Logic models are very easy tools to help you plan and evaluate your training program. A logic model provides a representation of a "theory of change" (if...then) that clearly aligns the training inputs and activities to the outputs and results. Logic models are created in the planning phase and can be completed for programs, initiatives, individual courses, events and activities. There is an important distinction between training program evaluation and training evaluation. Training program evaluation examines the entire program including the training component, while training evaluation is assessment of the training course, process, or component within a program. For example, the Senior Executive Service Candidate Development Program (SESCDP) involves a recruitment, selection and certification process. These processes, in addition to the required 80 hours of training and 4-month developmental assignment, should also be consistently monitored and evaluated to determine progress and areas of improvement. All processes within the program contribute to program success or failure, yet all processes are not "training". Knowledge, understanding and skill in program evaluation in necessary to effectively evaluate training and development programs.
Contact us at SESDevelopment@opm.gov if you would like training
on how to use the OPM Training Evaluation Field Guide and/or Logic Models
in your agency.
For more detailed information on logic models, you can watch this video or take EPA's FREE Logic Modeling Course.
Agencies are required to evaluate their training programs annually to determine how well such plans and programs contribute to mission accomplishment and meet organizational performance goals (5 CFR 410.202). The law authorizes OPM to require Federal agencies to report training data (Example: Sample Agency Training Report FY2010). An important part of the evaluation process involves consideration of training costs, and other elements not directly addressed in the typical evaluation. Agencies must track and report accurate training data on all completed training events to OPM as prescribed by the Final Rule on Training Reporting Requirements, published on May 17, 2006, in the Federal Register, The Federal Workforce Flexibility Act of 2004 (P.L. 108-411).
Agencies can reference the Guide for Collection and Management of Training Information for detailed information on reporting training data.
The Training Evaluation Field Guide uses the Kirkpatrick Model of evaluation as the basis of instruction. However, there are other viable, well researched and more appropriate models available to evaluate your training program, not just the training component of your program. Agencies should use the model that more closely meets their needs.
- Daniel Stufflebeam's CIPP Model (Context, Input, Process, Product)The CIPP Model for evaluation is a comprehensive framework for guiding formative and summative evaluations of programs, projects, personnel, products, institutions, and systems. This model was introduced by Daniel Stufflebeam in 1966 to guide mandated evaluations of U.S. federally funded projects.http://srmo.sagepub.com/view/encyclopedia-of-evaluation/n82.xml
- CIRO (Context, Input, Reaction, Outcome): This model is based on four stages or types of evaluation – context, input, reactions and outcome – and is underpinned by a set of three questions, which, according to the authors, the trainer should always bear in mind.
- Michael Scriven's Goal-Free Evaluation Approach: This approach is premised on the assumption that an evaluation should establish the value of a program by examining what it is doing rather than what it is trying to do.http://www.click4it.org/index.php/Goal-Free_Evaluation
- Provus' Discrepancy Model: Developed in 1969 this model provides information for program assessment and program improvement. Under this model evaluation is defined as the comparison of an actual performance to the desired standard. https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED143683
- Illuminative Evaluation Model: An illuminative evaluation is a custom built research strategy which lacks in formal statements of objectives, avoids (but does not exclude) statistical procedures, employs subjective methods, and is primarily interested in the informing function of an evaluation, rather than the more usual inspectoral or grading functions of an evaluation. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-94-009-5656-8_9
Logic Model Template for Supervisory & Managerial Training: This logic model provides agencies with a systematic and visual aid to identify a training program’s components: inputs, outputs, outcomes and evaluation methodologies, and illustrates the relationship among them. The logic model has been prepopulated with Federal supervisory and managerial curriculum-specific examples for agencies to reference when creating their agency-specific logic model. Once completed, the logic model will provide stakeholders with a roadmap that describes the sequence of related events. Stakeholders will also have a clear understanding of the curriculum goals and evaluation.
Note: The Federal Managerial Curriculum Logic Model components have been color-coded to map to each of the stages included in the OPM Training Field Guide Supplement.
Certifications: Both Kirkpatrick and Phillips offer training evaluation certificates although a certified evaluator is not necessary to evaluate the effectiveness of agency training. The 2011 OPM Training Evaluation Field Guide, books and/or training courses on performance measurement, program evaluation, and training evaluation should provide enough information to successfully evaluate your agency training.
Associations: The American Evaluation Association (AEA) is an international professional association of evaluators devoted to the application of many other forms of evaluation. Evaluation involves assessing the strengths and weaknesses of programs, policies, personnel, products, and organizations to improve their effectiveness. The AEA has approximately 5500 members representing all 50 states in the US as well as over 60 foreign countries.
WHAT should you evaluate?
Training program evaluations can help the organization to reach many different goals during the life cycle of a training program. One primary reason to evaluate is to determine if the benefits derived from the training justified the costs.
Some additional reasons include:
- Examining the assumptions upon which an existing or proposed training course or program is based
- Inquiring, up front, about the expected results
- Assessing how much of the knowledge and skills learned during training transferred to on-the-job behaviors
- Collecting information about inputs, activities and outcomes.
- Comparing it to some pre-set standards or targets.
- Determining whether the results of the training contributed to the achievement of the organization’s goals
- Reporting findings in a manner that facilitates their use and improves program effectiveness
WHY should you evaluate?
Aside from the requirement in 5 CFR 410.202, agencies face very real demands to demonstrate training program efficiency, program effectiveness and public accountability. Use of evaluation data meets these demands in various ways:
Planning: To assess needs, set priorities, direct allocation of resources, and guide policy
Analysis of Course/Program Effectiveness or Quality: To determine achievement of objective, identify strengths and weaknesses of a program/course, determine the cost-effectiveness of a program/course, and assess causes of success or failure
Direct Decision-making: To improve effectiveness, identify and facilitate needed change, and continue, expand, or terminate a program/course
Maintain Accountability: To stakeholders, funding sources, and the general public
WHEN should you evaluate?
There are several basic questions to ask when deciding when to carry out an evaluation. If the answers to these questions are "Yes", this may be the time to evaluate.
- Is the program/course important or significant enough to warrant evaluation?
- Is there a legal requirement to carry out a program evaluation?
- Will the results of the evaluation influence decision-making about the program/course?
- Will the evaluation answer questions posed by your stakeholders or those interested in the evaluation?