Megan E. Gregory, Ph.D.

Associate Professor



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Megan E. Gregory, Ph.D.

Associate Professor


Curriculum vitae


Health Outcomes & Biomedical Informatics

University of Florida




Megan E. Gregory, Ph.D.

Associate Professor


Health Outcomes & Biomedical Informatics

University of Florida



Improving Training Motivation and Transfer in Hospitals: Extension of a Conceptual Model.


Journal article


J. Hefner, Ingrid M. Nembhard, M. Gregory, D. Walker, Lindsey N. Sova, S. Pfeil, Clayton D. Rothwell, Jaclyn Volney, A. Gaughan, A. McAlearney
Advances in health care management, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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Cite

APA   Click to copy
Hefner, J., Nembhard, I. M., Gregory, M., Walker, D., Sova, L. N., Pfeil, S., … McAlearney, A. (2021). Improving Training Motivation and Transfer in Hospitals: Extension of a Conceptual Model. Advances in Health Care Management.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Hefner, J., Ingrid M. Nembhard, M. Gregory, D. Walker, Lindsey N. Sova, S. Pfeil, Clayton D. Rothwell, Jaclyn Volney, A. Gaughan, and A. McAlearney. “Improving Training Motivation and Transfer in Hospitals: Extension of a Conceptual Model.” Advances in health care management (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Hefner, J., et al. “Improving Training Motivation and Transfer in Hospitals: Extension of a Conceptual Model.” Advances in Health Care Management, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{j2021a,
  title = {Improving Training Motivation and Transfer in Hospitals: Extension of a Conceptual Model.},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Advances in health care management},
  author = {Hefner, J. and Nembhard, Ingrid M. and Gregory, M. and Walker, D. and Sova, Lindsey N. and Pfeil, S. and Rothwell, Clayton D. and Volney, Jaclyn and Gaughan, A. and McAlearney, A.}
}

Abstract

Health-care professionals undergo numerous training programs each year in order to fulfill licensure requirements and organizational obligations. However, evidence suggests that a substantial amount of what is taught during training is never learned or transferred back to routine work. A major contributor to this issue is low training motivation. Prior conceptual models on training transfer in the organizational sciences literature consider this deficit, yet do not account for the unique conditions of the hospital setting. This chapter seeks to close this gap by adapting conceptual models of training transfer to this setting that are grounded in organizational science. Based on theory and supplemented by semistructured key informant interviews (i.e., organizational leaders and program directors), we introduce an applied model of training motivation to facilitate training transfer in the hospital setting. In this model, training needs analysis is positioned as a key antecedent to ensure support for training, relevant content, and perceived utility of training. We posit that these factors, along with training design and logistics, enhance training motivation in hospital environments. Further, we suggest that training motivation subsequently impacts learning and transfer, with elements of the work environment also serving as moderators of the learning-transfer relationship. Factors such as external support for training content (e.g., from accrediting bodies) and allocation of time for training are emphasized as facilitators. The proposed model suggests there are factors unique to the hospital work setting that impact training motivation and transfer that should be considered when developing and implementing training initiatives in this setting.


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