We acquire and internalise new knowledge better by practising than by listening. and this is what promotes the active vocational training in the company: that workers advance more effectively in their development through a more participatory and open methodology.
According to the Learning pyramid Edgar Dale's "Putting something into practice allows us to remember it in a 75% after 24 hours, while if we have only listened to it we will retain only 5% of the information.
For this reason, companies should update their training programmes for promoting professional development, introducing models where the worker/learner is not a mere listener.
Active learning is defined on the job Active methodologies GIMA as “methods, techniques and strategies used by the teacher in order to to turn the teaching process into activities that encourage active student participation and lead to learning”.”
In this sense, according to the book Participatory methodologies in university teaching, According to Fernando López Noguero, this model of training is “a interactive process based on teacher-student, student-student, student-student, student-learning material and student-material communication which enhances the responsible involvement of the latter and leads to the satisfaction and enrichment of teachers and students”.
For active vocational training, pupils are not conceived as blank sheets of paper in which to translate certain content. Rather, they have prior knowledge, ideas, values and experiences that influence their learning process.
Thus, at the working level, it is based on this same methodological point of view, where it is the workers themselves - guided by the teacher - who improve their skills and abilities through practical programmes in which they apply feasible solutions to existing problems..
In this way, employees act as active agents of their professional development and not as mere recipients of information.
“The learner becomes the centre of the educational process, rote learning is rejected and critical thinking is encouraged.”GIMA points out, moving from an expository or dogmatic methodology to an internalisation of content through actual construction. This is what is known as discovery learning.
However, How can HR departments develop this methodology within companies? To this end, active vocational training must have a number of characteristics: