Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T15:16:34.918Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Part V - Workplace Learning from Other Lenses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 October 2017

Kenneth G. Brown
Affiliation:
University of Iowa
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References

About AHRD. 2015. The AHRD vision. http://www.ahrd.org/?about_ahrd_2 (accessed June 18, 2015).Google Scholar
About ATD. 2015. Association for Talent Development. http://www.astd.org/About (accessed June 12, 2015).Google Scholar
Aguinis, H., and Kraiger, K. 2009. Benefits of training and development for individuals and teams, organizations, and society. Annual Review of Psychology 60: 451474.Google Scholar
Aguinis, H., Bradley, K. J., and Brodersen, A. 2014. Industrial-organizational psychologists in business schools: Brain drain or eye opener? Industrial and Organizational Psychology 7(3): 284303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
American Psychological Association. 2015 . Journal of Applied Psychology. http://www.apa.org/pubs/journals/apl (accessed June 15, 2015).Google Scholar
Annett, J., and Stanton, N. 2006. Task analysis. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 21: 4578.Google Scholar
Announcement of New 2015 SIOP Fellows. 2015. SIOP. http://www.siop.org/fellows/2015Fellows.aspx (accessed June 1, 2015).Google Scholar
Argote, L., and Todorova, G. 2007. Organizational learning. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 22: 193234.Google Scholar
Arneson, J., Rothwell, W., and Naughton, J. 2013 . Training and development competencies redefined to create competitive advantage. T&D 67(1): 4247.Google Scholar
Arnold, J., and Cohen, L. 2008. The psychology of careers in industrial and organizational settings: A critical but appreciative analysis. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 23: 144.Google Scholar
Ashforth, B. E., Sluss, D. M., and Harrison, S. H. 2007. Socialization in organizational contexts. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 22: 170.Google Scholar
ATD. 2014. 2014 Annual Report. Alexandria, VA: ATD.Google Scholar
Avery, D. R., and McKay, P. F. 2010. Doing diversity right: An empirically based approach to effective diversity management. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 25: 221252.Google Scholar
Avolio, B. J., and Chan, A. 2008. The dawning of a new era for genuine leadership development. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 23: 197238.Google Scholar
Baldwin, T. T., Ford, J. K., and Blume, B. D. 2009. Transfer of training 1988–2008: An updated review and agenda for future research. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 24: 4170.Google Scholar
Beier, M. E. 2008. Age and learning in organizations. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 23: 83105.Google Scholar
Bell, B. S. 2015. Personal communication, editor, Personnel Psychology, June 17.Google Scholar
Bell, B. S., and Ford, J. K. 2007. Reactions to skill assessment: The forgotten factor in explaining motivation to learn. Human Resource Development Quarterly 18(1): 3362.Google Scholar
Benjamin, L. T., Jr. 1997. A history of Division 14 (The Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology). In Dewsbury, D. A., ed. Unification through Division: Histories of the Divisions of the American Psychological Association, Vol. II, Washington, DC: APA.Google Scholar
Billett, S. 2014. Technical and vocational learning. In Poell, R. F., Rocco, T. S., and Roth, G. L., eds., The Routledge Companion to Human Resource Development, 30–39. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Brown, K. G., Charlier, S. D. and Pierotti, A. 2012. e-Learning at work: Contributions of past research and suggestions for the future. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 27: 89114.Google Scholar
Brown, T. C., McCracken, M., and Hillier, T. L. 2013. Using evidence-based practices to enhance transfer of training: Assessing the effectiveness of goal setting and behavioural observation scales. Human Resource Development International 16(4): 374389.Google Scholar
Burke, M. J., Holman, D., and Birdi, K. 2006. A walk on the safe side: The implications of learning theory for developing effective safety and health training. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 21: 144.Google Scholar
Campbell, J. P. 1971. Personnel training and development. Annual Review of Psychology 22: 565602.Google Scholar
Cascio, W. F. 2007. The costs – and benefits – of human resources. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 22: 71109.Google Scholar
Cascio, W. F. 2008. To prosper, organizational psychology should ... bridge application and scholarship. Journal of Organizational Behavior 29: 455468.Google Scholar
Cascio, W. F., and Aguinis, H. 2008. Research in industrial and organizational psychology from 1963 to 2007: Changes, choices, and trends. Journal of Applied Psychology 93(5): 10621081.Google Scholar
Collings, D. G. 2014. Toward mature talent management: Beyond shareholder value. Human Resource Development Quarterly 25(3): 301319.Google Scholar
Communities of Practice. 2015. ATD. https://www.td.org/Communities-of-Practice (accessed June 2, 2015).Google Scholar
Cook, A., and Glass, C. 2014. Do diversity reputation signals increase share value? Human Resource Development Quarterly 25(4): 471491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cortina, J. 2014. About us: President’s message. SIOP. http://www.siop.org/siophoshin.aspx (accessed October 6, 2014).Google Scholar
Cushenbery, L. D., and Gabriel, A. S. 2014. Reappraising the brain drain: Collaboration as a catalyst for innovation in industrial–organizational research. Industrial and Organizational Psychology 7: 347351.Google Scholar
Dachner, A. M., Saxton, B. M., Noe, R. A., and Keeton, K. E. 2013. To infinity and beyond: Using a narrative approach to identify training needs for unknown and dynamic situations. Human Resource Development Quarterly 24(2): 239267.Google Scholar
Daley, B. J., and Cervero, R. M. 2014. Continuing professional education, development, and learning. In Poell, R. F., Rocco, T. S., and Roth, G. L., eds., Routledge Companion to Human Resource Development, 40–49. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Davis, P., Naughton, J., and Rothwell, W. J. 2004. New roles and competencies for the profession. T&D 58(4): 26–36.Google Scholar
Dewe, P., and Cooper, C. L. 2007. Coping research and measurement in the context of work related stress. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 22: 141192.Google Scholar
Dierdorff, E. C., Surface, E. A., and Brown, K. G. 2010. Frame-of-reference training effectiveness: Effects of goal orientation and self-efficacy on affective, cognitive, skill-based, and transfer outcomes. Journal of Applied Psychology 95(6): 11811191.Google Scholar
Dinero, D. 2005. Training Within Industry: The Foundation of Lean. Portland, OR: Productivity Press.Google Scholar
Dooley, L. M., 2004. AHRD and ASTD: Competitors or collaborators? Human Resource Development Quarterly 15(4): 359361.Google Scholar
Ellinger, A. D. 2014. Celebrating 25 years of HRD scholarship: Happy silver anniversary Human Resource Development Quarterly! Human Resource Development Quarterly 25(1): 13.Google Scholar
Farr, J. L. 1997. Organized I/O psychology: Past, present, future. SIOP Presidential Address, April 11, St. Louis. http://www.siop.org/tip/backissues/tipjul97/Farr.aspx (accessed June 12, 2015).Google Scholar
Ford, J. K., ed. 2014. Improving Training Effectiveness in Work Organizations. East Sussex, UK: Psychology Press.Google Scholar
Goldstein, I. L. 1974. Training: Program Development and Evaluation. Monterey, CA: Brooks/Cole.Google Scholar
Goldstein, I. L. 1980. Training in work organizations. Annual Review of Psychology 31: 229272.Google Scholar
Goldstein, I. L., and Ford, K. 2002. Training in Organizations: Needs Assessment, Development, and Evaluation, 4th ed. Boston: Wadsworth.Google Scholar
Gosser, K., and Cumberland, D. 2014. Employee and customer satisfaction in the restaurant industry: Research-driven interventions. http://c.ymcdn.com/sites/ahrd.site-ym.com/resource/resmgr/Docs/scholarlyawardwinner2014.pdf (accessed June 2, 2015).Google Scholar
Grant, A. M., Passmore, J., Cavanagh, M. J., and Parker, H. M. 2010. The state of play in coaching today: A comprehensive review of the field. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 25: 125167.Google Scholar
Gubbins, C., and Rousseau, D. M. 2015. Embracing translational HRD research for evidence-based management: Let’s talk about how to bridge the research–practice gap. Human Resource Development Quarterly 26(2): 109125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gubler, M., Arnold, J., and Coombs, C. 2014. Reassessing the protean career concept: Empirical findings, conceptual components, and measurement. Journal of Organizational Behavior S35: S23S40.Google Scholar
Hamlin, B., and Stewart, J. 2011. What is HRD? A definitional review and synthesis of the HRD domain. Journal of European Industrial Training 35(3): 199220.Google Scholar
Hardy, C., and Tolhurst, D. 2014. Epistemological beliefs and cultural diversity matters in management education and learning: A critical review and future directions. Academy of Management Learning and Education 13(2): 265289.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hatcher, T. 2006. An editor’s challenge to human resource development. Human Resource Development Quarterly 17(1): 14.Google Scholar
Heller, F. A., and Clark, A. W. 1976. Personnel and human resources development. Annual Review of Psychology 27: 405435.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holladay, C. L., and Quiñones, M. A. 2005. Reactions to diversity training: An international comparison. Human Resource Development Quarterly 16(4): 529545.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
HoltonIII, E. F., and Naquin, S. 2005. A critical analysis of HRD evaluation models from a decision-making perspective. Human Resource Development Quarterly 16(2): 257280.Google Scholar
HRDQ. 2015. HRDQ board meeting minutes, February 21.Google Scholar
Hutchins, H. M., and Burke, L. A. 2007. Identifying trainers’ knowledge of training transfer research findings – closing the gap between research and practice. International Journal of Training and Development 11(4): 236264.Google Scholar
Illeris, K. 2014. Adult learning. In Poell, R. F., Rocco, T. S., and Roth, G. L., eds., Routledge Companion to Human Resource Development, 21–29. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Ireland, R. D. 2012. Management research and managerial practice: A complex and controversial relationship. Academy of Management Learning and Education 11(2): 263271.Google Scholar
Jacobs, R. 2016. President’s report to the membership, 2015. http://c.ymcdn.com/sites/ahrd.site-ym.com/resource/resmgr/Docs/2015-AHRD-Pres-Report.pdf (accessed June 1, 2015).Google Scholar
Jacobs, R. L. 2009. What to research? Human Resource Development Quarterly 20(1): 1113.Google Scholar
Keefer, J., and Yap, R. 2007. Is HRD research making a difference in practice? Human Resource Development Quarterly 18(4): 449455.Google Scholar
Kessels, J. 2014. Andragogy. In Poell, R. F., Rocco, T. S., and Roth, G. L., eds., Routledge Companion to Human Resource Development, 13–20. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kirkpatrick, D. 1959. Techniques for evaluating training programs. Journal of the American Society for Training and Development 13(11): 39.Google Scholar
Kochan, T., Finegold, D., and Osterman, P. 2012. Who can fix the “middle-skills” gap? Harvard Business Review 90(12): 8190.Google Scholar
Koppes, L. L. n.d. A brief history of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, Inc., A Division of the APA. SIOP. http://www.siop.org/History/historynew.aspx (accessed June 12, 2014).Google Scholar
Koppes, L. L. 1997. Preserving the history of APA Division 14/SIOP. The Industrial-Organizational Psychologist 34(3): 3739.Google Scholar
