Adult learners are more attentive and absorb more information when they participate in the learning.
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Trainers need to devise new methods to enhance learning, in order to be successful teachers. An important part of a training session is creating a balance between the active and the passive teaching styles. If a trainer only uses active methods of teaching, the excess of activities may exhaust the participants. On the other hand, hours of listening to a trainer talk can become monotonous. Trainers need to use both methods and schedule each one appropriately to:
- Break monotony
- Retain the attention of trainees, and
- Keep trainees enthusiastic and open to learning
Shifting Attention of Trainees
Getting the trainees to actively participate in the training process through activities, such as role playing, helps not only the trainees that are participating to be more attentive and engaged, but also the participants who are watching. A trainer can easily keep the trainees occupied by shifting the attention from himself or herself to the trainees. Role-playing, asking questions, group discussions, and activities can lend variety to a training session, and keep everybody motivated to learn alone and together.
Encouraging and Managing Interactions
During any training session, a trainer will mostly interact with all the trainees together as a group. There will also be occasions where the trainer will only interact with a person or a group for a short duration of time. At the same time, there will be interaction among the participants, formal or informal, during a training session.
A trainer needs to plan the training in such a way that there are interactions at all of the following three levels:
- Trainer-to-class interactions
- Trainer-to-trainee/group interactions
- Trainee-to-trainee interactions
In most training sessions, trainer to class interaction will dominate the training. The duration of the other two interactions must be kept so that it allows variety, enhances learning and encourages participation. A five-hour training session can have a three and a half hour of trainer-to-class interaction, and one and a half hours of trainer-to-trainee/group interaction and trainee-to-trainee interaction.
Group Learning
As most adult learners are used to self-learning or learning by themselves, even when in a class, a trainer can use and promote group learning to offer a new way of learning to the participants. In group learning, the trainer creates the rules and provides broad guidelines on what to do. The trainees act as a group without hierarchy or division, and work together to meet the goal(s) articulated by the trainer.
Brainstorming is an effective method of encouraging group learning. It helps to build familiarity, companionship and healthy competition within a class, especially if the training session will run for days. Participants can brainstorm to answer questions, to generate ideas, and to make decisions.
Handling Shy or Reluctant Participants
In any training session, you will find people of varied personalities. To help each participant be engaged and participate in the training, a trainer needs to build a comfortable and open environment where even the shy and reluctant participants can open up. Instead of using direct questions that bring the attention of the entire class to one participant, trainers can use trainee-to-trainee interactions to build familiarity among the participants.
Slowly acclimatising the participants to the new environment and people is essential. Using varied channels of gaining and sharing knowledge work best to keep the trainees involved and keen to learn.
Pdtraining delivers 1000’s of professional development courses each year in Wellington, Auckland, Napier, Christchurch, Hamilton, Dunedin and Tauranga, so you can be assured your training will be delivered by a qualified and experienced trainer.
All public Train the Trainer Training courses include am/pm tea, lunch, printed courseware and a certificate of completion. Customised courses are available upon request so please contact pdtraining on 1300 121 400 to learn more.