Evaluating Workforce Development
- 1 November 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Public Health Management & Practice
- Vol. 9 (6) , 489-495
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00124784-200311000-00008
Abstract
Evaluating workforce development for public health is a high priority for federal funders, public health agencies, trainees, trainers, and academic researchers. But each of these stakeholders has a different set of interests. Thus, the evolving science of training evaluation in the public health sector is being pulled simultaneously in a number of different directions, each emphasizing different methods, indicators, data-collection instruments, and reporting priorities. We pilot-tested the evaluation of a 30-hour, competency-based training course in a large urban health department. The evaluation processes included strategic, baseline assessment of organizational capacity by the agency; demographic data on trainees as required by the funder; a pre- and posttraining inventory of beliefs and attitudes followed by a posttraining trainee satisfaction survey as required by the trainers and the agency; and a 9-month posttraining follow-up survey and discussion of learning usefulness and organizational impact as desired by the academic researchers and the trainers. Routinely requiring all of these processes in training programs would be overly burdensome, time-consuming, and expensive. This pilot experience offers some important practical lessons for training evaluations in the future.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Joint Council of State and Local Health OfficialsJournal of Public Health Management & Practice, 2001
- Partnership for Front-Line SuccessJournal of Public Health Management & Practice, 2001
- Using the Essential Services as a Foundation for Performance Measurement and Assessment of Local Public Health SystemsJournal of Public Health Management & Practice, 2000