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Allied Health Professions Learning Needs Analysis and Workforce Planning Workshop 7 th May 2010

Allied Health Professions Learning Needs Analysis and Workforce Planning Workshop 7 th May 2010. Lesley Barrowman Senior Professional Officer. Learning Needs Analysis. The HSC must have a workforce that is responsive, able to meet service needs.

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Allied Health Professions Learning Needs Analysis and Workforce Planning Workshop 7 th May 2010

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  1. Allied Health ProfessionsLearning Needs Analysis and Workforce Planning Workshop7th May 2010 Lesley Barrowman Senior Professional Officer

  2. Learning Needs Analysis The HSC must have a workforce that is responsive, able to meet service needs. Individual practitioners must be able to demonstrate competence in their roles.

  3. Learning Needs Analysis • Flexible approach to learning and development • Contribute to a strategic approach to learning and development activities • Promote “learning cultures” within organisations • Promote a structured approach to the learning needs analysis process

  4. Learning Needs Analysis Learning and development activities should be designed to • Support service development • Support on-going and new role development • Assist with the development of new competencies • Develop knowledge base • Meet professional development needs of individuals

  5. Learning Needs Analysis Learning needs assessment is more likely to succeed and make a difference when it is ... ‘owned’ by stakeholders and changes are implemented which bring about improvement in performance and practice. Furze and Pearcey (1999)

  6. Learning Needs Analysis • Learning needs analysis is a systematic way of gathering and interpreting information about the learning needs of an organisation or teams and individuals within an organisation. • The learning needs analysis process should address short (one year), medium (two to three years) and long term requirements (five to seven years)

  7. Learning Needs Analysis Assessment of need learning and development cycle Evaluating outcomes and effectiveness Planning learning activities Implementing learning activities

  8. Learning Needs Analysis The process must take into account - • The overall strategic developments of the HSCNI • The overall service objectives of the organisation and how each part of the organisation contributes to this • The competencies and skill sets required to meet service and departmental outputs • The staff profile of each department to identify competencies and deficits and to plan the learning and development needs of staff

  9. Learning Needs Analysis – External Influences Examples • Government drivers and policies • New developments in fields of practice • Ombudsman reports • RQIA reports

  10. Learning Needs Analysis – Internal Influences Examples • KSF requirements • Clinical audit findings • Critical incidents • Patient satisfaction surveys • Complaints

  11. Issues that influence Learning Needs Analysis • Business needs and objectives • Planning of services • Workforce planning and skill mix • New role development and role expansion • Job profiles to meet service needs • Role descriptors and competencies of individual posts

  12. Learning Needs Analysis – key questions What do we need? What do we have? How do we get there?

  13. Assessment– local and organisational • Develop a CPD culture • Develop a work-based learning culture • Promote flexible and innovative approach to learning and development • Clear and systematic identification of learning and development needs of departments and individuals

  14. Assessment at local level • Analysis of staff profile • Competency requirements of new or changed roles • Annual appraisal/performance review of individuals - KSF • Individual personal development plans

  15. Planning and Delivering learning activities • Clear description of required outcomes • Use formal and informal learning activities • Use creative and flexible approaches to meeting learning needs • Maximise the use of in-house learning resources and experiential learning • Line managers identify learning activity required for individual practitioners • Make organisational decisions

  16. Evaluate effectiveness • Hold individuals to account for their learning and development • Post-learning evaluations – students and managers • Note improvements in individual’s practice and level of competence – formally or informally • Service delivery outputs and targets • Audits, patient complaints, patient satisfaction surveys and clinical incident reports • Learning activity linked to performance improvement represents value for money

  17. Learning Needs Analysis Assessment of need learning and development cycle Evaluating outcomes and effectiveness Planning learning activities Implementing learning activities

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