Are we doing the right thing?

Author:

Giangreco Antonio,Carugati Andrea,Sebastiano Antonio

Abstract

PurposeThis paper aims to advance the debate regarding the use of training evaluation tools, chiefly the Kirkpatrick model, in reaction to minimal use of the tools reported in the literature and the economic changes that have characterised the industrialised world in the past 20 years.Design/methodology/approachThe main argument – the need to design new evaluation tools – emerges from an extensive literature review of criticism of the Kirkpatrick model. The approach is deductive; the argument emerges from extant literature.FindingsThe main findings of the literature review show that the major criticisms of the Kirkpatrick model, though rigorous, are not relevant in today's post‐industrial economy. Issues of complexity, accuracy and refinement, which are relevant in stable industrial organisations, must be revised in the new economic world.Research limitations/implicationsThis paper is based on a literature review and presents a call for new research. As such, it is not grounded in original empirical evidence, beyond that presented in the cited articles.Practical implicationsThe paper calls for training evaluation tools that align better with modern organisational reality. If the research community responds to this call, the results will benefit practitioners directly. This paper also presents practical advice about the use of existing evaluation techniques.Originality/valueA new angle on criticisms of existing training evaluation systems does not reiterate classic criticisms based on logic and mathematics but rather takes a pragmatic and economic approach. Thus, this paper offers evidence of theoretically grounded paradoxes of the consequences of existing criticisms of training evaluation.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Applied Psychology

Reference81 articles.

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2. Alliger, G.M. and Janak, E.A. (1989), “Kirkpatrick's levels of training criteria: 30 years later”, Personnel Psychology, Vol. 42, pp. 331‐42.

3. Alliger, G.M., Tannenbaum, S.I., Bennett, W. Jr, Traver, H. and Shotland, A. (1997), “A meta‐analysis of the relations among training criteria”, Personnel Psychology, Vol. 50, pp. 341‐58.

4. Alvesson, M. (2000), “Social identity and the problem of loyalty in knowledge‐intensive companies”, Journal of Management Studies, Vol. 37 No. 8, pp. 1101‐23.

5. Andrews, A.B. (2004), “Start at the end: empowerment evaluation product planning”, Evaluation and Program Planning, Vol. 27 No. 3, pp. 275‐85.

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