstrategies.com)
Intrepid Learning (www.intrepidlearning.com)
Skillsoft (www.skillsoft.com)
Why might a company choose to contract with a training
provider? What services are provided by the training provider
you chose to review?
Case: Work Styles Promotes Flexible Work at TELUS
TELUS, a telecommunications company, is a Canadian company
spread across several time zones. TELUS’s Work Styles
program was started to enhance employee productivity, help
employees stay happy by promoting practices that enhance their
work-life balance, and support TELUS’s commitment to
environmental sustainability. Work Styles allows employees to
choose to work away from the office—at home or on the road.
Part of the Work Styles program includes providing employees
with technology that can help them meet their job
responsibilities and allow them to work when and where they
can be most effective. Because many employees work at home
or on the road, TELUS provides mobile devices including
smartphones and notebook and tablet computers. These devices
include teleconferencing and video conferencing capabilities
and cloud-based networking applications, which help employees
collaborate and interact with their peers. TELUS provides
training courses that help employees work effectively in such a
flexible work environment. These courses cover how to lead
38. effective meetings, establish and sustain team norms, and lead
and succeed in high-performing Work Styles teams. Also,
employees can participate in weekly one-hour webinars during
which the philosophy of the Work Styles program is discussed,
and they can ask questions and share success stories. TELUS’s
goal is to have 70 percent510of employees working on the road
or at home, rather than in office buildings across Canada.
If you were asked to evaluate the effectiveness of Work Styles,
what outcomes or data would you collect? How would you
collect your data or outcomes? What are the challenges of
delivering learning to employees who work on the road or at
home? What should be included in mobile-delivered training
courses to ensure that employees learn?
Source: “Working in style,” TD (April 2015):
112; www.telus.ca, the website for TELUS (accessed April 23,
2015); J. Salopek, “Getting social to create
transparency,” T+D (October 2011): 68–70.
Endnotes
1.M. Weinstein, “Charity Begins @ Work,” training (May
2008): 56–58; “Corporate responsibility performance report
2013” and “Improving healthcare in Africa,”
from http://www.novartis.com, accessed April 22, 2015; D.
Parrey, “The employees are greener at Ingersoll Rand,” Chief
Learning Officer (March 2015): 46–53; H. Dolezalek, “Good
news: Training can save the world,” training (May 2006): 28–
33.
2.K. Everson, “Special report: Learning is all in the
wrist,” Chief Learning Officer (March 15, 2015),
from www.clomedia.com, accessed March 18, 2015.
3.“About” and “Products,” from www.wearableintelligence.com,
the website for Wearable Intelligence, accessed April 21, 2015.
4.K. Everson, “In the know, in the now,” Workforce (January
2015): 44–47.
5.From www.playerlync.com, website for PlayerLync.
6.C. Mims, “Amelia, a machine, thinks like you,” The Wall
Street Journal (September 28, 2014): B1–B2; M. Rundle,
39. “Amelia: IPSoft’s new artificial intelligence can think like a
human and wants your job” (March 4, 2014),
from www.huffingtonpost.co.uk, accessed April 21, 2015.
7.“Overview Tin Can API,” www.tincanapi.com/overview,
accessed April 20, 2015.
8.J. Horne, “Devereux,” from http://site.watershedlrs.com/six-
watershed-first-organizations/, accessed April 21, 2015; J.
Salopek, “Digital collaboration,” Training and
Development (June 2000): 38–43.
9.S. Castellano, “Innovations in learning
technology,” T+D (March 2015): 64–66; J. Veloz, “Old tactics
are kryptonite for today’s attention spans,”
from www.adweek.com, accessed April 20, 2015; J. Ford and T.
Meyer, “Advances in training technology: Meeting the
workplace challenges of talent development, deep
specialization, and collaborative learning.” In The Psychology
of Workplace Technology, eds. M. Coovert and L. Thompson,
(New York: Routledge, 2014): 43–76; J. Bersin, “What’s in
store for HR in 2015,” HR Magazine (January/February 2015):
33–51.
10.L. Miller, Playing to Win (Alexandria, VA: American
Society for Training & Development, 2014); C.
Morrison, Going Mobile: Creating Practices That Transform
Learning (Alexandria, VA: American Society for Training and
Development, 2013).
11.D. Rock, “Your brain on learning,” Chief Learning
Officer (April 13, 2015), from http://www.clomedia.com,
accessed April 22, 2015; D. Rock, “The ‘aha’
moment,” T+D (February 2011): 45–49.
