T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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81.1 | | KERNEL::GARNETT | | Sat Dec 23 1989 13:15 | 12 |
| HI BOB,
MY OPINION OF TRAINING THESE DAYS IS THAT FAR TOO MUCH ATTENTION
IS PAID TO HOW THE KIT WORKS....I BELIEVE FAR MORE ATTENTION SHOULD
BE PAID TO HOW IT BREAKS.....MORE THEORETICAL EXERCISES RELATED
TO REGISTER INFORMATION...HOW TO "@CRASH"..DECODE DBL-ERR-HLTS ON
ALL CPU'S (INCLUDING MICROVAXES)....ANOTHER EXAMPLE IS A 6XX0 PASSES
SELF-TEST BUT WONT BOOT...WHAT NEXT ETC ???
REGARDS
NIGE
|
81.2 | My two-pence worth. | KERNEL::ADAMS | Venus on Remote Control | Tue Jan 02 1990 21:13 | 20 |
|
Bob,
It would help in the "trees", if relevant experience could in
some cases, take the place of formal courses. I'm thinking of
say, engineers who have worked on the bugcheck desk, but haven't
done all the pre-requisite courses for say "Int & Data Structures"
I agree with Nigels points, on teaching what to do when it fails,
rather than spending all the course on how it works. I think from
comments from Dave Wrighton, re courses that he has taught, using
field experienced people in training, is a very good idea. Most
of the "Instructor Sellotape faults" just prove that the diagnostics
usually will find a problem. It's what happens when they don't,
that is most useful to the broad base of engineers. Save the real
heavy level 2/3 stuff for board (Sorry - TCD ) candidates.
Also, as one of the groups to see new products first, any info on
up and coming courses/new products would be appreciated, and the
earlier the better.
|
81.3 | VAX 9000 training....right on target! | KERNEL::LOANE | Once upon a time in a TU45! | Wed Jan 03 1990 08:56 | 22 |
| Given the 2 replies to the base note, it might be interesting to
learn that VAX9000 training is a good deal different from previous
CPU offerings.
Instead of having the the traditional approach of Level I, followed
by (and a pre-requisite to) Level II courses etc, we are aiming
Courses at the Job requirements of the Students. There's an
"Installation and Maintenance Course" (aimed at Installation SDU
people and AR's), there's the "Fault Isolation Course" (aimed at
Remote Service delivery people), and the "Theory of Operation
Course" (for CSSE and Country Support people). None of these
courses are pre-requisites for each other; they are stand-alone.
Could this be the shape of things to come??
On Brian's comment; students will always warm to a fellow engineer
instructing them because of the understanding of each other's job.
Obviously this is NOT a knock at Instructors on EDU SVCS!!
Chris
P.S. Now that you know about VAX9000 training, I'll rip yer heads
off if I hear you talk of "Level I Vax 9000 Courses" :-)
|
81.4 | 'course it is... | MINNIE::SOWTON | City to City | Thu Jan 04 1990 13:42 | 41 |
|
Having attended a couple of courses myself, (I did, honest..)I agree
that the most memorable and useful were the ones given by the likes
of Chris and Glenn etc, but these chaps can't be expected to be
involved with every course that's delivered.
In an ideal World, Instructors would have the same experience and
ability as Product Engineers however this will never be as they
have a differing environment. The next best step is the idea that Chris
mentioned previously, and that is to target courses at more specific
audiences...as he said, it's the way VAX9000 training will be done
and I would think all large (expensive..) VAX training will follow
the same idea.
As far as the content goes, I'm playing Devil's Advocate here...is
it not true that the better you understand how a machine works the
more likely you are to be able to fix it? HEY NIGE, WHEN DID YOU
LAST HAVE SELLOTAPE ON A MODULE ????? (We have to shout for the
old boy...sorry about that..)
Seriously though...a training course will never give all the answers
but should provide an approach to fault-finding a particular product.
If you come away from a course with an idea of how it's structured
mechanically, electrically and logically (module functions), how to
drive the console, what the register contents mean with a few
descriptive books about it then what more is needed ? The course will
have been successful because it will enable an Engineer who met the
pre-reqs to go out and fix most problems on it. Any other knowledge
will be obtained by experience and sharing of information.
Obviously, this course alone is not sufficient to maintain the product.
There still has to be Support for problems that are not
straightforward and 'how it works' is crucial.
Ref Brians point about pre-reqs..maybe we should do away with ALL
pre-reqs and as part of the request to attend a course should be
a completed test signed off by an Engineers TCD advisor ?
Cheers for now
Bob
|
81.5 | What a good idea !! | KERNEL::ADAMS | Venus on Remote Control | Thu Jan 04 1990 18:59 | 13 |
|
Bob,
I'm not sure how much data is kept on each engineer, but maybe the
training booking system, could cross reference the TCD database
when taking course bookings, rather than have to get the Advisor
together with the "student" for a test.
In some cases, the course subject will be new material, as part of
the engineer's developement, so would a test be relevant ??
Which ever way it is done, this seems like a good idea worth pursuing.
|
81.6 | Wow | KERNEL::LOANE | Once upon a time in a TU45! | Fri Jan 05 1990 09:12 | 8 |
| This may be a bit dynamic here, but couldn't we use an Electronic
Multiple Choice Q and A system that a prospective student could
fill in back in his Service Location (that's Branch to you Nigel).
Think of the shock to some people, though; "What, you mean we've
actually got to use COMPUTERS??!!"
:-)
|
81.7 | And whilst we're at it! | COMICS::TREVENNOR | A child of init | Mon Jan 08 1990 13:05 | 46 |
| Hello,
My experience has been that there is a very high level of resistance
within EDU to post-testing on training. The argument goes that people
don't always go on courses to learn all that is presented - some
go on them for in-depth overview, some go for awareness, some go
to learn the whole thing down to the ground - ie the interest levels
vary enormously. This is bourne out by my experience of teaching
classes, some people wanted to know both of the bits of info that
I could teach them, whilst others just wanted the concepts.
To apply a uniform post-test would be unfair and would not reflect
the effectiveness of the course.
I go some way towards supporting the above proposition, but I think
that it could be worked out. Perhaps the manager who signs for you to
go on the course could indicate what level of benefit he/she expects
you to gain from it (ie awareness, overview, in-depth) and different
post-tests could be devised.
Also, I think - as been said - that you can't judge how useful a
course has been until you've used what you learned. The ideal time for
a post-test would be some weeks - maybe months - after the end of the
course.
The "Strongly Agree" forms that get handed out at the moment are
farcical and should be done away with since the students typically have
little idea of how useful what they have learned will be until they come
to apply that knowledge (or not). Its a sad fact that those forms are
virtually the only measure that is applied to the performance of
instructors, therefore bad accomodation, bad facilities etc all reflect
on the instructors (since the individual sections are not broken out at
all) and adversely affect their job progress.
<Flame on>
These factors mean that - to a great extent - EDU is run as though it
were a branch of showbiz, with those instructors who are good
presenters - whilst not necessarily being technically excellent -
rising to the top. Like the TRB system it is self perpetuating,
those who have gained most from the status quo don't acknowledge
its shortcomings. The turnover of Instructors at Highfield is very
high, and they often leave for very similar reasons.
<flame off>
Alan (Don't start me off on EDU 8-)) Trevennor.
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