Products, Vendors, CAD Files, Spec Sheets and More...
Sign up for LAWeekly newsletter
By Regina McMichael by
At 20-years old, Regina McMichael's husband died after falling off a roof at a jobsite where he was working. That was the day her safety career started. Thirty-three years later she is still laser-focused on making the industry safer by improving the way we teach safety training. Her energy, humor, and engaging style as a speaker and trainer has earned her rave reviews throughout the industry. She recently shared five key ways to change your safety training to make it more effective. 1. Identify What the Learners Know and What They Need to Know "The gap between these two areas is what you teach to," says McMichael. "Nothing more, nothing less." She teaches trainers to use the ADDIE Model (Analysis, Design, Development, Implementation, and Evaluation) to first analyze and then design training. "We need to respect our audience and not waste time teaching them things they don't need to know, like the 29 CFR 19....- they don't need to know that to be safe," she says.
Housing Creators Aim to Streamline Construction
AB 3074 and is now becoming an important element
Completions Reached 608,000 Units
Sign up to receive Landscape Architect and Specifier News Magazine, LA Weekly and More...
Invalid Verification Code
Please enter the Verification Code below
You are now subcribed to LASN. You can also search and download CAD files and spec sheets from LADetails.