12.Learning Research Development Center, University of
Pittsburgh,
from http://www.lrdc.pitt.edu/schunn/research/neurolearning.ht
ml, accessed April 22, 2015.
13.H. Dolezalek, “Who has the time to
design?” training (January 2006): 24–28.
14.S. Thiagarajan, “Rapid Instructional Development.” In The
40. ASTD Handbook of Training Design and Delivery, eds. G.
Piskurich, P. Beckschi, and B. Hall (New York: McGraw-Hill,
2000): 54–75.
15.M. Weinstein, “Six for ’06,” training (January 2006): 18–22.
16.“Bass & Associates, P.C.,” TD (October 2014): 96.
17.M. Plater, “Three trends shaping learning,” Chief Learning
Officer (June 2014): 44–47; S. Castellano, “MOOCs in the
workplace,” T+D (September 2014): 16.
18.“Manage employees and clients like a hero,” T+D (February
2012): 17.
511
19.T. Bingham and M. Conner, The New Social
Learning (American Society for Training and Development:
Alexandria, VA, 2010); R. Landers and A. Goldberg, “Online
social media in the workplace: A conversation with employees.”
In The Psychology of Workplace Technology, eds. M. Coovert
and L. Thompson (New York: Routledge, 2014): 284–304.
20.“Training top 125, EMC
Corporation,” training (January/February 2015): 85.
21.“Training top 125, Tata Consultancy
Services,” training (January/February 2015): 99.
22.S. Adkins, “The brave new world of learning,” T+D (June
2003): 28–37.
23.M. Littlejohn, “Embedded learning,” T+D (February 2006):
36–39.
24.J. Meister and K. Willyerd, “Looking ahead at social
learning: 10 predictors,” T+D (July 2010): 34–41.
25.J. Campbell and W. Finegan, “Dawn of the social
cyborg,” training (September/October 2011): 20–27; J. Meister
and K. Willyerd, The 2020 Workplace (Harper Business: New
York, 2010); A. Thompson, “Delivering meaningful outcomes
for your organization,” T+D (February 2012): 38–41; J. Meister
and K. Willyerd, “Looking ahead at social learning: 10
predictors,” T+D (July 2010): 34–41.
26.E. Salas, S. Tannenbaum, K. Kraiger, and K. Smith-Jentsch,
“The science of training and development in organizations:
41. What matters in practice,” Psychological Science in the Public
Interest 13 (2012): 74–101; A. Thompson, “Delivering
meaningful outcomes for your organization,” T+D (February
2012): 38–41.
27.D. Zielinski, “Wanted: Training manager,” training (January
2006): 36–39.
28.T. Handcock, W. Howlett, and J. Martin, “The future of the
learning function,” Chief Learning Officer (April 13, 2015):
26–47.
29.“Training top 125, La Quinta
Holdings,” training (January/February 2015): 75; T. Handcock,
W. Howlett, and J. Martin, “The future of the learning
function,” Chief Learning Officer (April 13, 2015): 26–47.
30.S. Castellano, “The evolution of the LMS,” T+D (November
2014): 14.
31.M. Hequet, “The state of the e-learning
market,” training (September 2003): 24–29.
32.A. McAfee, “What every CEO needs to know about the
cloud,” Harvard Business Review (November 2011): 124–132;
B. Roberts, “The grand convergence,” HR Magazine (October
2011): 39–46; M. Paino, “All generations learn in the
cloud,” Chief Learning Officer (September 28, 2011), accessed
from http://blog.clomedia.com, October 11, 2011.
33.K. Everson, “In the know, in the now,” Workforce (January
2015): 44–47.
34.B. Hall, “Will big data equal big learning?” Chief Learning
Officer (March 2013): 16.
35.“Markets/finance,” Bloomberg Businessweek (April 13–19,
2015): 34.
36.T. Bingham and P. Galagan, “Training powers up at
STIHL,” T+D (January 2014): 29–33; C. Gambill, “Creating
learning solutions to satisfy customers,” T+D (January 2014):
35–39.
37.E. Gordon, “Talent challenge: Renewing the
vision,” T+D (June 2010): 42–47.
38.K. Whitney, “Wal-Mart puts up cash to close skills
42. gap,” Chief Learning Officer (March 2, 2015),
from www.clomedia.com, accessed March 6, 2015.
39.J. Ramirez, “Stemming the tide,” Human Resource
Executive (September 2014): 27–31.
