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Human Competence: Engineering Human Performance
 
 

Human Competence: Engineering Human Performance [Hardcover]

T. Gilbert
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Hardcover CDN $48.79  
Hardcover, April 1 1996 --  

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"Human Competence stands not only as a tribute to Tom's genius, but also as the best single source of ideas about performance technology. It is a 'must have' for anyone serious about changing the performance of individuals or organizations."
—Dick Lincoln, Centers for Disease Control

"Human Competence is the crowning achievement of a most remarkable man. But more than that, it is the performance technologist's foundation. Read it with zest, but read it with the intent of learning as much as you possibly can."
—Odin Westgaard, Hale Associates

"Tom's work has given me the framework to help others in a powerful way—it is a big part of my message of respecting and valuing people at work."
—Elizabeth Guman, Performance Insights

"Human Competence is a must read for anyone wishing to become a true performance improvement professional."
—Peter Dean, University of Tennessee at Knoxville

"Among the ideas bulging from this classic work: performance exemplars, potential for improving performance, behavior-accomplishment distinction, performance matrix, ACORN troubleshooting test, performance audits, states, Worth = Value - Cost, knowledge maps, mediators, and job aids. The great accomplishments he left behind will continue to profit behavior analysis and performance improvement for a long, long time."
—Ogden Lindsley, Behavior Research Company

"Human Competence is probably the most borrowed and least returned book in my library. It's good to have it in print once more, so that I can keep replacing it, and rereading it for new insights from the original master of HPT."
—Rob Foshay, TRO Learning, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

Book Description

Human Competence offers an original theory of engineering human performance, coupled with a detailed plan of action based on provided applications. Grounded on remarkable principles, sound applications, and educational practice, this classic book:
  • explains how to identify people who have the potential to be exemplary performers.
  • details various economic models for reducing expenses, increasing productivity, and improving learning, with special worksheets that help put these models to work.
  • shows how to diagnose causes of performance failure and how to tailor the best remedies to each problem.
  • describes a general procedure for measuring any performance and for translating these measures into economic opportunity.
  • shows how to design training and educational systems that bring the best results.

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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5.0 out of 5 stars How and why the behavior engineering model "is really an outline of a performance troubleshooting sequence", Jan 30 2012
By 
Robert Morris (Dallas, Texas) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME)    (TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Note: The comments that follow discuss the "Tribute Edition" (2007) of a book first published in 1996, after its author's death. It is now widely viewed as a "classic" and should be.

Disclaimer: Although I re-read this book before beginning to compose this review, I do not claim to understand all of the material that Gilbert shares. I am by no means an expert, nor even a serious student of human engineering and performance technology, viewed as separate but related sciences.

As his brief bio provided by Amazon points out, Thomas F. Gilbert (1927-1995) was a psychologist often considered the founder of the field of performance technology, also known as Human Performance Technology (HPT). Gilbert himself coined and used the term "Performance Engineering." He applied his understanding of behavioral psychology to efforts to improve human performance at work and in school. He is best known for this book, Human Competence: Engineering Worthy Performance. Gilbert devised HPT when he realized that formal learning programs often only brought about a change in knowledge, not a change in behavior. (Years later, Jeffrey Pfeffer and Robert Sutton characterized this as "The Knowing-Doing Gap.") Gilbert asserted that other techniques were needed to bring about a lasting change in behavior. He spent a year on a post-doctoral sabbatical working with the behavioral psychologist B. F. Skinner at Harvard University and then with Ogden R. Lindsley in Lindsley's laboratory at Metropolitan State Hospital in Waltham, MA. In brief, that is his background.

The primary focus in Human Competence is on the behavior engineering model to which I refer in the title of this review, a model that -- Gilbert suggests, on Pages 91 and 93 -- "is really an outline of a performance troubleshooting sequence...merely a way to organize empirical data" That is, as he explains, "The system this book describes is based on three theorems summarizing my major assumptions about the nature of human competence [as opposed to human performance: `we often confuse behavior with performance. And that is the main problem of investigating human competence.']. I call them Leisurely Theorems using leisure as a synonym for human capital, which is the product of time and opportunity."

With meticulous care and uncommon clarity, Gilbert addresses business subjects, areas, and issues such as these:

o The nature and extent of "the great culture of behavior"
o And of its subcults (work, knowledge, and motivation)
o Worthy competence
o Measuring human competence
o The "performance matrix"
o Troubleshooting performance

Note: Gilbert observes that the performance matrix and the behavior engineering model are simplifications of the ways in which we view performance." He discusses all this in Chapters Four and Five which comprise Part Two, "Models of Performance Analysis."

o The correlations between information and competence
o Knowledge policy at work (Chapter Seven) and at school (Chapter Eight)
o Knowledge policies, strategies, and tactics

Note: Gilbert asserts, "Nowhere are the separate issues of policy, strategy, and tactics more readily confused than in education and training." Table 9-1 (on Page 254) does much to clarify several key issues of education and training insofar as policy, strategy, and tactics are concerned.

o Motivation and human capital
o Performance engineering in perspective (e.g. differentiating the behavioral and physical worlds)

Readers will appreciate Gilbert's provision of "An Application of Performance Engineering" as an Appendix. It is in the form of a case study of "Savory Snacks" during which Gilbert rigorously examines Policy Level Analysis (consolidated in Table A-3 on Page 359) and Strategy Level Analysis (Table A-6, Page 367). He includes a Schematic Knowledge Map (Table A-7, Page 368).