Kozlowski, S. W. J., and Salas, E., eds. 2009. Learning, Training, and Development in Organizations. New York: Routledge Academic.Google Scholar
Kraiger, K. 2014. Looking back and looking forward: Trends in training and development research. Human Resource Development Quarterly 25(4): 401408.Google Scholar
Kraiger, K., ed. 2002. Creating, Implementing, and Managing Effective Training and Development. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Latham, G. P. 1988. Human resource training and development. Annual Review of Psychology 39: 545582.Google Scholar
Lee, M. 2014. The history, status, and future of HRD. In Poell, R. F., Rocco, T. S., and Roth, G. L., eds., Routledge Companion to Human Resource Development, 3–12. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Leubsdorf, B. 2014 . U.S. news: White House sets sights on skills gap in workforce. Wall Street Journal, July 23, A2.Google Scholar
Levy, P. E. 2009. Industrial Organizational Psychology: Understanding the Workplace, 3rd ed. New York: Worth.Google Scholar
Lyons, S., and Kuron, L. 2014. Generational differences in the workplace: A review of the evidence and directions for future research. Journal of Organizational Behavior S35: 139157.Google Scholar
Madera, J. M., Steele, S. T., and Beier, M. 2011. The temporal effect of training utility perceptions on adopting a trained method: The role of perceived organizational support. Human Resource Development Quarterly 22(1): 6986.Google Scholar
Major, D. A., and Cleveland, J. N. 2007. Strategies for reducing work-family conflict: Applying research and best practices from industrial and organizational psychology. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 22: 111140.Google Scholar
McLagan, P. A. 1989. Models for HRD practice. Training and Development Journal 41(9): 49–59.Google Scholar
MED. 2014. Spring/Summer 2014 newsletter. http://division.aomonline.org/med/ (accessed October 27, 2014).Google Scholar
Morgeson, F. P., and Lepak, D. 2015. Five-year review (2010–2014) of the Academy of Management Human Resources Division. http://www.hrdiv.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/HR-Division-5-Year-Report-Final.pdf (accessed June 2, 2015).Google Scholar
Nadler, L. 1970. Developing Human Resources. Houston: Gulf Publishing.Google Scholar
Noe, R. A. 2013. Employee Training and Development, 6th ed. Burr Ridge, IL: McGraw-Hill/Irwin.Google Scholar
Outstanding HRD Scholar Award. 2015. Academy of Human Resource Development. http://www.ahrd.org/?outstanding_award (accessed June 12, 2015).Google Scholar
Personnel Psychology. 2015. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1744–6570 (accessed June 15, 2015).Google Scholar
Poell, R. F., Rocco, T. S., and Roth, G. L., eds. 2014. The Routledge Companion to Human Resource Development. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Reio, T. G. 2009. Contributing to the emergent research method conversation. Human Resource Development Quarterly 20(2): 143146.Google Scholar
Swanson, Richard A. Research Excellence Award. 2015. AHRD. http://www.ahrd.org/general/custom.asp?page=richard_a_swanson (accessed June 2, 2015).Google Scholar
Russ-Eft, D., Watkins, K. E., Marsick, V. J., Jacobs, R. L., and McLean, G. N. 2014. What do the next 25 years hold for HRD research in areas of our interest? Human Resource Development Quarterly 25(1): 527.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rynes, S. L. 2012. The research-practice gap in I/O psychology and related fields: Challenges and potential solutions. In S. W. J. Kozlowski ed., Oxford University Handbook of Organizational Psychology, 1: 409–453. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Rynes, S. L., Giluk, T. L., and Brown, K. G. 2007. The very separate worlds of academic and practitioner periodicals in human resource management: Implications for evidence-based management. Academy of Management Journal 50(5): 9871008.Google Scholar
Rynes, S. L., Rousseau, D. M., and Barends, E. 2014. From the guest editors: Change the world: Teach evidence-based practice! Academy of Management Learning and Education 13(3): 305321.Google Scholar
Sadler-Smith, E. 2014. HRD research and design science: Recasting interventions as artefacts. Human Resource Development International 17(2): 129144.Google Scholar
Salas, E., and Cannon-Bowers, J. A. 2001. The science of training: A decade of progress. Annual Review of Psychology 52: 471499.Google Scholar
Salas, E., and Kosarzycki, M. P. 2003. Why don’t organizations pay attention to (and use) findings from the science of training? Human Resource Development Quarterly 14(4): 487491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salas, E., Cannon-Bowers, J. A., Rhodenizer, L., and Bowers, C. A. 1999. Training in organizations: Myths, misconceptions, and mistaken assumptions. Research in Personnel and Human Resources Management 17: 123162.Google Scholar
Salas, E., Tannenbaum, S. I., Kraiger, K., and Smith-Jentsch, K. A. 2012. The science of training and development in organizations: What matters in practice. Psychological Science 13(2): 74101.Google Scholar
Schmitt, N., and Ford, J. K. 2014. Frederick R. Wickert (1912–2013). American Psychologist 69(3): 304.Google Scholar
Short, D. C. 2006. Closing the gap between research and practice in HRD. Human Resource Development Quarterly 17(3): 343350.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
SHRM. 2015. Michael R. Losey Excellence in Human Resource Research Award. http://www.shrm.org/about/awards/pages/loseyaward.aspx (accessed June 19, 2015).Google Scholar
Silzer, R., and Parson, C. 2013. Trends in SIOP membership, graduate education, and member satisfaction. TIP: The Industrial-Organizational Psychologist 50(4): 135149.Google Scholar
SIOP Fellows. 2014. Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology. http://www.siop.org/siop_fellows.aspx (accessed October 8, 2014).Google Scholar
SIOP Membership Services. 2015. Personal communication, June 2.Google Scholar
Soken, N. H., and Barnes, K B. 2014. What kills innovation? Your role as a leader in supporting an innovative culture. Industrial and Commercial Training 46(1): 715.Google Scholar
Stanhope, D. S., PondIII, S. B., and Surface, E. A. 2013. Core self-evaluations and training effectiveness: Prediction through motivational intervening mechanisms. Journal of Applied Psychology 98(5): 820831.Google Scholar
Swanson, R. A., and Holton, E. F., III 2009. Foundations of Human Resource Development, 2nd ed. San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler.Google Scholar
Tannenbaum, S. I., and Yukl, G. 1992. Training and development in work organizations. Annual Review of Psychology 43: 399441.Google Scholar
Tsui, A. S. 2013. Making research engaged: Implications for HRD scholarship. Human Resource Development Quarterly 24(2): 137143.Google Scholar
U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the United States. 2012. Education: Higher education: Degrees. Table 302, p. 190. Bachelor’s degrees earned by field: 1980–2009. https://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s0302.pdf (accessed June 12, 2015).Google Scholar
Wang, G. G., Sun, J. Y., Werner, J. M., Gilley, J. W., and Gilley, A. 2015. Re-conceptualizing the definition of HRD: A gateway to new research frontiers. Paper presented at the 2015 Academy of Human Resource Development International Conference, St. Louis, MS.Google Scholar
Werner, J. M. 2014. Human resource management and HRD: Connecting the dots, or ships passing in the night? In Poell, R. F., Rocco, T. S., and Roth, G. L., eds. Routledge Companion to Human Resource Development, 89–98. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Werner, J. M. 2017. Human Resource Development/Talent Development, 7th ed. Mason, OH: Cengage.Google Scholar
Werner, J. M., and DeSimone, R. L. 2012. Human Resource Development, 6th ed. Mason, OH: Cengage.Google Scholar
Wexley, K. N. 1984. Personnel training. Annual Review of Psychology 35: 519551.Google Scholar
Wexley, K. N., and Latham, G. P. 1981. Developing and Training Human Resources in Organizations. Glenview, IL: Scott, Foresman.Google Scholar
Wexley, K. N., and Latham, G. P. 2001. Developing and Training Human Resources in Organizations, 3rd ed. Glenview, IL: Scott, Foresman.Google Scholar
Wood, J. 2015. Personal communication, editorial assistant, Journal of Applied Psychology, June 17.Google Scholar

References

Aguinis, H., and Kraiger, K. 2009. Benefits of training and development for individuals and teams, organizations, and society. Annual Review of Psychology 60(1): 451–474.Google Scholar
Andrews, R. Boyne, G. A., Meier, K. J., O’Toole, L. J., and Walker, R. M. 2012. Vertical strategic alignment and public service performance. Public Administration 90(1): 7798.Google Scholar
Arthur, W. J., Bennett, W. J., and Edens, P. S. 2003. Effectiveness of training in organizations: A meta-analysis of design and evaluation features. Journal of Applied Psychology 88(2): 234–245.Google Scholar
Atkinson, Richard C. 1990. Supply and demand for scientists and engineers: A national crisis in the making. Science 248(4954): 425432.Google Scholar
Ayers, R. S. 2015. Aligning individual and organizational performance: Goal alignment in federal government agency performance appraisal programs. Public Personnel Management 44(2): 169191.Google Scholar
Baldwin, T. T., and Magjuka, R. J. 1991. Organizational training and signals of importance: Linking pre-training perceptions to intentions to transfer. Human Resource Development Quarterly 2: 2536.Google Scholar
Barber, J. 2004. Skill upgrading within informal training: lessons from the Indian auto mechanic. International Journal of Training & Development 8(2): 128–139.Google Scholar
Barney, J. B. 1991. Firm resources and sustained competitive advantage. Journal of Management 17: 99120.Google Scholar
Barney, J. B. 1986. Types of competition and the theory of strategy: Toward an integrative framework. Academy of Management Review 11(4): 791–800.Google Scholar
Barney, J. B., and Wright, P. M. 1998. On becoming a strategic partner: The role of human resources in gaining competitive advantage. Human Resource Management 37: 3146.Google Scholar
Becker, B. E., and Huselid, M. A. 2006. Strategic human resources management: Where do we go from here? Journal of Management 32: 898925.Google Scholar
Becker, G. S. 1964. Human Capital. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Bigley, G. A., and Roberts, K. H. 2001. The incident command system: High reliability organizing for complex and volatile task environments. Academy of Management Journal 44(6): 12811299.Google Scholar
Bluestone, B., and Melnik, M. 2010. After the recovery: Help needed. http://www.encore.org/files/research/JobsBluestonePaper3-5–10.pdf (accessed May 21, 2017).Google Scholar
Broad, M. L., and Newstrom, J. W. 1992. Transfer of training: Action-packed strategies to ensure high payoff from training investments. ERIC, EBSCOhost (accessed May 21, 2017).Google Scholar
Brown, K. G., & Gerhardt, M. W. 2002. Formative evaluation: An integrative practice model and case study. Personnel Psychology 55(4): 951–983.Google Scholar
Campbell, B. A., Coff, R., and Kryscynski, D. 2012. Rethinking sustained competitive advantage from human capital. Academy of Management Review 37: 376395.Google Scholar
Cappelli, P. 1995. Rethinking the “skills gap.” California Management Review 37(4): 108–24.Google Scholar
Carnevale, Anthony. 2005. The coming labor and skills shortage. Training and Development 59(1): 3741.Google Scholar
Carnevale, A. P., Smith, N., and Strohl, J. 2010. Help wanted: Projections of jobs and education requirements through 2018. Washington, DC: Center on Education and the Workforce, Georgetown University.Google Scholar
Carnevale, A. P., Gainer, L. J., and Villet, J. 1990. Training in America: The Organization and Strategic Role of Training. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Cassner-Lotto, J., and Associates. 1988. Successful Training Strategies. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Coff, R. W. 1997. Human assets and management dilemmas: Coping with hazards on the road to resource-based theory. Academy of Management Review 22: 374402.Google Scholar