40.Aptara, “Making customer self-service a reality: Fast
forwarding content development,”
from http://www.aptaracorp.com/why-aptara/success-
story/mckesson, accessed April 23, 2015.
41.P. Galagan, “New skills for a new work
reality,” T+D (November 2011): 26–29; J. Salopek, “Keeping it
real,” T+D (August 2008): 42–45; C. Malained, “What will your
training role be in the future?” (February 13, 2012),
from www.astd.org, accessed April 24, 2015.
512
Case 4
Learning in Practice
Working at Home: A Bad Idea?
Yahoo’s CEO Marissa Mayer decided as one part of her plan to
revitalize the company that she wanted to end the company’s
work-from-home policy. In an internal memo from Yahoo’s
executive vice president of people and development, working at
the office rather than at home was necessary because of the
need for employees to communicate and collaborate and to
reduce the chance that speed and quality would be diminished.
Criticism of Yahoo’s policy change focused on the message that
not allowing home work sends to employees: We can’t trust you
to get the work done.
Many employees want to work at home so companies are using
working at home as a benefit that helps recruit and retain
talented employees. Several studies have demonstrated benefits
from working at home. Cisco Systems found that employees
who could work remotely from home experienced an increase in
their quality of life. This could result from reducing the hassles
of commuting to work and allowing employees to better balance
work and life responsibilities such as childcare, running
errands, or dealing with a sick child, spouse, or family member.
43. Another study showed that when employees of a Chinese travel
agency were allowed to work from home, they were more
productive, resulting in cost savings of $2,000 per employee
each year. Finally, a study found that office employees who
work from home may work fifty-seven hours each week before
they feel as if their work-life is out of balance, compared to
thirty-eight hours for employees who work at their office.
Working at home also may have significant disadvantages. The
disadvantages include employees taking advantage of the policy
to extend their weekends by not working in the office on
Fridays or Mondays, and loss of the potential benefit from
having face-to-face interactions with colleagues that are useful
for sharing knowledge and generating creative solutions to
product or service problems. Being in the office is especially
important today because many jobs require close collaboration
with peers or working on team projects. Also, unplanned
personal interactions occurring at the office can lead to new
ideas or working relationships. The biggest problems for
employees working from home is overcoming other employees’
and managers’ perceptions that they are not as productive as
they could be, that they lack focus, and that they lose “face-
time,” which leads to fewer opportunities for promotions.
Questions
1. Do you think that companies should have a policy that allows
all employees to work at home? Why or why not? How would
you determine which jobs are best suited for working at home?
2. What role can technology play in allowing employees to work
at home? Do you believe that interaction using technology can
replace interpersonal face-to-face interaction between
employees or between employees and their manager?
3. Some employees don’t take advantage of flexible work
options such as working at home because they believe it hurts
their career. Why might they feel this way?
Sources: Based on B. Goldsmith, “Yahoo’s work-from-home
ban stirs backlash,” The Columbus Dispatch (February 27,
2013): A5; P. Marinova, “Who works from home and when”
44. (February 28, 2013), from www.cnn.com, accessed February 28,
2013; C. Suddath, “Work-from-home truths, half-truths, and
myths,” Bloomberg Businessweek (March 4–10, 2013): 75; R.
Silverman and Q. Fottrell, “The home office in the
spotlight,” The Wall Street Journal (February 27, 2013): B6; N.
Shah, “More Americans working from home remotely,” The
Wall Street Journal (April 6, 2013): A3.
CASE SCENARIO
In this week's Team case for analysis: Chapter 11 of the text –
P. 508 (attached on another word document)
Summary:
This chapter discussed future trends that are likely to influence
training and development. These trends relate to training
delivery and structure of the training function. Training will
contribute to a company’s sustainability goals. Trainers will be
asked to design focused content more quickly and to deliver
training using multiple methods. New technology will have a
growing impact on training delivery in the future. Also, new
technology will allow training departments to store and share
human capital throughout the company. There will be an
increased emphasis on integrating training with other human
resource functions and showing how training helps the business.
Training departments are more likely to develop partnerships
with vendors and other companies in the future.
