How to measure the impact of your resident and community training programmes - One hour live Webinar
Why guess at the impact of what you are doing when you can know? Invest an hour in this utterly essential webinar
2pm - 3pm - 7 November 2012
You probably spend a great deal of time and money on training your community and tenant groups. But how well are you doing? Are your programmes hitting the mark?
Now you can find out for sure. And it's so important, isn't it? After all, the only purpose of training is to get results and make sure your groups are more effective.
The “happy sheets” which residents complete tell you a lot. But are they enough? To what degree were they really satisfied? And to what extent did the course make a real difference? There is a lot of evidence to suggest that both of these aspects are vital if they are not just to recall but to apply what they have learnt.
And there are so many other things to consider.
Do you know how to assess how much change a programme of training might bring? What will be the initial impact of the training? To what extent will skills be transferred to other areas?
And how long will changes last? To what degree will the group and your organisation appreciate the benefits produced, and invest in them? How much better will the tenant or community group do as a result?
These are all vital ingredients for sound evaluation.
Topics include:
• How to design and plan an evaluation of a training programme
• How to undertake an evaluation when time, money and personnel
are limited
• How to know where to focus the evaluation
• How to measure the effectiveness and impact of training
• How to know if training has contributed to the desired personal and
group outcomes
•
How to collect and manage data and which collection methods work
best for evaluating training programmes
Your presenter for this one hour webinar is
Rosemary Collie.
With 15 years experience of working with all sorts of organisations Rosemary is a qualified social auditor with vast experience in supporting groups to measure their social impact and develop social accounts.
Your trainer
Your trainer
Your presenter for this one hour webinar is
Rosemary Collie.
With 15 years experience of working with all sorts of organisations Rosemary is a qualified social auditor with vast experience in supporting groups to measure their social impact and develop social accounts.
Your trainer
Your presenter for this one hour webinar is
Rosemary Collie.
With 15 years experience of working with all sorts of organisations Rosemary is a qualified social auditor with vast experience in supporting groups to measure their social impact and develop social accounts.
Your trainer
Your presenter for this one hour webinar is
Rosemary Collie.
With 15 years experience of working with all sorts of organisations Rosemary is a qualified social auditor with vast experience in supporting groups to measure their social impact and develop social accounts.
Your trainer
Your presenter for this one hour webinar is
Rosemary Collie.
With 15 years experience of working with all sorts of organisations Rosemary is a qualified social auditor with vast experience in supporting groups to measure their social impact and develop social accounts.
Your trainer
And who better than Barbara Hastings-Asatourian to present the webinar. She qualified in nursing midwifery and health visiting before entering higher education as a Senior Lecturer in Public Health 20 years ago.
She now works for her own Social Enterprise developing and authoring unique sex education materials and providing sexual health information and resources. Most recently she has developed a passion for on line social media as a means of promoting health issues.
Your trainer
And who better than Barbara Hastings-Asatourian to present the webinar. She qualified in nursing midwifery and health visiting before entering higher education as a Senior Lecturer in Public Health 20 years ago.
She now works for her own Social Enterprise developing and authoring unique sex education materials and providing sexual health information and resources. Most recently she has developed a passion for on line social media as a means of promoting health issues.