Dickinson, G., and Puleo, M. 2008. Chronic misalignment. Deloitte Review 2: 3749.Google Scholar
Dubey, R., and Gunasekaran, A. 2015. Shortage of sustainable supply chain talent: An industrial training framework. Industrial and Commercial Training 47(2): 8694.Google Scholar
Fujita, S. 2014. On the causes of declines in the labor force participation rate. Philadelphia, PA: Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Goldstein, I. L. 1993. Training in Organizations, 3rd ed. Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks/Cole.Google Scholar
Hatch, N. W., and Dyer, J. H. (2004). Human capital and learning as a source of sustainable competitive advantage. Strategic Management Journal 25(12): 1155–1178.Google Scholar
Hitt, M. A., Biermant, L., Shimizu, K., and Kochhar, R. 2001. Direct and moderating effects of human capital on strategy and performance in professional service firms: A resource-based perspective. Academy of Management Journal 44(1): 13–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huang, J. L., Ford, J. K., and Ryan, A. M. 2016. Ignored no more: Within-person variability enables better understanding of training transfer. Personnel Psychology 70(3): 557–596.Google Scholar
Huselid, M. A. 1995. The impact of human resource management practices on turnover, productivity, and corporate financial performance. Academy of Management Journal 38: 635672.Google Scholar
Jiang, K., Lepak, D. P., Hu, J., and Baer, J. 2012. How does human resource management influence organizational outcomes? A meta-analytic investigation of the mediating mechanisms. Academy of Management Journal 6: 12641294.Google Scholar
Kim, Y., and Ployhart, R. E. 2014. The effects of staffing and training on firm productivity and profit growth before, during, and after the Great Recession. Journal of Applied Psychology 99: 361389.Google Scholar
Kozlowski, S. W. J., Brown, K. G., Weissbein, D. A., Cannon-Bowers, J. A., and Salas, E. (2000). A multilevel approach to training effectiveness: Enhancing horizontal and vertical transfer. In K. J. Klein, S. J. Kozlowski, K. J. Klein, S. J. Kozlowski, eds., Multilevel Theory, Research, and Methods in Organizations: Foundations, Extensions, and New Directions, 157–210. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Kozlowski, S. W. J., Gully, S. M., Brown, K. G., Salas, E., Smith, E. M., and Nason, E. R. 2001. Effects of training goals and goal orientation traits on multidimensional training outcomes and performance adaptability. Organizational Behavior & Human Decision Processes 85(1): 1–31.Google Scholar
Kozlowski, S. W. J., and Klein, K. J. 2000. A multilevel approach to theory and research in organizations: Contextual, temporal, and emergent processes. In Klein, K. J., and Kozlowski, S. W. J., eds., Multilevel Theory, Research, and Methods in Organizations: Foundations, Extensions, and New Directions, 3–90. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Kraaijenbrink, J., Spender, J.C., and Groen, A. J. 2010. The resource-based view: A review and assessment of its critiques. Journal of Management 36: 349372.Google Scholar
Kraiger, K., and Culbertson, S. S. 2013. Understanding and facilitating learning: Advancements in training and development. In N. W. Schmitt, S. Highhouse, I. B. Weiner, N. W. Schmitt, S. Highhouse, and I. B. Weiner, eds., Handbook of Psychology: Industrial and Organizational Psychology, 2nd ed., 12: 244–261. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons Inc.Google Scholar
Kraiger, K., and Ford, J. K. 2006. The expanding role of workplace training: Themes and trends influencing training research and practice. Koppers, L. L, ed., Historical Perspectives in Industrial and Organizational Psychology, 281309. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.Google Scholar
Kristof-Brown, A. L., Zimmerman, R. D., and Johnson, E. C. 2005. Consequences of individuals’ fit at work: A meta-analysis of person–job, person–organization, person–group, and person–supervisor fit. Personnel Psychology 58: 281342.Google Scholar
Hill, C. E., and Lent, R. W. 2006. A narrative and meta-analytic review of helping skills training: Time to revive a dormant area of inquiry. Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, Practice, Training 43(2): 154–172.Google Scholar
MacLean, R. 2005. Map your value proposition: Strategy maps can reveal how EHS contributes to the business. Environmental Protection 16(6): 1214.Google Scholar
Maden, Ceyda, and Kabasakal, Hayat. 2014. The simultaneous effects of fit with organizations, jobs and supervisors on major employee outcomes in Turkish banks: Does organizational support matter? The International Journal of Human Resource Management 25(3): 341366.Google Scholar
ManPowerGroup. 2010. Teachable Fit: A new approach for easing the talent mismatch. http://us.manpower.com/us/en/multimedia/fresh-perspective-hardest-jobs-to-fill.pdf (accessed May 21, 2017).Google Scholar
Martin, R. L. 2014. The big lie of strategic planning. Harvard Business Review, January/February.Google Scholar
Martocchio, J. J., and Baldwin, T. J. 1997. The evolution of strategic organizational training: New objectives and research agenda. In G. R. Ferris, ed., Research in Personnel and Human Resources Management 15: 1–46. Greenwich, Conn. and London.Google Scholar
McKinsey Global Institute. 2012. The world at work: Jobs, pay and skills for 3.5 billion people. http://www.mckinsey.com/insights/employment_and_growth/the_world_atwork (accessed May 21, 2017).Google Scholar
Nguyen, T. N., Truong, Q., and Buyens, D. 2010. The relationship between training and firm performance: A literature review. Research & Practice In Human Resource Management 18(1): 36–45.Google Scholar
Noe, R. 2012. Employee Training and Development, 6th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill Higher Education.Google Scholar
Noe, R. A., Clarke, A. M., and Klein, H. J. 2014. Learning in the twenty-first-century workplace. Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior 1: 245275.Google Scholar
Nyberg, A. J., Moliterno, T. P., Hale, D., and Lepak, D. P. 2014. Resource-based perspectives on unit-level human capital: A review and integration. Journal of Management 40: 316346.Google Scholar
Olian, J. D., Durham, C. C., Kristof, A. L., Brown, K. G., Pierce, R. M., and Kunder, L. 1998. Designing management training and development for competitive advantage: Lessons from the best. Human Resource Planning 21(1): 20–31.Google Scholar
O’Reilly, C. A., III, Chatman, J., and Caldwell, D. F. 1991. People and organizational culture: A profile comparison approach to assessing person–organization fit. Academy of Management Journal 34: 487516.Google Scholar
Peteraf, M. A., and Barney, J. B. 2003. Unraveling the resource-based tangle. Managerial and Decision Economics 24: 309323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ployhart, R. E. 2015. Strategic organizational behavior (STROBE): The missing voice in the strategic human capital conversation. Academy of Management Perspectives 29(3): 342–356.Google Scholar
Ployhart, R. E. 2012. Personnel selection and the competitive advantage of firms. In Hodgkinson, G. P., and Ford, J. K., eds., International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology, 27: 153–195. Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Ployhart, R. E., and Hale, D. 2014. The fascinating psychological microfoundations of strategy and competitive advantage. Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior 1: 145172.Google Scholar
Ployhart, R. E., and Moliterno, T. P. 2011. Emergence of the human capital resource: A multilevel model. Academy of Management Review 36: 127150.Google Scholar
Ployhart, R. E., Van Iddekinge, C. H. and MacKenzie, W. 2011. Acquiring and developing human capital for sustained competitive advantage: The interconnectedness of generic and specific human capital resources. Academy of Management Journal 54: 353368.Google Scholar
Ployhart, R. E., Nyberg, A. J., Reilly, G., and Maltarich, M. A. 2014. Human capital is dead: Long live human capital resources! Journal of Management 40: 371398.Google Scholar
Porter, M. E. 1980. Competitive Strategy: Techniques for Analyzing Industries and Competitors. New York: The Free Press.Google Scholar
Posthuma, R. A., Campion, M. C., Masimova, M., and Campion, M. A. 2013. A high performance work practices taxonomy: Integrating the literature and directing future research. Journal of Management 39: 11841220.Google Scholar
Rajasekar, J. 2013. A comparative analysis of mission statement content and readability. Journal of Management Policy and Practice 14(6): 131147.Google Scholar
Reed, J., and Vakola, M. 2006. What role can a training needs analysis play in organisational change? Journal of Organizational Change Management 19: 393407.Google Scholar
Richard, P. J., Devinney, T. M., Yip, G. S., and Johnson, G. 2009. Measuring organizational performance: Towards methodological best practice. Journal of Management 35: 718804.Google Scholar
Robinson, D. G., and Robinson, J. 1989. Training for impact. Training & Development Journal 43(8): 34.Google Scholar
Satterfield, J., and Hughes, E. 2007. Emotion skills training for medical students: A systematic review. Medical Education 41(10): 935–941.Google Scholar
Simon, M. A., Gunia, B., Martin, E. J., Foucar, C. E., Kundu, T., Ragas, D. M., and Emanuel, L. L. 2013. Path toward economic resilience for family caregivers: Mitigating household deprivation and the health care talent shortage at the same time. The Gerontologist 53(5): 861873.Google Scholar
Sirmon, D. G., Hitt, M. A., and Ireland, R. D. 2007. Managing firm resources in dynamic environments to create value: Looking inside the black box. Academy of Management Review 32: 273292.Google Scholar
Sung, S. Y., and Choi, J. N. 2014. Do organizations spend wisely on employees? Effects of training and development investments on learning and innovation in organizations. Journal of Organizational Behavior 35(3): 393–412.Google Scholar
Tannenbaum, S. I. 1997. Enhancing continuous learning: Diagnostic findings from multiple companies. Human Resource Management 36: 437452.Google Scholar
Tannenbaum, S. I. 2002. A strategic view of organizational training and learning. In Kraiger, K., ed., Creating, Implementing, and Managing Effective Training and Development, 1052. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Tharenou, P., Saks, A. M., and Moore, C. 2007. A review and critique of research on training and organizational-level outcomes. Human Resource Management Review 17(3): 251–273.Google Scholar
Van Iddekinge, C. H., Ferris, G. R., Perrewé, P. L., Blass, F. R., Perryman, A. A., and Heetderks, T. D. 2009. Effects of selection and training on unit-level performance over time: A latent growth modeling approach. Journal of Applied Psychology 94(4): 829–843.Google Scholar
Venneberg, D. L., and Eversole, B. W. 2010. The Boomer Retirement Time Bomb: How Companies Can Avoid the Fallout from the Coming Skills Shortage. Santa Barbara, CA: Praeger.Google Scholar
Wernerfelt, B. 1984. A resource-based view of the firm. Strategic Management Journal 5: 171180.Google Scholar
Zwick, T. 2006. The impact of training intensity on establishment productivity. Industrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society 45: 2646.Google Scholar

References

Aguinis, H., and Gottfredson, R. K. 2010. Best-practice recommendations for estimating interaction effects using moderating multiple regression. Journal of Organizational Behavior 31: 776786.Google Scholar
Aguinis, H., and Kraiger, K. 2009. Benefits of training and development for individuals, teams, organizations, and society. Annual Review of Psychology 60: 451–74.Google Scholar
Anderson, E. W., Fornell, C., and Lehmann, D. R. 1994. Customer satisfaction, market share and profitability: Findings from Sweden. Journal of Marketing 58: 5366.Google Scholar