TEAM ASSIGNMENT:
Discuss which of these trends will affect the future of training
the most. Present the advantages and disadvantages of each of
the trends. Research for other trends is OK also. Other than the
text here is a good reference to start with: ATD – Future of
Training (https://www.td.org/insights/the-future-of-learning-is-
not-training)
Do the following:
45. Create a four+ page analysis and recommendation, and create a
4+ slide Narrated PowerPoint presentation that presents the
results from the analysis. (At least 3 scholarly resources
Task:
Discuss the Advantages and Disadvantages of those trends
(Accessibility and Gamification)
Notes:
Helpful Resources
Zoe, E. (2018, December 18). How Employee Training Will
Change in 2019. Retrieved from
https://www.talentlms.com/blog/employee-training-trends/
Coe, J. (2018, November 28). 5 Impactful L&D Trends to Watch
in 2019. Retrieved from
https://www.unboxedtechnology.com/2019-training-trends/
Staff Writer. (2019, January 7). Why 2019 Will Be the Year of
Gamification in Corporate Learning. Retrieved
fromhttps://www.hrtechnologist.com/articles/learning-
development/why-2019-will-be-the-year-of-gamification-in-
corporate-learning/
2/8/2018
1
Phil 2: Puzzles and Paradoxes
Prof. Sven Bernecker
University of California, Irvine
46. Solution
s to the
Sorites Paradox
Attempts to Solve the Sorites
Paradox
• Rejecting the initial premise:
– nihilism
• Rejecting one of the other premises, and/or the sorites
premise:
– epistemic view
– truth-value gaps
– supervaluationism
47. – degrees of truth
2
Nihilism
• Proposal: A predicate that admits of borderline cases (like
”bald“) does not apply to anything. Vagueness is not a feature
of reality but only of our description of reality. Nothing is tall,
bald, or a heap.
• The first premises of the sorites arguments can be rejected.
3
Problems with nihilism:
• Mountains are part of reality, but they are vague. They
have no shrap boundaries. It is vague where the mountain
48. ends and the plain begins. But we don‘t want to say that
mountains only exist in our description of reality. This
suggests that vagueness is a feature of reality, and not just
of our thought and talk.
4
LiYuxi
2/8/2018
2
Epistemic View
Proposal: There are sharp boundaries between, say, “bald”
and “not bald”, but we can never know where they are.
Losing one hair can make someone go from not bald to bald,
but we can’t ever know when this happens.
49. 5
1) A man with 1 hair on his head is bald.
2) If a man with 1 hair on his head is bald, then a man with 2
hairs on his
head is bald.
3) If a man with 2 hairs on his head is bald, then a man with 3
hairs on his
head is bald.
….
C) Therefore, a man with 100,000 hairs on his head is bald.
Everyone is
bald.
• On the epistemic view, one of the premises other than the first
is
false. Suppose it is number 125:
125) If a man with 124 hairs on his head is bald, then a man
50. with 125
hairs on his head is bald.
6
Problems with the epistemic view:
• According to the epistemic view, no one knows which premise
in
the sorites paradox is false. So facts about whether our word
“bald”
applies to someone with, say 130 hairs is forever unknowable.
But
is it plausible to think that there are unknowable facts of this
sort
about the application of our own words?
• Words like “bald” have the meanings they do because of the
way
51. that we use them. But how could we use our words in ways
which
determined standards if we could not know the cut-off points?
7
Truth-Value Gaps
• Proposal: it is impossible to know the sharp cut-off point for
words like ”bald“ because there is no sharp cut-off point.
• Some people are clearly bald and others are clearly not bald.
But there are also some people in the middle. If you say that
one of them in the middle is bald, you haven't said anything
true; but you haven't said anything false either. The rules for
applying the word “bald” just don't deliver a verdict for these
people -- it is “undefined' when it comes to them.
52. 8
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3
• A proponent of truth-value gaps claims that some number of
the
premises in a sorites argument will fail to be true.
• Consider again premise (125): If a man with 124 hairs on his
head is bald, then a man with 125 hairs on his head is bald.
• Suppose that it is neither true nor false to say that someone
with
124/5 hairs is bald. In this case, premise (125) is an example of
an “if-then” sentence both of whose constituent sentences are
neither true nor false, but rather “undefined.” It follows that
53. premise (125) is not true.
• This may be enough to explain why the conclusion of the
sorites
argument is false.
9
Problems with the truth-value gap view:
• Suppose Bob has 125 hairs. Consider these sentences:
– If Bob is bald, then with one less hair he would still be bald.
– If Bob is bald, then with one more hair he would still be bald.
• Intuitively, the first sentence is definitely true. The second
looks not as
clearly true as the first. The truth-value gap view cannot explain
the
asymmetry between the two sentences.
