Trainers are made, not born! These practical skills and techniques will improve your on-the-job training and job coaching. Ensure consistency from trainer to trainer, or session to session, through job documentation, training checklists, organized training aids, and tracking skill achievement.
Chuck is a great instructor. Very
enjoyable class. Learned a lot
and will take back to work and
immediately apply to my training.”
“Building a Competent Workforce ” attendee
2010 dates coming soon.
Sweetwaters Restaurant
1104 W. Clairemont Avenue
Eau Claire, WI
All programs are 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Best practices for on-the-job training. Benchmark your skills training against
training standards and other companies.
Your role includes “trainer” although your
title may be “team leader.” Instructional
skills are a critical skill in all supervisors’
toolkits.
Are you an instructor or facilitator? Do
you have a training plan? Learn to fit your
approach to the needs of the learner.
A four-step training model you can
apply to your training. Watch for “chunk
size” and discover how to identify when the
learner needs to practice.
Left brain versus right brain thinking
styles affect teaching and learning
outcomes. Discover your learner’s favored
style, match it with your instructional
style, and quickly build confidence and
competence.
Training tools – check lists, job aids,
tracking charts – which ensure consistency
and quality.
Not all problems are solved by training. Identify why some people do not perform
as expected. Learn how to separate
training issues from management and
motivation problems.
Learners’ competency levels challenge
all trainers. Explore inherent learning
challenges, and ways to avoid self-fulfilling
prophecies about ‘difficult students.’
Training styles and learning styles can
clash or mesh. Practice adapting to four
types of learners. Learn to modify your
training to engage each learner’s style.
Anyone responsible for training others to build competencies:
Chuck Levine
Chuck designs and develops instructional systems for business and industry throughout the United States. In this train-the-trainer workshop, Chuck focuses on what every manager or supervisor needs to know when the responsibility for introducing a new process or orienting a new worker falls on you. He shares best practices gleaned from a wide range of workplace settings and training challenges. You take home skills you can apply immediately in your next training assignment.
| BONUS! Pick Chuck’s brain! Bring your training documentation, job aids, and check lists with you to review in the seminar. Then take what you learn and apply it to your training and get Chuck’s feedback on your efforts. Each participant receives 60 minutes of FREE private training consultation with Chuck Levine. Offer is good any time within six months following the seminar. |
Individual Fee: $425 per person (includes refreshment, breaks, luncheons, materials and instruction)
Group Fee: $375 per person for three, four or five people from the same firm to register for the same session.
Refund Policy, Transfer Fees
You may cancel or transfer your registration up to 5 business days before a program’s start date. If you cancel or transfer fewer than 5 business days prior to the program start date, a $50 administrative fee will be assessed. If you cancel or fail to attend the day of the event, you are responsible for the full fee. Full refunds are given if a program is cancelled or filled. You may substitute another person for your registration at any time. Call the Continuing Education Office (715-836-5811 or 1-800-582-5182) for assistance.
Walk-ins are welcome—please call 24 hours ahead to ensure space availability.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire Continuing Education offers excellence in lifelong learning. If you're not completely satisfied with your learning experience after attending our program we will refund your registration fee.
To earn the Supervisory Management Certificate, you must complete 6 two-day seminars from the approved sequence within five years. Of these, 3 two-day seminars are required:
These seminars provide an overview of management basics. They address the challenges you face as you make the transition into management, and they lay a foundation for the other seminars.
In addition, you select 3 two-day seminars based upon your job requirements and professional development needs from the below listing:
Each specialized seminar addresses a specific management concern. You may take the specialized seminars prior to, during the same time frame, or after completing the required seminars.
You may register for a Supervisory Management seminar without completing the Certificate requirements.