Arthur, W. J., Bennett, W. J., Edens, P., Bell, S. T. 2003. Effectiveness of training in organizations: A meta-analysis of design and evaluation features. Journal of Applied Psychology 88: 234245.Google Scholar
Ballesteros, J. L., and De Saá, P. 2012. The influence of organisational context on training success in the restaurant industry. Service Industries Journal 32: 12651282.Google Scholar
Beck, J., Lalopa, J., and Hall, J. 2003. Insuring quality service: Training mystery shoppers. Journal of Human Resources in Hospitality and Tourism 2: 4157.Google Scholar
Bell, B. S., and Kozlowski, S. W. J. 2008. Active learning: Effects of core training design elements on self-regulatory processes, learning, and adaptability. Journal of Applied Psychology 93: 296316.Google Scholar
Bernhardt, K., Donthu, N., and Kennett, P. 2000. The relationship among customer satisfaction, employee satisfaction, and profitability: A longitudinal analysis. Journal of Business Research 47: 161172.Google Scholar
Blume, B. D., Ford, J. K., Baldwin, T. T., and Huang, J. L. 2010 Transfer of training: A meta-analytic review. Journal of Management 36: 10651105.Google Scholar
Brown, K. G., and Sitzmann, T. 2011. Training and employee development for improved performance. In Zedeck, S., ed., APA Handbook of Industrial and Organizational Psychology, 2: 469503. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.Google Scholar
Brown, K. G., Charlier, S. D., and Pierotti, A. 2012. E-learning at work: Contributions of past research and suggestions for the future. International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 27: 89114.Google Scholar
Burke, L. A., and Hutchins, H. M. 2007. Training transfer: An integrative review. Human Resource Development Review 6: 263296.Google Scholar
Butcher, K., Sparks, B., and McColl-Kennedy, J. 2009. Predictors of customer service training in hospitality firms. International Journal of Hospitality Management 28: 389396.Google Scholar
Camp, R. R., Schulz, E., Vielhaber, M. W., and Wagner-Marsh, F. 2011. Human resource professionals’ perceptions of interviewer training. Journal of Managerial Issues 23: 250268.Google Scholar
Chen, L-C., and Tseng, C-Y. 2012. Benefits of cross-functional training: Three departments of hotel line supervisors in Taiwan. Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Management 19: 18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chiaburu, D. S. and Marinova, S. V. 2005. What predicts skill transfer? An exploratory study of goal orientation, training self-efficacy, and organizational supports. International Journal of Training and Development 9: 110123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chiang, C-F., Back, K-J., and Canter, D. D. 2005. The impact of employee training on job satisfaction and intention to stay in the hotel industry. Journal of Human Resources in Hospitality & Tourism 4: 99118.Google Scholar
Choi, W., and Jacobs, R. L. 2011. Influence of formal learning, personal learning orientation, and supportive learning environment on informal learning. Human Resource Development Quarterly 22: 239257.Google Scholar
Choi, Y., and Dickson, D. R. 2010. A case study into the benefits of management training programs: Impacts on hotel employee turnover and satisfaction level. Journal of Human Resources in Hospitality and Tourism 9: 103116.Google Scholar
Christoph, R. T., Schoenfeld, Jr., G. A., and Tansky, J. W. 1998. Overcoming barriers to training utilizing technology: The influence of self-efficacy factors on multimedia-based training receptiveness. Human Resource Development Quarterly 9: 2538.Google Scholar
Colquitt, J. A., LePine, J. A., and Noe, R. A. 2000. Toward an integrative theory of training motivation: A meta-analytic path analysis of 20 years of research. Journal of Applied Psychology 85: 678707.Google Scholar
Costen, W. M. and Salazar, J. 2011. The impact of training and development on employee job satisfaction, loyalty, and intent to stay in the lodging industry. Journal of Human Resources in Hospitality and Tourism 10: 273284.Google Scholar
Cox, C., Burgess, S., Sellitto, C., and Buultjens, J. 2009. The roles of user-generated content in tourists’ travel planning behavior. Journal of Hospitality Marketing and Management 18: 743764.Google Scholar
Doornbos, A. J., Simons, R. J., and Denessen, E. 2008. Relations between characteristics of workplace practices and types of informal work-related learning: A survey study among Dutch police. Human Resource Development Quarterly 19: 129151.Google Scholar
Facteau, J. D., Dobbins, G. H., Russell, J. E. A., Ladd, R. T., and Kudisch, J. D. 1995. The influence of general perceptions of the training environment on pretraining motivation and perceived training transfer. Journal of Management 21: 125.Google Scholar
Fowlkes, J. E., Salas, E., Baker, D. P., Cannon-Bowers, J. A., and Stout, R. J. 2000. The utility of event-based knowledge elicitation. Human Factors 42: 2435.Google Scholar
Frash, R., Antun, J. Kline, S., and Almanza, B. 2010. Like it! Learn it! Use it? Cornell Hospitality Quarterly 51: 398414.Google Scholar
Frash, R., Kline, S., Almanza, B., and Antun, J. 2008. Support for a multi-level evaluation framework in hospitality training. Journal of Human Resources in Hospitality 7: 197218.Google Scholar
Gultek, M. M., Dodd, T. H., and Guydosh, R.M. 2006. Attitudes towards wine-service training and its influence on restaurant wine sales. International Journal of Hospitality Management 25: 432446.Google Scholar
Heskett, J. L., Sasser, Jr., W. E., and Schlesinger, L. A. 1997. The Service Profit Chain. New York: The Free Press.Google Scholar
Hinkin, T. R., and Tracey, J. B. 2010 What makes it so great? An analysis of HR practices among Fortune’s best companies in the hospitality and service segments. Cornell Hospitality Quarterly 51: 158170.Google Scholar
Holton, E. F., III 2005. Holton’s evaluation model: New evidence and construct elaborations. Advances in Developing Human Resources 7: 3754.Google Scholar
Kao, F-H., Cheng, B-S., Kuo, C-C., and Huang, M-P. 2014. Stressors, withdrawal, and sabotage in frontline employees: The moderating effects of caring and service climates. Journal of Occupational & Organizational Psychology 87: 755780.Google Scholar
Keith, N., and Frese, M. 2008. Effectiveness of error management training: A meta-analysis. Journal of Applied Psychology 93: 5969.Google Scholar
Kim, K., and Jogaratnam, G. 2010. Effects of individual and organizational factors on job satisfaction and intent to stay in the hotel industry. Journal of Human Resources in Hospitality and Tourism 9: 318339.Google Scholar
Kozlowski, S. W. J., Brown, K. G., Weissbein, D. A., Cannon-Bowers, J., and Salas, E. 2000. A multi-level perspective on training effectiveness: Enhancing horizontal and vertical transfer. In Klein, K. J. and Kozlowski, S. W. J., eds., Multilevel Theory, Research, and Methods in Organizations, 157210. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Kraiger, K. 2002. Decision-based evaluation. In Kraiger, K. ed., Creating, Implementing, and Maintaining Effective Training and Development: State-of-the-Art Lessons for Practice, 331375. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Lam, C. S. 2011. Frontline employees’ informal learning and customer relationship skills in Macao casinos: An empirical study. UNLV Gaming Research and Review Journal 15: 3557.Google Scholar
Lanier, D., Jackson, F. H., and Lanier, R. 2010. Job rotation as a leadership development tool. Consortium Journal of Hospitality and Tourism 14: 2125.Google Scholar
Lema, J. D., and Agrusa, J. 2009. Relationship of WWW usage and employee learning in the casino industry. International Journal of Hospitality Management 28: 1825.Google Scholar
Lundberg, C., and Mossberg, L. 2008. Learning by sharing: Waiters’ and bartenders’ experiences of service encounters. Journal of Foodservice 19: 4452.Google Scholar
Magnini, V., and HoneycuttJr., E. D. 2005. Face recognition and name recall: Training implications for the hospitality industry. Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly 46: 6978.Google Scholar
Magnini, V. P. 2009. An exploratory investigation of the real-time training modes used by hotel expatriates. International Journal of Hospitality Management 28: 513518.Google Scholar
Masadeh, M. 2013. Perspectives on foreign training: Middle managers in Jordan’s international hotel chains. European Journal of Tourism Research 6: 2035.Google Scholar
Morgeson, F. P., and Campion, M. A. 1997. Social and cognitive sources of potential inaccuracy in job analysis. Journal of Applied Psychology 82: 627655.Google Scholar
Noe, R. A., Clarke, A. D. M., and Klein, H. J. 2014. Learning in the twenty-first century workplace. Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior 1: 131.Google Scholar
Noe, R. A., Tews, M. J., and Marand, A. D. 2013. Individual differences and informal learning in the workplace. Journal of Vocational Behavior 83: 327335.Google Scholar
O’Mahony, M., and Smyth, B. 2010. A classification-based view recommender. Knowledge-Based Systems 23: 323329.Google Scholar
Reynolds, D., Rahman, I., and Bradetich, S. 2014. Hotel managers’ perceptions of the value of diversity training: An empirical investigation. International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management 26: 426446.Google Scholar
Richman, W. L., and Quiñones, M. A. 1996. Task frequency rating accuracy: The effect of task engagement and experience. Journal of Applied Psychology 81: 512524.Google Scholar
Ross, G. F. 2006. Ethical, career, organizational, and service values as predictors of hospitality traineeship interest. Tourism Culture and Communication 6: 121136.Google Scholar
Rynes, S., and Rosen, B. 1995. A field survey of factors affecting the adoption and perceived success of diversity training. Personnel Psychology 48: 247270.Google Scholar
Saks, A. M. and Gruman, J. A. 2017. Implications of positive psychology for learning and training. In K. G. Brown, ed., The Handbook of Workplace Training and Employee Development. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Salanova, M., Agut, S., and Peiro, J. M. 2005. Linking organizational resources and work engagement to employee performance and customer loyalty: The mediation of service climate. Journal of Applied Psychology 90: 12171227.Google Scholar
Salazar, J., Ashraf, H-R., Tcheng, M., and Antun, J. 2005. Food service employee satisfaction and motivation and the relationship with learning food safety. Journal of Culinary Science and Technology 4: 93108.Google Scholar
Schlesinger, L. A., and Zornitsky, J. 1991. Job satisfaction, service capability, and customer satisfaction: An examination of linkages and management implications. Human Resource Planning 14: 141149.Google Scholar
Schnieder, B., White, S. S., and Paul, M. C. 1998. Linking service climate and customer perceptions of service quality: Test of a causal model. Journal of Applied Psychology 83: 150163.Google Scholar
Singh, D., Kim, Y-S., and Feinstein, A. H. 2011. Internet utilization as a medium for training employees in multi-unit restaurants. Journal of Foodservice Business Research 14: 122145.Google Scholar
Sitzmann, T. 2011. A meta-analytic examination of the instructional effectiveness of computer-based simulation games. Personnel Psychology 64: 489528.Google Scholar
Sitzmann, T., Kraiger, K., Stewart, D. and Wisher, R. 2006. The comparative effectiveness of web-based and classroom instruction: A meta-analysis. Personnel Psychology 59: 623664.Google Scholar
Sobaih, A. E. E. 2011. Half job-half training? Management perceptions of part-time employee training in the hospitality industry. Journal of Human Resources in Hospitality and Tourism 10: 400420.Google Scholar
Tannenbaum, S. I., Beard, R., McNall, L. A., and Salas, E. 2010. Informal learning and development in organizations. In Kozlowski, S. W. J. and Salas, E., eds., Learning, Training, and Development in Organizations, 303332. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Testa, M. R., and Sipe, L. 2012. Service-leadership competencies for hospitality and tourism management. International Journal of Hospitality Management 31: 648.658.Google Scholar