54. • This sentence looks like a logical truth:
• Either it is raining or it is not raining.
• But if ”is raining“ is a vague predicate, then
this sentence may turn out to be neither true
nor false. This is strange.
10
Supervaluationism
• Proposal: there are lots of middle cases of thinly haired men.
The rules for “bald” don't dictate that it is true to say of them
that they are bald, but also don't dictate that it would be false
to say of them that they are bald. So, in a certain sense, it is
“up to us” to say what we want about such cases.
55. • The act of “drawing the line” between the bald and non-bald
can be called a sharpening of “bald.” There are many
possible sharpenings of “bald” which are consistent with the
rules governing the word.
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• A sharpening associates each predicate with a partial function
that
maps the set of individuals onto a positive extension, a negative
extension, or neither (for the borderline cases).
– A sentence is true if and only if it is true with respect to every
sharpening.
– A sentence is false is and only if it is false with respect to
every
sharpening.
56. – A sentence is undefined if and only if it is true with respect to
some sharpenings, and false with respect to others.
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2/8/2018
4
13
Mark Sainsbury, Vagueness, p. 35
• Q: How does supervaluationism escape the sorites paradox?
• A: Many premises in the typical instance of the sorites
paradox will be true on some sharpenings, but false on
others. So, some of these premises will be undefined.
57. • This makes room for the view that the reasoning is valid and
the conclusion false.
14
The supervaluationist proposal is similar to the truth-value
gap view but it has certain advantages:
• The supervaluationist can capture the asymmetry
between these sentences:
– If Bob is bald, then with one less hair he would still be bald.
– If Bob is bald, then with one more hair he would still be bald.
• Given supervaluationism, this sentence is true in every
circumstance:
• Either it is raining or it is not raining.
15
58. Problem of higher-order vagueness:
• Just as there are borderline cases between “bald” and “not
bald,” there are also borderline cases between cases
where “bald” applies and cases in which it is undefined. But
the truth-value gap view and supervaluationism assume
that there is a sharp dividing line between the cases where
“bald” applies and the cases in which it is undefined.
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2/8/2018
5
• Instead of positing a sharp dividing line between the cases
59. to which “bald” applies and the cases for which it is
undefined, why not simply posit such a sharp dividing line
between “bald” and “not bald”? It gives us the same result
and is simpler. (But, of course, then we would be stuck with
the idea that there is some number of hairs such that, if you
have that number you are not bald, but if you lost just one,
you would be bald.)
17
Degrees of Truth
• Suppose a man with around 120 hairs on his head starts
becoming
bald. Consider once again:
– 125) If a man with 124 hairs on his head is bald, then a man
with 125 hairs
60. on his head is bald.
• Proposal: The if-part (antecendent) of premise (125) is nearly
but not
quite true. It‘s degree of truth is, say, 0.96. The then-part
(consequent)
of premise (125) is also nearly true but not quite so nearly true
as the if-
part. Say it‘s degree of truth is 0.95.
18
• When the antecedent of a conditional
has a higher degree of truth than its
consequent, then the conditional as a
whole has a degree of truth less than 1.
(For a conditional is clearly false if its
61. antecendent is true and consequent
false.)
• So the conditional premise (125), though very nearly true,
is not quite true. This is enough to stop the sorites
argument being sound, for not all of its premises will be
strictly true.
• The tiny falsities of many of the premises in the sorites
argument propagate through the long chain premises to
yield a wholly false conclusion.
19
Problems with degrees of truth:
• The assigment of degrees of truth is often artificial. For
example,
62. what value should we assign to ”France is octogonal“?
• Like the truth-value gap view and supervaluationism, the
degree
of truth approach assumes there is a sharp dividing line between
cases to which “bald“ applies and cases for which it is
undefined.
But why should we not simply instead posit a sharp dividing
line
between “bald“ and “not-bald“? This is once again the problem
of
higher-order vagueness.
20
2/8/2018
63. 1
Phil 2: Puzzles and Paradoxes
Prof. Sven Bernecker
University of California, Irvine
Explaining the
Sorites Paradox
History of the Sorites Paradox
2
• The sorites paradox is attributed to Eubulides of Miletus
(4th century BC) who is also came up with the liar paradox.
• Miletus was part of the Ancient Greek empire and is part of
modern day Turkey.
64. • “Sorites” derives from the Greek word soros (meaning
“heap”). This is why this paradox is also called the
“paradox of the heap.”
