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Training Engagement Theory: A Multilevel Perspective on the Effectiveness of Work-Related Training

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextDescription: 732–756 pSubject(s): In: DEBORAH E. RUPP JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENTSummary: Training Engagement Theory: A Multilevel Perspective on the Effectiveness of Work-Related Training Traci Sitzmann, Justin M. Weinhardt First Published March 9, 2015 Research Article Download PDFPDF download for Training Engagement Theory: A Multilevel Perspective on the Effectiveness of Work-Related Training Article information Article has an altmetric score of 12 No Access Please click here for full access options Abstract Training engagement theory provides a multilevel depiction of the antecedents of training effectiveness. By multilevel, we are referring both to the hierarchical nature of constructs—such that employees are embedded in organizations and workgroups—and the temporal nature of processes—emphasizing that macro and within-person processes are not static phenomena. The hierarchical nature of training engagement theory provides a broad account of how processes at various levels in the organizational hierarchy influence one another and contribute to the success or failure of training programs. The temporal nature of the theory advocates for examining the processes that occur from before training is conceptualized until the completion of training when examining the antecedents of training effectiveness. Thus, training engagement theory proposes a sequence model of the independent and joint effects of establishing training goals, prioritizing those goals, and persisting during goal striving on training effectiveness. Finally, we propose testable multilevel propositions to spur future research.
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Item type Current library Call number Vol info Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
Journal Article Journal Article Main Library Vol 44, Issue 2/ 5558626JA13 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 5558626JA13
Journals and Periodicals Journals and Periodicals Main Library On Display Journal/MGT/Vol 44, Issue 2/5558626 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Vol 44, Issue 2 (03/03/2018) Not for loan February, 2018 5558626
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Training Engagement Theory: A Multilevel Perspective on the Effectiveness of Work-Related Training
Traci Sitzmann, Justin M. Weinhardt
First Published March 9, 2015 Research Article
Download PDFPDF download for Training Engagement Theory: A Multilevel Perspective on the Effectiveness of Work-Related Training Article information
Article has an altmetric score of 12 No Access
Please click here for full access options
Abstract

Training engagement theory provides a multilevel depiction of the antecedents of training effectiveness. By multilevel, we are referring both to the hierarchical nature of constructs—such that employees are embedded in organizations and workgroups—and the temporal nature of processes—emphasizing that macro and within-person processes are not static phenomena. The hierarchical nature of training engagement theory provides a broad account of how processes at various levels in the organizational hierarchy influence one another and contribute to the success or failure of training programs. The temporal nature of the theory advocates for examining the processes that occur from before training is conceptualized until the completion of training when examining the antecedents of training effectiveness. Thus, training engagement theory proposes a sequence model of the independent and joint effects of establishing training goals, prioritizing those goals, and persisting during goal striving on training effectiveness. Finally, we propose testable multilevel propositions to spur future research.

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