Tews, M. J., and Tracey, J. B. 2008. An empirical examination of interventions for enhancing the effectiveness of interpersonal skills training. Personnel Psychology 61: 375401.Google Scholar
Tews, M. J., and Tracey, J. B. 2009. Helping managers help themselves. Cornell Hospitality Quarterly 50: 245257.Google Scholar
Torres, E. N., Adler, H., Behnke, C., Miao, L., and Lehto, X. 2015. The use of consumer-generated feedback in the hotel industry: Current practices and their effects on quality. International Journal of Hospitality Tourism and Administration 16: 224250.Google Scholar
Tracey, J. B. 2014. A review of human resources management research: The past 10 years and implications for moving forward. International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management 26: 679705.Google Scholar
Tracey, J. B. and Cardenas, C. G. 1996. Training effectiveness: An empirical examination of factors outside the training context. Hospitality Research Journal 20: 113123.Google Scholar
Tracey, J. B., and Tews, M. J. 2004. An empirical investigation of the relationships among climate, capabilities, and unit performance. Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Research 28: 298312.Google Scholar
Tracey, J. B., Hinkin, T. R., Tannenbaum, S. I., and Mathieu, J. E. 2001. The influence of individual characteristics and the work environment on varying levels of training outcomes. Human Resource Development Quarterly 12: 523.Google Scholar
Tracey, J. B., Hinkin, T. R., Tran, T. L. B., Emigh, T., Kingra, M., Taylor, J., and Thorek, D. 2015. A field study of new employee training programs: Industry practices and strategic insights. Cornell Hospitality Quarterly 56: 345354.Google Scholar
Úbeda-García, M., Marco-Lajara, B., Sabater-Sempere, V., and Garcia-Lillo, F. 2013. Does training influence organisational performance? Analysis of the Spanish hotel sector. European Journal of Training & Development 37: 380413.Google Scholar
Vanderpool, C., and Way, S. A. 2013. Investigating work-family balance, job anxiety, and turnover intentions as predictors of health care and senior services customer-contact employee voluntary turnover. Cornell Hospitality Quarterly 54: 149160.Google Scholar
Warr, P., and Bunce, D. 1995. Trainee characteristics and the outcomes of open learning. Personnel Psychology 48: 347375.Google Scholar
Way, S. A., Tracey, J. B., Fay, C. H., Wright, P., Snell, S.A., Chang, S., and Gong, Y. 2015. Validation of a multi-dimensional HR flexibility measure. Journal of Management 41: 10981131.Google Scholar
Werner, J. 2017. Training from the perspective of human resource development and industrial and organizational psychology: Common past, parallel paths – Going where? In K. G. Brown, ed., The Handbook of Workplace Training and Employee Development. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Wei-Tang, T. H., Martin, L., and Yeh, Y. R. 2002. Cross-cultural impact and learning needs for expatriate hotel employees in Taiwan lodging industry. Journal of Human Resources in Hospitality and Tourism 1: 3146.Google Scholar
Wirtz, J., Tambyah, S. K., and Mattila, A. S. 2010. Organizational learning from customer feedback received by service employees. Journal of Service Management 21: 363387.Google Scholar
Wright, P. M., and Snell, S. A. 1998. Toward a unifying framework for exploring fit and flexibility in strategic human resource management. Academy of Management Review 23: 756772.Google Scholar
Zakrzewski, C. S., Sammons, G., and Feinstein, H. 2005. A new approach to CAI: Online applications for procedural based activities. Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Education 17: 4754.Google Scholar
Zhang, L. Cai, L. A., and Liu, W-L. 2002. On-job training: A critical human resources challenge in China’s hotel industry. Journal of Human Resources in Hospitality and Tourism 1: 91101.Google Scholar
Zhao, X., and Namasivayam, K. 2009. Posttraining self-efficacy, job involvement, and training effectiveness in the hospitality industry. Journal of Human Resources in Hospitality and Tourism 8: 137152.Google Scholar

References

70:20:10 Forum. n.d. The 70:20:10 Framework. https://www.702010forum.com/about-702010-framework (accessed April 11, 2016).Google Scholar
ArthurJr., W., BennettJr., W., Edens, P. S., and Bell, S. T. 2008. Effectiveness of training in organizations: A meta-analysis of design and evaluation features. Journal of Applied psychology 88(2): 234.Google Scholar
Bandura, A. 1994. Self-Efficacy. New York: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Beinhart, S., and Smith, P. 1998. Research Report No. 49: National Adult Learning Survey 1997. Sudbury, UK Department for Education and Employment.Google Scholar
Bélanger, P., and Robitaille, M. 2008. A Portrait of Work-Related Learning in Quebec. Ottawa, ON: Canadian Council on Learning, Work and Learning Knowledge Centre.Google Scholar
Berry, L. L., Carbone, L. P., and Haeckel, S. H. 2002. Managing the total customer experience. MIT Sloan Management Review 43(3): 85.Google Scholar
Blomqvist, I., Niemi, H. and Ruuskanen, T. 1998. Participation in Adult Education and Training in Finland 1995. Helsinki: Statistics Finland.Google Scholar
Brockett, R., and Hiemstra, R. 1991. Self-Direction in Adult Education: Perspectives on Theory, Research and Practice. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Brookfield, S. 1981. The adult education learning iceberg. Adult Education (UK) 54(2): 110118.Google Scholar
Brown, K. G., Charlier, S. D., and Pierotti, A. 2012. e-Learning in work organizations: Contributions of past research and suggestions for the future. In Hodgkinson, G. P. and Ford, J. K., eds., International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology, 27: 89114. Chichester, UK: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Burke, L. A. and Hutchins, H. M. 2007. Training transfer: An integrative literature review. Human Resource Development Review 6(3): 263296.Google Scholar
Cappelli, P. 2012. Why Good People Can’t Get Jobs: The Skills Gap and What Companies Can Do About It. Philadelphia: Wharton Digital Press.Google Scholar
Carliner, S. 2012. Informal Learning Basics. Alexandria, VA: ASTD Press.Google Scholar
Carliner, S., and Bakir, I. 2010. Trends in spending on training: an analysis of the 1982 through 2008 training annual industry reports. Performance Improvement Quarterly 23(3): 77105.Google Scholar
Carliner, S., and Bernard, C. 2011. An integrative review of literature on the perceptions of HRD. Proceedings of the 2011 Academy of Human Resource Development Research Conference in the Americas. St Paul, MN: Academy of Human Resource Development.Google Scholar
Carliner, S., and Price, D. W. 2015. What’s in a name? Training matters, Training July/August: 56–58.Google Scholar
Catanach, J. 2013. Case study of an award-winning program: Best deployment of a hosted LMS. Sydney: LearnX Australia.Google Scholar
Clark, R. C., and Mayer, R. E. 2016. E-learning and the Science of Instruction: Proven Guidelines for Consumers and Designers of Multimedia Learning. New York: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Colley, H., Hodkinson, P., and Malcolm, J. 2003. Informality and Formality in Learning: A Report for the Learning and Skills Research Centre. London: Learning and Skills Research Centre.Google Scholar
Cross, J. n.d. What is informal learning? Informal Learning Blog, http://www.informl.com/the-informal-learning-page (accessed September 30, 2015).Google Scholar
Cross, J. 2007. Informal Learning: Rediscovering the Natural Pathways that Inspire Innovation and Performance. San Francisco: Pfeiffer.Google Scholar
Cross, J. 2011. Informal Learning: Rediscovering the Natural Pathways That Inspire Innovation and Performance. New York: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Csikzentmihalyi, M., and Hermanson, K. 1995. Intrinsic motivation in museums: What makes visitors want to learn? Museum News 74(3): 3537 and 5962.Google Scholar
Dale, M., and Bell, J. 1999. Informal Learning in the Workplace. London: Department for Education and Employment.Google Scholar
De Bruyckere, P., Kirschner, P. A., and Hulshof, C. D. 2015. Urban Myths about Learning and Education. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Downing, J. 2007. Using customer contact centers to measure the effectiveness of online help systems. Technical Communication 54(2): 201209.Google Scholar
Driscoll, M., and Carliner, S. 2005. Advanced Web-Based Training Strategies: Unlocking Instructionally Sound Online Learning. New York: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Ellinger, A. D., and Bostrom, R. P. 1999. Managerial coaching behaviors in learning organizations. Journal of Management Development 18(9): 752771.Google Scholar
Eraut, M. 2000. Non-formal learning and tacit knowledge in professional work. British Journal of Educational Psychology 70(1): 113136.Google Scholar
Eraut, M. 2007. Learning from other people in the workplace. Oxford Review of Education 33(4): 403422.Google Scholar
Falk, J. H., and Dierking, L. 2000. Learning from Museums: Visitor Experiences and the Making of Meaning. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press.Google Scholar
Falk, J. H., and Dierking, L. D. 2012. Museum Experience Revisited. New York: Taylor & Francis.Google Scholar
Gery, G. 1991. Electronic Performance Support Systems. Tolland, MA: Gery Performance Press.Google Scholar
Gery, G. 1995. Attributes and behaviors of performance-centered systems. Performance Improvement Quarterly 8(1): 4793.Google Scholar
Gery, G. 2002. Task support, reference, instruction, or collaboration? Factors in determining electronic learning and support options. Technical Communication 49(4): 420427.Google Scholar
Gibbons, M. 2002. The Self-Directed Learning Handbook. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Grant Wofford, M., Ellinger, A. D., and Watkins, K. E. 2013. Learning on the fly: Exploring the informal learning process of aviation instructors. Journal of Workplace Learning 25(2): 7997.Google Scholar
Hale, J. 2011. Performance-based Certification: How to Design a Valid, Defensible, Cost-effective Program. New York: John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Hall, C., and Cotsman, S. 2015. 2015 Learning and Development Outlook. Ottawa, ON: Conference Board of Canada.Google Scholar
Hughes, P. D., and Campbell, A. 2009. Learning and Development Outlook 2009: Learning in Tough Times. Ottawa, ON: The Conference Board of CanadaGoogle Scholar
Hughes, P. D., and Grant, M. 2007. 2007 Learning and Development Outlook. Ottawa, ON: Conference Board of Canada.Google Scholar
International Coach Federation. n.d. What is professional coaching, Coaching FAQs. https://www.coachfederation.org/need/landing.cfm?ItemNumber=978&navItemNumber=567 (accessed August 23, 2016).Google Scholar
Laiken, M., Edge, K., Friedman, S., and West, K. 2008. Formalizing the informal: From informal to organizational learning in the post-industrial workplace. In Church, K. et al., eds., Learning through Community: Exploring Participatory Practices, 187204. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Springer.Google Scholar
Lavis, C. 2011. Learning and Development Outlook 2011: Are Organizations Ready for Learning 2.0. Ottawa, ON: Conference Board of Canada.Google Scholar
Leigh, D., and Watkins, R. 2005. E-learner success: Validating a self-assessment of learner readiness for online training. In Carliner, S. and Sugrue, B., eds., Proceedings of the 2005 ASTD Research-to-Practice Conference-in-a-Conference. Alexandria, VA: ASTD Press.Google Scholar
Livingstone, D. 2010. The Relationship between Workers’ Practical Knowledge and Their Job Requirements: Findings of the 1998, 2004 and 2010 National Surveys of Work and Lifelong Learning. Canadian Society for Training and Development Conference. Toronto, November 17.Google Scholar