Miletus
Theater of Miletus
• The paradox of the heap: Would you describe a single grain of
sand as a heap? No. Would you describe two grains of sand as a
heap? No. … You must admit the presence of a heap sooner or
later, so where do you draw the line?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9DXVDPiiUN8
• The paradox of the heap is the name given to a class of
paradoxical arguments, also known as “little-by-little
arguments,”
65. which arise as a result of the indeterminacy surrounding limits
of
application of the predicates involved.
3
Sorites Paradox
Example:
1) A man with 1 hair on his head is bald.
2) If a man with 1 hair on his head is bald, then a man with 2
hairs on his head is
bald.
3) If a man with 2 hairs on his head is bald, then a man with 3
hairs on his head is
bald.
….
C) Therefore, a man with 100,000 hairs on his head is bald.
Everyone is bald.
66. •The “..... “ stands for a long list of premises which can be
summed up as
follows: For any number of hairs h, if someone's number of
hairs is h and he is
bald, then someone whose number of hairs is h + 1 is also bald.
4
• The conclusion (C) is obviously
false, but the reasoning seems valid
and the premises seem plausible.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9DXVDPiiUN8
LiYuxi
2/8/2018
2
• The reason that the paradox of the heap occurs in natural
language is
67. because of the existence of vague predicates. Words such as
bald
and poor are only partially defined.
• But, classical logic says that ~(b & ~b) ≡ b v ~b. This is not
the case
with DeVito! So, predicates such as bald don’t conform to the
usual
logical rules.
5
• Because bald is only partially defined, it would be
wrong to say that Danny DeVito is either bald or non-
bald, so ~(b v ~b). People would also agree that it
would be correct to say that DeVito is not both bald
and non-bald, so ~(b & ~b).
68. More Examples of Sorites Paradoxes
1) Someone who is 7 feet in height is tall.
2) If someone who is 7 feet in height is tall, then someone
6'11.9” in height
is tall.
3) If someone who is 6'11.9” in height is tall, then someone
6'11.8” in height
is tall.
......
C) Therefore, someone who is 3' in height is tall.
The “..... “ stands for a long list of premises which can be
summed up as follows:
For any height h, if someone's height is h and she is tall, then
someone whose
height is h – 0.1” is also tall.
69. 6
1) 10,000 grains of sand is a heap of sand.
2) If 10,000 grains of sand is a heap of sand, then 9999 grains
of
sand is a heap of sand.
3) If 9999 grains of sand is a heap of sand, then 9998 grains of
sand is a heap of sand.
......
C) Therefore, 1 grain of sand is a heap of sand.
Sorites premise: For any number n, if n grains of sand is a heap,
then n
-1 grains of sand is a heap.
7
70. Mathematical Induction
• A conclusion reached through ordinary inductive reasoning is
not
certain; it is at best probable.
• Mathematical induction is different. Mathematical induction is
a
method of proof typically used to establish a given statement
for all
natural numbers. Example:
1) 0 is a natural number, and it is divisible by 1
2) If natural number n is divisible by 1, so is n+1
C) Every natural number is divisible by 1
• The paradox of the heap is an example of the failure of
mathematical
induction in natural language.
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71. 2/8/2018
3
Vagueness, Ambiguity, Equivocation
• A statement is vague if it uses concepts that have indefinite
application to particular cases.
• A statement is ambiguous if it can have two or more distinct
meanings.
• A statement is both vague and ambiguous if it has multiple
meanings, some (or all) of which have indefinite applications.
• Ambiguity creates equivocation.
9
• Lexical ambiguity: when a word in a sentence has multiple
meanings: “His
72. house is next to the bank.”
1: the land alongside a river...
2: a financial establishment...
“Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana.” (Groucho
Marx)
• Syntactic ambiguity: when sentence-structure (syntax) allows
for different
interpretations: “The killing of tyrants is justified.”
1: The killing DONE BY tyrants...
2: The killing OF tyrants...
10
• Contextual ambiguity: when
conversational context creates the
73. possibility of multiple interpretations.
“John wanted him to leave the band.”
Who does “him” refer to?
Vagueness is (almost) ubiquitous
• Gradable adjectives: tall, red, fun
• Non-gradable adjectives: circular, level
• Nouns: striped apple, stone lion
• Verbs: running, singing, sleeping
• An important factor affecting the location of the threshold is
the
set of objects with respect to which the property in question is
being judged – the comparison class
11