I am grateful, deeply grateful to Thomas Gilbert for all that I have learned from him about human engineering and performance technology, in general, and about his system for studying, measuring, and engineering human competence, in particular. He calls his system "teleonomics," combining the Greek words "nomos" (the laws) and "teleos" (the ends or objectives). Whatever he calls it, the system proposed certain would be a significant improvement over the haphazard, insufficient, and/or obsolete systems that many organizations now use...if indeed they use any system at all.
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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)

14 of 18 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Leisure, July 25 2001
By James A. McClure - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Human Competence: Engineering Human Performance (Hardcover)
This unique perspective on human behavior provides a powerful and enjoyable set of tools to influence key issues at work. Thomas Gilbert provides a look at people that is based on empirical observations and the occurrence of functional relationships between our work behavior and that of others. It also takes into consideration the ecological variable effecting the execution of a business model and operationl.

He argues that competency is not a measure of knowledge, hardward, or dedication, it is a measure of worthy performance. Results that faciliate the acquisition of leisure or opportunity to pursue more meaningful or worthwhile activites are the best measure of competency.

This book will help any person at work who whats to succeed. It provides a perspective that will allow that person to improve their own an others performance at work. It will help any open minded person demonstrate their own competency.

It is excellent and profound.


1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars How and why the behavior engineering model "is really an outline of a performance troubleshooting sequence", Jan 30 2012
By Robert Morris - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Human Competence: Engineering Worthy Performance (Hardcover)
Note: The comments that follow discuss the "Tribute Edition" (2007) of a book first published in 1996, after its author's death. It is now widely viewed as a "classic" and should be.

Disclaimer: Although I re-read this book before beginning to compose this review, I do not claim to understand all of the material that Gilbert shares. I am by no means an expert, nor even a serious student of human engineering and performance technology, viewed as separate but related sciences.

As his brief bio provided by Amazon points out, Thomas F. Gilbert (1927-1995) was a psychologist often considered the founder of the field of performance technology, also known as Human Performance Technology (HPT). Gilbert himself coined and used the term "Performance Engineering." He applied his understanding of behavioral psychology to efforts to improve human performance at work and in school. He is best known for this book, Human Competence: Engineering Worthy Performance. Gilbert devised HPT when he realized that formal learning programs often only brought about a change in knowledge, not a change in behavior. (Years later, Jeffrey Pfeffer and Robert Sutton characterized this as "The Knowing-Doing Gap.") Gilbert asserted that other techniques were needed to bring about a lasting change in behavior. He spent a year on a post-doctoral sabbatical working with the behavioral psychologist B. F. Skinner at Harvard University and then with Ogden R. Lindsley in Lindsley's laboratory at Metropolitan State Hospital in Waltham, MA. In brief, that is his background.

The primary focus in Human Competence is on the behavior engineering model to which I refer in the title of this review, a model that -- Gilbert suggests, on Pages 91 and 93 -- "is really an outline of a performance troubleshooting sequence...merely a way to organize empirical data" That is, as he explains, "The system this book describes is based on three theorems summarizing my major assumptions about the nature of human competence [as opposed to human performance: `we often confuse behavior with performance. And that is the main problem of investigating human competence.']. I call them Leisurely Theorems using leisure as a synonym for human capital, which is the product of time and opportunity."

With meticulous care and uncommon clarity, Gilbert addresses business subjects, areas, and issues such as these:

o The nature and extent of "the great culture of behavior"
o And of its subcults (work, knowledge, and motivation)
o Worthy competence
o Measuring human competence
o The "performance matrix"
o Troubleshooting performance

Note: Gilbert observes that the performance matrix and the behavior engineering model are simplifications of the ways in which we view performance." He discusses all this in Chapters Four and Five which comprise Part Two, "Models of Performance Analysis."

o The correlations between information and competence
o Knowledge policy at work (Chapter Seven) and at school (Chapter Eight)
o Knowledge policies, strategies, and tactics

Note: Gilbert asserts, "Nowhere are the separate issues of policy, strategy, and tactics more readily confused than in education and training." Table 9-1 (on Page 254) does much to clarify several key issues of education and training insofar as policy, strategy, and tactics are concerned.

o Motivation and human capital
o Performance engineering in perspective (e.g. differentiating the behavioral and physical worlds)

Readers will appreciate Gilbert's provision of "An Application of Performance Engineering" as an Appendix. It is in the form of a case study of "Savory Snacks" during which Gilbert rigorously examines Policy Level Analysis (consolidated in Table A-3 on Page 359) and Strategy Level Analysis (Table A-6, Page 367). He includes a Schematic Knowledge Map (Table A-7, Page 368).

I am grateful, deeply grateful to Thomas Gilbert for all that I have learned from him about human engineering and performance technology, in general, and about his system for studying, measuring, and engineering human competence, in particular. He calls his system "teleonomics," combining the Greek words "nomos" (the laws) and "teleos" (the ends or objectives). Whatever he calls it, the system proposed certain would be a significant improvement over the haphazard, insufficient, and/or obsolete systems that many organizations now use...if indeed they use any system at all.

2 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book, changed my perspective on training, Jan 14 2009
By Chris Mcqueen "Instructor by Design" - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Human Competence: Engineering Human Performance (Hardcover)
Really enjoyed it. For me, the concept of Human Performance Technology really clicked. I would suggest it to any trainer, instructional designer, or manager.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 6 reviews  5.0 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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