Livingstone, D. W. 2001. NALL Working Paper #21: Adults’ Informal Learning: Definitions, Findings, Gaps, and Future Research. Toronto: Ontario Institute for Studies in Education.Google Scholar
Livingstone, D. W. 2015. Lifelong Learning in Paid and Unpaid Work: Survey and Case Study Findings. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Livingstone, D. W., and Scholtz, A. 2006. Work and lifelong learning in Canada: Basic findings of the 2004 WALL survey. Toronto: Centre for the Study of Education and Work, and the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto.Google Scholar
Livingstone, D. W., Hart, D., and Davie, L. E. 1997. Public Attitudes Toward Education in Ontario 1996: Eleventh OISE/UT Survey. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Livingstone, D. W., Hart, D., and Davie, L. E. 1999. Public Attitudes Toward Education in Ontario 1998: Twelfth OISE/UT Survey. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Lombardo, M. M., and Eichinger, R. W. 2000. The Career Architect Development Planner. Minneapolis, MN: Lominger Inc.Google Scholar
Malcolm, J., Hodkinson, P., and Colley, H. 2003. Informality and Formality in Learning: A Report for the Learning and Skills Research Centre. London: Learning and Skills Research Centre.Google Scholar
Marsick, V. J. 2009. Toward a unifying framework to support informal learning theory, research and practice. Journal of Workplace Learning 21(4): 265275.Google Scholar
Marsick, V. J., and Watkins, K. 1990. Informal and Incidental Learning in the Workplace. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Marsick, V. J., and Watkins, K. E. 2001. Informal and incidental learning. In S. B. Merriam, , ed., The New Update on Adult Learning Theory. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Marsick, V. J., and Watkins, K. 2011. Pursuing research in organizations that is useful to practice. Academy of Human Resource Development Research Conference in the Americas, Schaumberg, Illinois.Google Scholar
Marsick, V. J., and Watkins, K. 2015. Informal and Incidental Learning in the Workplace (Routledge Revivals). New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Meyer, C., and Schwager, A. 2007. Understanding customer experience. Harvard Business Review, February.Google Scholar
Millar, R. 2008. Plenary: Informal learning in the workplace. Third annual symposium of the Work and Learning Knowledge Centre. Work and Learning Knowledge Centre of the Canadian Council on Learning. Ottawa, ON.Google Scholar
Miller, L. 2014. 2014 ASTD State of the Industry Report. Alexandria, VA: ASTD Press.Google Scholar
NALL. 1998. Lifelong Learning Profiles: General summary of findings from the first Canadian survey of informal learning. http://www.nall.ca. (accessed May 12, 2017).Google Scholar
Nielsen, J. 2016. AlertBox. https://www.nngroup.com/articles/author/jakob-nielsen (accessed September 21, 2016).Google Scholar
Penland, P. 1977. Self-Planned Learning in America. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh.Google Scholar
Poell, R., Chivers, G. E., Van Der Krogt, F. J. and Wildemeersc, D. A. 2000. Learning-network theory: Organizing the dynamic relationships between learning and work. Management Learning 31(1): 2549.Google Scholar
Rabin, R. 2014. Blended Learning for Leadership: The CCL Approach. Greensboro, NC: Center for Creative Leadership. http://insights.ccl.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/BlendedLearningLeadership.pdf (accessed September 21, 2016).Google Scholar
Ribeiro, O. 2015. Becoming a clinical educator: An exploration of what clinical educators do and how they prepare to teach in a healthcare setting. PhD thesis, Montreal, QC: Concordia University.Google Scholar
Redish, J. 2012. Letting Go of the Words: Writing Web Content That Works. Burlington, MA: Morgan Kaufmann.Google Scholar
Schulz, M., and Rosznagel, C. S. 2010. Informal workplace learning: An exploration of age differences in learning competence. Learning and Instruction 20(5): 383399.Google Scholar
Sitzmann, T., Ely, K., Brown, K. G., and Bauer, K. N. 2010. Self-assessment of knowledge: A cognitive learning or affective measure? Academy of Management Learning and Education 9(2): 169191.Google Scholar
Sleight, D. 1993. A developmental history of training in the United States and Europe. https://msu.edu/~sleightd/trainhst.html (accessed August 23, 2016).Google Scholar
Spencer, B. 2008. Have we got an adult education model for PLAR? Online Proceedings of the Canadian Association for the Study of Adult Education (CASAE). http://auspace.athabascau.ca/handle/2149/1794 (accessed May 12, 2017).Google Scholar
Statistics Canada. 1997. Adult Education and Training in Canada: Report of the 1994 Adult Education and Training Survey. Ottawa, ON: Statistics Canada.Google Scholar
Tessmer, M. 1993. Planning and Conducting Formative Evaluations: Improving the Quality of Education and Training. New York: Psychology Press.Google Scholar
Tough, A. 1971. The Adult’s Learning Projects. Toronto, ON: OISE Press.Google Scholar
Tough, A. 1978. Major learning efforts: Recent research and future directions. Adult Education Quarterly 28(4): 250263.Google Scholar
Wasserman, M. E., and Fisher, S. L. 2017. One (lesson) for the road? What we know (and don’t know) about mobile learning. In K. G. Brown, ed., The Handbook of Workplace Training and Employee Development. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Wenger, E. 2000. Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Westbrook, T. S., and Veale, J. R. 2001. Work-related learning as a core value: An Iowa perspective. Human Resource Development Quarterly 12(3): 301317.Google Scholar
Wihak, C., and Hall, G. 2011. Work-Related Informal Learning: Research and Practice in the Canadian Context. Ottawa, ON: Canadian Council on Learning.Google Scholar
Wihak, C., Hall, G., Bratton, J., Warkentin, L., Wihak, L. and MacPherson, S. 2008. Work-Related Informal Learning: Research and Practice in the Canadian Context. Ottawa, ON: Work and Learning Knowledge Centre of the Canadian Centre for Learning.Google Scholar
Zikopoulos, P., and Eaton, C. 2011. Understanding Big Data: Analytics for Enterprise Class Hadoop and Streaming Data. New York: McGraw-Hill.Google Scholar

References

Agnihothri, S. R., Mishra, A. K., and Simmons, D. E. 2003. Workforce cross-training decisions in field service systems with two job types. Journal of the Operational Research Society 54(4):410418.Google Scholar
Ahn, H.-S., Righter, R., and Shanthikumar, J. G. 2005. Staffing decisions for heterogeneous workers with turnover. Mathematical Methods of Operations Research 62(3):499514.Google Scholar
Allport, A., Styles, E. A., and Hsieh, S. 1994. Shifting intentional set: Exploring the dynamic control of tasks. In Umilta, C. and Moscovitch, M., eds., Attention and Performance XV: Conscious and Unconscious Information Processing, 421452. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Anzanello, M. J., and Fogliatto, F. S. 2011. Learning curve models and applications: Literature review and research directions. International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics 41(5): 573583.Google Scholar
Aral, S., Brynjolfsson, E., and Van Alstyne, M. 2012. Information, technology, and information worker productivity. Information Systems Research 23(3-part-2): 849867.Google Scholar
Arlotto, A., Chick, S. E., and Gans, N. 2014. Optimal hiring and retention policies for heterogenous workers who learn. Management Science 60(1): 110129.Google Scholar
Armbruster, D., Gel, E. S., and Murakami, J. 2007. Bucket brigades with worker learning. European Journal of Operational Research 176(1):264274.Google Scholar
Attia, E.-A., Duquenne, P., and Le-Lann, J.-M. 2014. Considering skills evolutions in multi-skilled workforce allocation with flexible working hours. International Journal of Production Research 52(15): 45484573.Google Scholar
Badiru, A. B. 1995. Multivariate analysis of the effect of learning and forgetting on product quality. The International Journal of Production Research 33(3):777794.Google Scholar
Bailey, C. D. 1989. Forgetting and the learning curve: A laboratory study. Management Science 35(3):340352.Google Scholar
Batt, R. J., and Terwiesch, C. 2012. Doctors under load: An empirical study of service time as a function of census. https://opimweb.wharton.upenn.edu/files/?whdmsaction=public:main.file\&fileID=5133.Google Scholar
Bentefouet, F., and Nembhard, D. A. 2013. Optimal flow-line conditions with worker variability. International Journal of Production Economics 141(2):675684.Google Scholar
Bersin, J. 2013. The datafication of human resources. Forbes.com, July 19.Google Scholar
Bevis, F., Finniear, C., and Towill, D. 1970. Prediction of operator performance during learning of repetitive tasks. International Journal of Production Research 8(4):293305.Google Scholar
Bianco, F. J., Cronin, A. M., Klein, E. A., Pontes, E. E., Scardino, P. T., and Vickers, A. J. 2010. Fellowship training as a modifier of the surgical learning curve. Academic Medicine: Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges 85(5):863868.Google Scholar
Block, L. 2015. Work Rules! New York: Twelve.Google Scholar
Blume, B. D., Ford, J. K., Baldwin, T. T., and Huang, J. L. 2010. Transfer of training: A meta-analytic review. Journal of Management 36(4):10651105.Google Scholar
Bokhorst, J., and Gaalman, G. 2009. Cross-training workers in dual resource constrained systems with heterogeneous processing times. International Journal of Production Research 47(22): 63336356.Google Scholar
Brown, L., Gans, N., Mandelbaum, A., Sakov, A., Shen, H., Zeltyn, S., and Zhao, S. 2005. Statistical analysis of a telephone call center. Journal of the American Statistical Association 100(469): 3650.Google Scholar
Bukchin, J., Luquer, R., and Shtub, A. 2002. Learning in tele-operations. IIE Transactions 34(3):245252.Google Scholar
Buzacott, J. 2002. The impact of worker differences on production system output. International Journal of Production Economics 78(1):3744.Google Scholar
Cachon, G., and Terweisch, C. 2012. Matching Supply with Demand, 3rd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill Education.Google Scholar
Campbell, G. M. 2010. A two-stage stochastic program for scheduling and allocating cross-trained workers. Journal of the Operational Research Society 62(6): 10381047.Google Scholar
Campbell, G. M., and Diaby, M. 2002. Development and evaluation of an assignment heuristic for allocating cross-trained workers. European Journal of Operational Research 138(1): 920.Google Scholar
Chen, X., Thomas, B. W., and Hewitt, M. 2015. The technician routing problem with experience-based service times. http://myweb.uiowa.edu/bthoa/iowa/Research.html (accessed August 17, 2017).Google Scholar
Cordeau, J.-F., Laporte, G., Pasin, F., and Ropke, S. 2010. Scheduling technicians and tasks in a telecommunications company. Journal of Scheduling 13(4): 393409.Google Scholar
Corominas, A., Olivella, J., and Pastor, R. 2010. A model for the assignment of a set of tasks when work performance depends on experience of all tasks involved. International Journal of Production Economics 126(2): 335340.Google Scholar
Dar-El, E. M. 2000. Human Learning: From Learning Curves to Learning Organizations. Boston, MA: Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Deming, W. E. 1982. Quality, Productivity, and Competitive Position. Boston, MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Center for Advanced Engineering Study.Google Scholar
Detert, J. R., Treviño, L. K., Burris, E. R., and Andiappan, M. 2007. Managerial modes of influence and counterproductivity in organizations: A longitudinal business-unit-level investigation. Journal of Applied Psychology 92(4): 9931005.Google Scholar
Donin, O., Feigin, P. D., Mandelbaum, A., Zeltyn, S., Trofimov, V., Ishay, E., Khudiakov, P., and Nadjharov, E. 2006. DataMOCCA: DATA model for call center analysis. Technical report 4.1., Tel Aviv, Israel: Industrial Engineering and Management, Technion University.Google Scholar
