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Journal ArticleDOI

Exploring determinants of pre-training motivation and training effectiveness: a temporal investigation

Amitabh Deo Kodwani, +1 more
- Vol. 9, Iss: 4, pp 321-337
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TLDR
The authors examined the role of the trainer's reputation, training nomination and training reputation on pre-training motivation and training effectiveness in a business context, and found that self-nomination positively influences pretraining motivation.
Abstract
The present study is an attempt to extend previous findings and examine the role of the trainer's reputation, training nomination and training reputation on pre-training motivation and training effectiveness in a business context.,The authors hypothesized that trainer reputation, training nomination and training reputation would affect pre-training motivation; and that pre-training motivation would act as a mediator between these three variables and training effectiveness. The sample is constituted by 251 managerial-level employees at a large firm in India who completed pre-training and post-training surveys. These data were then analyzed using structural equation modeling and other inferential techniques.,The results suggested that self-nomination positively influences pre-training motivation. Similarly, positive training and trainer reputations also affect pre-training motivation. Pre-training motivation mediates the relationship between trainer reputation, training nomination, training reputation and training effectiveness.,The method bias and measurement error cannot be ruled out. The data were collected from employees in a single firm via self-reports, and, ceteris paribus, it would be advantageous to broaden the sampling frame to cover multiple organizations with data collected using more than one methodology. However, the temporal lag of 45 days used herein between collecting predictor data and criterion data can reasonably be expected to have mitigated this problem to some extent.,The findings regarding the reputation suggest that what trainees know or what they believe they know about the trainer or the training program they are going to attend will have a significant impact on their pre-training motivation, and subsequently on the training effectiveness. It is also essential to understand how trainees get information about training. Most often, this information travels through various informal channels and passes through many people, and thus trainees may get inadequate or incorrect information about the training program and the trainer.,Previous research indicates that only a small proportion of training actually gets transferred to the job (Mackay, 2007). This study augments the literature by putting forward empirical evidence that could be leveraged by firms' senior management teams pursuant of optimizing investments in the training of employees.

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Citations
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Investigating training effectiveness of public and private banks employees in this digital age: an empirical study

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the pre-training and post-training variables influencing employee training effectiveness in the banking industry in this era of the digital age and found that a significant influence of pretraining (i.e., training environment, trainer quality) and post training factors (e.g., trainee motivation, trainee selfefficacy, and authentic leadership practices) towards the bank's staff training effectiveness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Training Management on Training Effectiveness and Teaching Creativity in the COVID-19 Pandemic

TL;DR: In this paper , an online quantitative survey with a sample of state-funded teachers consisting of civil, honorary, and contract teachers was conducted to elaborate on the relationship between training management, effectiveness, and its impact on the teaching creativity of public teachers from kindergarten to upper secondary level.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Motivation and transfer in professional training: A meta-analysis of the moderating effects of knowledge type, instruction, and assessment conditions

TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis of the relationship between motivation and transfer in professional training has been conducted, where motivation was conceptualized in the following nine dimensions: motivation to learn, motivation to transfer, pre- and post-training selfefficacy, mastery orientation, performance orientation, avoidance orientation, expectancy, and instrumentality.
Journal ArticleDOI

The State of Transfer of Training Research: Moving Toward More Consumer‐Centric Inquiry

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose three broad prescriptions for moving future transfer research toward more consumer-centric outcomes: (1) systematically report more and richer information related to the trainees, trainers, and organizational contexts under study; (2) focus explicitly on the optimization of transfer -not just learning; and (3) expand the measurement and reporting of transfer outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of trainer expressiveness, organization, and trainee goal orientation on training outcomes.

TL;DR: The results indicated that participants had the highest recall after an expressive and organized lecture, and the findings for problem-solving performance were more complex.
Journal ArticleDOI

Power to the people: Using learner control to improve trainee reactions and learning in web-based instructional environments.

TL;DR: Results suggest that both training satisfaction and off- task attention predicted subsequent learning, and performance orientation was linked to off-task attention, whereas mastery orientation was found to indirectly influence satisfaction via its direct effect on training motivation.
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