Instructional Processes and Strategies in Team Training
Abstract
The research reported here represents a detailed analysis of the instructional processes and strategies at the Naval Gunfire Support (NGFS) Department, Naval Amphibious School, Little Creek, Norfolk, Virginia, as they relate to NGFS team training. This effort was undertaken to examine the instructional processes and strategies that occur, and to determine their relationship to, and impact upon, the success of NGFS teams in training. NGFS instructors were interviewed, in order to uncover the characteristics of teams which impact the instructional approaches used in team training, as well as determining the factors which cause the instructor to change instructional approaches during training. These efforts culminated in a model of instructional processes, with particular emphasis on the differential training decisions and instructional strategies employed by instructors while training teams with different levels of skills, knowledge, and attitudes. The model has proven valuable in describing the team-oriented instructional assessments, decisions, strategies, and feedback mechanisms employed by instructors in a team training setting. Through these process-oriented descriptions, the model has made salient several areas in which team-training interventions are likely to enhance specific instructional processes in operational training systems.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Nov 01, 1987
- Accession Number
- ADA204357
Entities
People
- Albert S. Glickman
- Ben Jr B. Morgan
- Douglas L. Miller
- Eduardo Salas
- Paula J. Guerette
Organizations
- Old Dominion University