Eitzen, G., Panton, D., and Mills, G. 2004. Multi-skilled workforce optimisation. Annals of Operations Research 127(1–4): 359372.Google Scholar
Fine, C. H. 1986. Quality improvement and learning in production systems. Management Science 10: 13011315.Google Scholar
Firat, M., and Hurkens, C. A. J. 2011. An improved MIP-based approach for a multi-skill workforce scheduling problem. Journal of Scheduling 15: 363380.Google Scholar
Fowler, J., Wirojanagud, P., and Gel, E. 2008. Heuristics for workforce planning with worker differences. European Journal of Operational Research 190(3): 724740.Google Scholar
Gans, N., and Zhou, Y.-P. 2002. Managing learning and turnover in employee staffing. Operations Research 50(6): 9911006.Google Scholar
Gans, N., Koole, G., and Mandelbaum, A. 2003. Commissioned paper: Telephone call centers: Tutorial, review, and research prospects. Manufacturing and Service Operations Management 5(2): 79141.Google Scholar
Gans, N., Liu, N., Mandelbaum, A., Shen, H., and Han, Ye. 2010. Service times in call centers: Agent heterogeneity and learning with some. In Berger, J. O., Cai, T. T., and Johnstone, I. M., eds., Borrowing Strength: Theory Powering Applications – A Festschrift for Lawrence D. Brown, 6: 99123. Beachwood, OH: Institute of Mathematical Statistics.Google Scholar
Greeno, J. G., Smith, D. R., and Sternberg, R. J. 1993. Transfer of situated transfer of situated learning. In Detterman, D. K. and Sternberg, R. J., eds., Transfer on Trial: Intelligence, Cognition, and Instruction, 99167. New York: Ablex.Google Scholar
Gutjahr, W. J., Katzensteiner, S., Reiter, P., Stummer, C., and Denk, M. 2008. Competence-driven project portfolio selection, scheduling and staff assignment. Central European Journal of Operations Research 16(3): 281306.Google Scholar
Heimerl, C., and Kolisch, R. 2009. Scheduling and staffing multiple projects with a multi-skilled workforce. OR Spectrum 32(2): 343368.Google Scholar
Heimerl, C., and Kolisch, R. 2010. Work assignment to and qualification of multi-skilled human resources under knowledge depreciation and company skill level targets. International Journal of Production Research 48(13): 37593781.Google Scholar
Hendrickson, G., and Schroeder, W. B. 1941. Transfer of training in learning to hit a submerged target. Journal of Educational Psychology 32(3): 205213.Google Scholar
Hewitt, M., Chacosky, A., Grasman, S., and Thomas, B. W. 2015. Integer programming techniques for solving non-linear workforce planning models with learning. European Journal of Operational Research 242(3): 942950.Google Scholar
Hopp, W., and Van Oyen, M P. 2004. Agile workforce evaluation: A framework for cross- training and coordination. IIE Transactions 36(10): 919940.Google Scholar
Hopp, W. J., Tekin, E., and Van Oyen, M. P. 2004. Benefits of skill chaining in serial production lines with cross-trained workers. Management Science 50(1): 8398.Google Scholar
Huang, H.-C., Lee, L.-H., Song, H., and Thomas Eck, B. 2009. SimMan – A simulation model for workforce capacity planning. Computers and Operations Research 36(8): 24902497.Google Scholar
Hunter, J. E., Schmidt, F. L., and Judiesch, M. K. 1990. Individual differences in output variability as a function of job complexity. Journal of Applied Psychology 75(1): 2842.Google Scholar
Jaber, M. Y. 2006. Lot sizing for an imperfect production process with quality corrective interruptions and improvements, and reduction in setups. Computers and Industrial Engineering 51(4): 781790.Google Scholar
Jaber, M. Y., and Bonney, M. 2003. Lot sizing with learning and forgetting in set-ups and in product quality. International Journal of Production Economics 83: 95111.Google Scholar
Jaber, M. Y., and Givi, Z. S. 2014. Imperfect production process with learning and forgetting effects. Computational Management Science 12(1): 129152.Google Scholar
Jaber, M. Y., and Guiffrida, A. L. 2004. Learning curves for processes generating defects requiring reworks. European Journal of Operational Research 159(3): 663672.Google Scholar
Jaber, M. Y., and Sikström, S. 2004. A numerical comparison of three potential learning and forgetting models. International Journal of Production Economics 92(3): 281294.Google Scholar
Jordan, W. C., and Graves, S. C. 1995. Principles on the benefits of manufacturing process flexibility. Management Science 41(February): 577594.Google Scholar
Judd, C. H. 1908. The relation of special training to general intelligence. Educational Review 36: 2842.Google Scholar
Kaminsky, J. A., and Sloutsky, V. M. 2011. Representation and transfer of abstract mathematical concepts. In Reyna, V. F., ed., The Adolescent Brain: Learning, Reasoning, and Decision Making, 6793. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.Google Scholar
KC, D. S. 2014. Does multitasking improve performance? Evidence from the emergency department. Manufacturing and Service Operations Management 16(2): 168183.Google Scholar
Kim, S., and Nembhard, D. A. 2010. Cross-trained staffing levels with heterogeneous learning/ forgetting. IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management 57(4): 560574.Google Scholar
Kovacs, A. A., Parragh, S. N., Doerner, K. F., and Hartl, R. F. 2011. Adaptive large neighborhood search for service technician routing and scheduling problems. Journal of Scheduling 15 (5): 579600.Google Scholar
Kuntz, L., Mennicken, R., and Scholtes, S. 2014. Stress on the ward: Evidence of safety tipping points in hospitals. Management Science 61(4): 754771.Google Scholar
Lapre, A. S., Mukherjee, , and Van Wassenhove, L. N. 2000. Behind the learning curve: Linking learning activities to waste reduction. Management Science 46(5): 597611.Google Scholar
Levy, F. K. 1965. Adaptation in the production process. Management Science 11(6): B136B154.Google Scholar
Lim, D. H., and Johnson, S. D. 2002. Trainee perceptions of factors that influence learning transfer. International Journal of Training and Development 6(1): 3648.Google Scholar
Lohr, S. 2013. Big data, trying to build better workers. The New York Times, BU4.Google Scholar
Marlin Steel. 2015. How cross-training drives employee engagement in manufacturing jobs. https://www.marlinwire.com/blog/how-cross-training-drives-employee-engagement-in-manufacturing-jobs (accessed September 30, 2015).Google Scholar
Mazur, J. E., and Hastie, R. 1978. Learning as accumulation: A reexamination of the learning curve. Psychological Bulletin 85(6): 12561274.Google Scholar
McDonald, T., Ellis, K. P., Van Aken, E. M., and Koelling, C. P. 2009. Development and application of a worker assignment model to evaluate a lean manufacturing cell. International Journal of Production Research 47(9): 24272447.Google Scholar
Nembhard, D., and Uzumeri, M. 2000a. An individual-based description of learning within an organization. IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management 47(3): 370378.Google Scholar
Nembhard, D., and Uzumeri, M. V. 2000b. Experiential learning and forgetting for manual and cognitive tasks. International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics 25(4): 315326.Google Scholar
Nembhard, D. A. 2001. Heuristic approach for assigning workers to tasks based on individual learning rates. International Journal of Production Research 39(9): 19551968.Google Scholar
Nembhard, D. A., and Bentefouet, F. 2012. Parallel system scheduling with general worker learning and forgetting. International Journal of Production Economics 139(2): 533542.Google Scholar
Nembhard, D. A., and Bentefouet, F. 2014. Selection policies for a multifunctional workforce. International Journal of Production Research 52(16): 47854802.Google Scholar
Nembhard, D. A., and Bentefouet, F. 2015. Selection, grouping, and assignment policies with learning-by-doing and knowledge transfer. Computers and Industrial Engineering 79: 175187.Google Scholar
Nembhard, D. A., and Norman, B. A. 2007. Cross training in production systems with human learning and forgetting. In Nembhard, D. A., ed., Workforce Cross Training, 111129. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.Google Scholar
Nembhard, D. A., and Shafer, S. M. 2008. The effects of workforce heterogeneity on productivity in an experiential learning environment. International Journal of Production Research 46(14): 39093929.Google Scholar
Olivella, J., Corominas, A., and Pastor, R. 2013. Task assignment considering cross-training goals and due dates. International Journal of Production Research 51(3): 3741.Google Scholar
Peck, D. 2013. They’re Watching You at Work. The Atlantic (December): 7282, 84 .Google Scholar
Pierce, L., Snow, D., and Mcafee, A. 2015. Cleaning house: The impact of information technology monitoring on employee theft and productivity. Management Science 61(10): 2299–2319.Google Scholar
Pisano, G. P., Bohmer, R. M., and Edmondson, A. C. 2001. Organizational differences in rates of learning: Evidence from the adoption of minimally invasive cardiac surgery. Management Science 47(6): 752768.Google Scholar
Powell, A., Savin, S., and Savva, N. 2012. Physician workload and hospital reimbursement: Overworked physicians generate less revenue per patient. Manufacturing and Service Operations Management 14(4): 512528.Google Scholar
Qin, R., Nembhard, D. A., and BarnesII, W. L. 2015. Workforce flexibility in operations management. Surveys in Operations Research and Management Science 20(1): 1933.Google Scholar
Sabar, M., Montreuil, B., and Frayret, J. M. 2012. An agent-based algorithm for personnel shift-scheduling and rescheduling in flexible assembly lines. Journal of Intelligent Manufacturing 23(6): 26232634.Google Scholar
Salomon, G., and Globerson, T. 1987. Skill may not be enough: The role of mindfulness in learning and transfer. International Journal of Educational Research 11(6): 623637.Google Scholar
Sayin, S., and Karabati, S. 2007. Assigning cross-trained workers to departments: A two-stage optimization model to maximize utility and skill improvement. European Journal of Operational Research 176(3): 16431658.Google Scholar
Shafer, S. M., Nembhard, D. A., and Uzumeri, M. V. 2001. The effects worker learning, forgetting, and heterogeneity on assembly line productivity. Management Science 47(12): 16391653.Google Scholar
Son, J. Y., and Goldstone, R. L., , J. Y. 2009. Contextualization in perspective. Cognition and Instruction 27: 5189.Google Scholar
Speier, C., Valacich, J. S., and Vessey, I. 1999. The influence of task interruption onindividual decision making: An information overload perspective. Decision Sciences 30(2): 337360.Google Scholar
Stevenson, W. J. 2015. Operations Management, 12th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill.Google Scholar
Sze, D. Y. 1984. OR practice – A queueing model for telephone operator staffing. Operations Research 32(2): 229249.Google Scholar
Tan, T. F., and Netessine, S. 2014. When does the devil make work? An empirical study of the impact of workload on worker productivity. Management Science 60(6): 15741593.Google Scholar
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. 2016. Labor force statistics from the current population survey. http://www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat47.htm (accessed September 30, 2016).Google Scholar
Uzumeri, M., and Nembhard, D. A. 1998. A population of learners: A new way to measure organizational learning. Journal of Operations Management 16(5): 515528.Google Scholar
Winch, J. K., Cai, X., and Vairaktarakis, G. L. 2007. Cyclic job scheduling in paced assembly lines with cross-trained workers. International Journal of Production Research 45(4): 803828.Google Scholar
Wirojanagud, P., Gel, E. S., Fowler, J. W., and Cardy, R. 2007. Modelling inherent worker differences for workforce planning. International Journal of Production Research 45 (3): 525553.Google Scholar
Womack, J. P., and Jones, D. T. 2003. Lean Thinking. New York: Free Press.Google Scholar
Wright, T. P. 1936. Factors affecting the cost of airplanes. Journal of Aeronautical Sciences 3(4): 122128.Google Scholar
Yan, J.-h., and Wang, Z.-m. 2011. GA based algorithm for staff scheduling considering learning-forgetting effect. 2011 IEEE 18th International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management: 122–126.Google Scholar
Zhu, G., and Sherali, H. 2009. Two-stage workforce planning under demand fluctuations and uncertainty. Journal of the Operational Research Society 60(1): 94103.Google Scholar
Zumbrun, J. 2015. Behind lingering job listings. The Wall Street Journal, June 19 A3.Google Scholar

References

Acemoglu, D., and Pischke, J. 1999. Beyond Becker: Training in imperfect labour markets. The Economic Journal 109(453): F112F142.Google Scholar
Andersson, F., Holzer, H. J., Lane, J. I., Rosenblum, D., and Smith, J. 2013. Does federally-funded job training work? Nonexperimental estimates of WIA training impacts using longitudinal data on workers and firms. Working Paper 19446. Cambridge MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.Google Scholar
Bailey, T., Jaggars, S., and Jenkins, D. 2015 . Redesigning America’s Community Colleges: A Clearer Path to Student Success. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Bassanini, A., Booth, A. L., Brunello, G., De Paola, M., and Leuven, E. 2005. Workplace training in Europe (SSRN Scholarly Paper No. ID 756405). Rochester, NY: Social Science Research Network.Google Scholar
Bell, M. P., and Kravitz, D. A. 2008. From the guest co-editors: What do we know and need to learn about diversity education and training? Academy of Management Learning & Education 7: 301308.Google Scholar
Bellmann, L., Grunau, P., Troltsch, K., and Walden, G. 2014. Make or buy: Train in-company or recruit from the labour market? Empirical Research in Vocational Education and Training 6(9).Google Scholar
Bellmann, L., and Janik, F. 2007. To recruit skilled workers or to train one’s own? Vocational training in the face of uncertainty as to the rate of retention of trainees on completion of training. Zeitschrift für ArbeitsmarktForschung - Journal for Labour Market Research, Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung (IAB), Nürnberg [Institute for Employment Research, Nuremberg, Germany] 40(2/3): 205220.Google Scholar
Biesta, G. 2006. What’s the point of lifelong learning if lifelong learning has no point? On the democratic deficit of policies for lifelong learning. European Educational Research Journal 5(3–4): 169180.Google Scholar
Bills, D. B., ed. 2003. The Sociology of Job Training. Research in the Sociology of Work 12. Elsevier Publishing.Google Scholar
Bills, D. B., and Randy, Hodson. 2007. Worker training: A review, critique, and extension. Research in Social Stratification and Mobility 25: 258272.Google Scholar
Bloom, D. 2010. Programs and policies to assist high school dropouts in the transition to adulthood. The Future of Children 20: 89108.Google Scholar
Blossfeld, H., Kilpi-Jakonen, E., Vono de Vilhena, D., and Buchholz, S., eds. 2014. Adult Learning in Modern Societies: An International Comparison from a Life-Course Perspective. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Boothby, D., Dufour, A., and Tang, J. 2010. Technology adoption, training and productivity performance. Research Policy 39: 650661.Google Scholar
Bosch, G., and Charest, J. 2008. Vocational training and the labour market in liberal and coordinated economies. Industrial Relations Journal 39(5): 428–447.Google Scholar
Boyle, M. E., and Boguslaw, J. 2003. Job training as business and community development: Reframing theory and practice. In D. Bills, ed., The Sociology of Job Training, Research in the Sociology of Work 12: 103–137. Boston, MA: Elsevier/JAI Press.Google Scholar
Breen, R. 2005. Explaining cross-national variation in youth unemployment: Market and institutional factors. European Sociological Review 21(2): 125134.Google Scholar
Brunello, G. 2004. Labour market institutions and the complementarity between education and training in Europe. In D. Checchi and C. Lucifora, eds., Education, Training and Labour Market Outcomes in Europe, 188–210. Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan.Google Scholar
Busemeyer, M. R. and Trampusch, C., eds. 2012. The Political Economy of Collective Skill Formation. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
CEDEFOP 2008. Terminology of Europeaneducation and training policy. A selection of 100 key terms. Director. European Centre for the Development of Vocational Training. Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European Communities.Google Scholar
Chang, W. 2003. Hiring and training in Korean establishments: Do employers substitute making for buying? In D. Bills, ed., The Sociology of Job Training, Research in the Sociology of Work 12: 31–48. Boston, MA: Elsevier/JAI Press.Google Scholar
Dieckhoff, M. 2007. Does it work? The effect of continuing training on labour market outcomes: A comparative study of Germany, Denmark, and the United Kingdom. European Sociological Review 23(3): 295308.Google Scholar
Dieckhoff, M., and Steiber, N. 2011. A re-assessment of common theoretical approaches to explain gender differences in continuing training participation. British Journal of Industrial Relations 49: s135s157.Google Scholar
DiPrete, T. A., and Eirich, G. M. 2006. Cumulative advantage as a mechanism for inequality: A review of theoretical and empirical developments. Annual Review of Sociology 32: 271297.Google Scholar
Dobbin, F., Kim, S., and Kalev, A. 2011. You can’t always get what you need: Why diverse firms adopt diversity programs. American Sociological Review 76: 386411.Google Scholar
Dougherty, K. 2003. The uneven distribution of employee training by community colleges: Description and explanation. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 586: 6291.Google Scholar
Dougherty, K., and Bakia, M. 2000. Community colleges and contract training: Content, origins, and impacts. Teachers College Record 102 (1): 197243.Google Scholar
Ducey, A. M., Gautney, H., and Wetzel, D. 2003. Regulating affective labor: Communication skills training in the health care industry. In D. Bills, ed., The Sociology of Job Training, Research in the Sociology of Work 12: 49–72. Boston, MA: Elsevier/JAI Press.Google Scholar
Estevez-Abe, M., Iversen, T., and Soskice, D. 2001. Social protection and the formation of skills: A reinterpretation of the welfare state. In P.A. Hall and D. Soskice, eds., Varieties of Capitalism: The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage, 145–183. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Felstead, A., and Jewson, N. 2014. ‘Training floors’ and ‘training ceilings’: Metonyms for understanding training trends. Journal of Vocational Education & Training 66(3): 296310.Google Scholar
Finegold, D., and Levine, D. L. 1997. Institutional incentives for employer training. Journal of Education and Work 10(2): 109127.Google Scholar
Green, A. 2002. The many faces of lifelong learning: Recent education policy trends in Europe. Journal of Education Policy 17(6): 611626.Google Scholar
Hanushek, E. A., Woessmann, L., and Zhang, L. 2011. General education, vocational education, and labor-market outcomes over the life-cycle. National Bureau of Economic Research. Retrieved April 10, 2013.Google Scholar
Heinrich, C. J., Mueser, P. R., Troske, K. R., Jeon, K., and Kahvecioglu, D. C. 2013. Do public employment and training programs work? IZA Journal of Labor Economics 2: 123.Google Scholar
Hoeckel, K., and Schwartz, R. 2010. Learning for Jobs: OECD Reviews of Vocational Education and Training: Germany. Paris, France: Office of Economic Cooperation and Development.Google Scholar
Holzer, H. J. 2013. Good Workers for Good Jobs: Improving Education and Workforce Systems in the US. Institute for Research on Poverty Discussion Paper No. 1404-13. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin-Madison.Google Scholar
Iversen, T., and Soskice, D. 2001. An asset theory of social policy preferences. The American Political Science Review 95(4): 875893.Google Scholar
Jacoby, D. 1991. The transformation of industrial apprenticeship in the United States. Journal of Economic History 52(4): 887910.Google Scholar
Jardine, R. 2012. A brief history of legal education in America: From apprenticeships and back again? The Docket (October): 13.Google Scholar
Kalev, A., Dobbin, F., and Kelly, E. 2006. Best practices or best guesses? Assessing the efficacy of corporate affirmative action and diversity policies. American Sociological Review 71: 589617.Google Scholar
Knoke, D., and Ishio, Y. 1998. The gender gap in company job training. Work and Occupations 25: 141167.Google Scholar
Knoke, D., and Janowiec-Kurle, L. 1999. Make or buy? The externalization of company job training. Research in the Sociology of Organizations 16: 85106.Google Scholar
Knoke, D., and Kalleberg, A. L. 1994. Job training in U.S. organizations. American Sociological Review 59: 537546.Google Scholar
Lang, K., and Weinstein, R. 2012. Evaluating student outcomes at for-profit colleges. Working Paper 18201. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.Google Scholar
McDuffie, J. P., and Kochan, T. A. 1995. Do U.S. firms invest less in human resources? Training in the world auto industry. Industrial Relations 34: 147168.Google Scholar
Merton, R. K. 1973. The Matthew effect in science. In N. W. Storer, ed., The Sociology of Science, 439–459. Chicago, IL: University Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Meyer, J. W., and Rowan, B. 1977. Institutionalized organizations: Formal structure as myth and ceremony. American Journal of Sociology 83(2): 340363.Google Scholar
Moodie, G. 2002. Identifying vocational education and training. Journal of Vocational Education and Training 54(2): 249266.Google Scholar
Nilsson, A. 2010. Vocational education and training – an engine for economic growth and a vehicle for social inclusion? International Journal of Training and Development 14(4): 251272.Google Scholar
O’Connell, P. J., and Byrne, D. 2012. The determinants and effects of training at work: Bringing the workplace back in. European Sociological Review 28(3): 283300.Google Scholar
O’Connell, P., and Jungblut, J. 2008. What do we know about training at work? In K.U. Mayer and H. Solga, eds., Skill Formation: Interdisciplinary and Cross-National Perspectives, 109–125. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
OECD. 2014. Education at a Glance 2014. Paris, France: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.Google Scholar
Paap, K. 2003. Voluntarily put themselves in harm’s way: The “bait and switch” of safety training in the construction industry. In D. Bills, ed., The Sociology of Job Training, Research in the Sociology of Work 12: 197–227. Boston, MA: Elsevier/JAI Press.Google Scholar
Protsch, P., and Solga, H. 2016. The social stratification of the German VET system. Journal of Education and Work 29: 637661.Google Scholar
Roosmaa, E., and Saar, E. 2010. Participating in non-formal learning: patterns of inequality in EU-15 and the new EU-8 member countries. Journal of Education and Work 23: 179206.Google Scholar
Schindler, S., Weiss, F., and Hubert, T. 2011. Explaining the class gap in training: the role of employment relations and job characteristics. International Journal of Lifelong Education 30(2): 213–232.Google Scholar
Triventi, M., and Barone, C. 2014. Returns to adult learning in comparative perspective. In H-P. Blossfeld, E. Kilpi-Jakonen, D. Vono de Vilhena, and S. Buchholz, eds., Adult Learning in Modern Societies. An International Comparison from a Life-Course Perspective, 56–76. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Wolbers, M. H. J. 2005. Initial and further education: Substitutes or complements? Differences in continuing education and training over the life-course of European workers. International Review of Education 51(5–6): 459478.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. 2002. Does Education Matter? Myths about Education and Economic Growth. London: Penguin.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×