Main Content

Syllabus

The information contained on this page is designed to give students a representative example of material covered in the course. Any information related to course assignments, dates, or course materials is illustrative only. For a definitive list of materials, please check the online catalog 3-4 weeks before the course start date.

TRDEV 565: Implementing Training and Development Interventions

The critical analysis of theories, strategies, and techniques for planning and implementing TRDEV programs to enhance employee learning and performance.

Overview

Organizations are systems of interrelated parts—people, ideas and resources, process and product, decisions and action. All these parts affect each other in an ongoing and dynamic dance of push and pull using a variety of energies: power and marginality, abundance and deficit, planning and urgency. Successful training and development interventions are not implemented in vacuum, isolated from other aspects of the system. Rather, at their best, they are thoughtfully, and sometimes even systematically, embedded in the organization's Gestalt, in order to support both the goals of the business and the people responsible for achieving them. This is not a simple balance.

In this course, we'll do more than accept the conventional wisdom of organization development and change at face value. We'll look at the standard approaches, and then look beyond them to examine critically the processes associated with planning, developing, and implementing training and development programs in the context of the whole organization. We will keep our gaze on ways to create changes that take into account the individuals who comprise the organization at the same time that they improve the organization's overall effectiveness. A key point of emphasis will be the connection between the models, theories, and strategies to the participants' workplaces and their professional practices. Participants will be encouraged to share stories of their experience—past and current—which illustrate concepts discussed in the course or which raise questions about them.

Course Objectives

Ultimately, the intent of this course is to help facilitate how you consider organizations (especially your own organization). In addition, you will consider how training and development solutions can advance (or hinder) organization goals, and the nature of your own identity and role as a practitioner in organizational contexts. This course will broaden your thinking, to render it more critical and more creative with respect to organizational development and change. At the close of this semester, if you fully engage, you should be able to

  • articulate key theories and a variety of models and strategies connected to traditional notions of planned change in organizations;
  • apply notions of discourse and discursive frameworks to their understanding of organizational dynamics and the changing of organizations;
  • critique theories, models, and strategies of planned changed for notions of power/marginalization, other forms of bias, and against the backdrop of their own organizations;
  • articulate and question issues of power, leadership, communication and organizational discourse in the context of case studies and their own practice;
  • identify the roles often assumed by and functions performed by key organizational members during change processes, including but not limited to individual contributors, line management, executive leadership, and external consultants.;
  • grapple with the emergent issues leading up to and during the implementation of solutions; and
  • further develop your personal identity as a practitioner.

Required Course Materials

Most World Campus courses require that students purchase materials (e.g., textbooks, specific software, etc.). To learn about how to order materials, please see the Course Materials page. You should check LionPATH approximately 3–4 weeks before the course begins for a list of required materials.

Library Resources

Many of the University Libraries resources can be utilized from a distance. Through the Libraries website, you can

  • access magazine, journal, and newspaper articles online using library databases;
  • borrow materials and have them delivered to your doorstep—or even your desktop;
  • get research help via email, chat, or phone using the Ask a Librarian service; and
  • much more. 

You must have an active Penn State Access Account to take full advantage of the Libraries' resources and service.  The Off-Campus Users page has additional information about these free services.

Software

One of the benefits of being a registered Penn State student is that you are eligible to receive educational discounts on many software titles. If you are interested in learning more about purchasing software through our affiliate vendor, please visit the Buying Software section of the Course Materials page.

Technical Requirements

Technical Requirements
Operating System

Canvas, Penn State's Learning Management System (LMS), supports most recent versions of Microsoft Windows and Apple Mac operating systems. 

To determine if your operating system is supported, please review Canvas' computer specifications.

Browser

Canvas supports the last two versions of every major browser release. It is highly recommended that you update to the newest version of whatever browser you are using.

Please note that Canvas does not support the use of Internet Explorer. Students and instructors should choose a different browser to use.   

To determine if your browser is supported, please review the list of Canvas Supported Browsers.


Note: Cookies must be enabled, and pop-up blockers should be configured to permit new windows from Penn State websites.
Additional Canvas Requirements For a list of software, hardware, and computer settings specifically required by the Canvas LMS, please review Canvas' computer specifications.
Additional Software

All Penn State students have access to Microsoft Office 365, including Microsoft Office applications such as Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.

Students will need a PDF reader, such as Adobe Reader.

Hardware

Monitor: Monitor capable of at least 1024 x 768 resolution
Audio: Microphone, Speakers
Camera (optional, recommended): Standard webcam - many courses may require a webcam for assignments or exam proctoring software.

Mobile Device (optional) The Canvas mobile app is available for versions of iOS and Android. To determine if your device is capable of using the Canvas Mobile App, please review the Canvas Mobile App Requirements.


Student Education Experience Questionnaire (SEEQ)

During the semester you will receive information for completing the Student Education Experience Questionnaire (SEEQ). Your participation is an opportunity to provide anonymous feedback on your learning experience. Your feedback is important because it allows us to understand your experience in this course and make changes to improve the learning experiences of future students. Please monitor email and course communications for links and availability dates.


If you need technical assistance at any point during the course, please contact the Service Desk.

For registration, advising, disability services, help with materials, exams, general problem solving, visit World Campus Student Services!

Course Requirements and Grading

Please see detailed descriptions on the “Course Requirements and Grading” page in the Course Logic lesson.

Grading Table
Grade Minimum % Minimum Points
A 93 930–1,000
A- 90 900–929
B+ 88 880–889
B 82 820–879
B- 80 800–819
C+ 78 780–799
C 70 700–779
D 60 600–699
F < 60 below 600

Please refer to the University Grading Policy for Graduate Courses for additional information about University grading policies.

If, for reasons beyond the student's control, a student is prevented from completing a course within the prescribed time, the grade in that course may be deferred with the concurrence of the instructor. The symbol DF appears on the student's transcript until the course has been completed. Non-emergency permission for filing a deferred grade must be requested by the student before the beginning of the final examination period. In an emergency situation, an instructor can approve a deferred grade after the final exam period has started. Under emergency conditions during which the instructor is unavailable, authorization is required from one of the following: the dean of the college in which the candidate is enrolled; the executive director of the Division of Undergraduate Studies if the student is enrolled in that division or is a provisional student; or the campus chancellor of the student's associated Penn State campus.

For additional information please refer to the Deferring a Grade page.

Activities

There are five major activities in the course. Please see detailed descriptions on the “Major Activities” page in the Course Logic lesson.

Course Schedule

Course Schedule

The schedule below outlines the topics we will be covering in this course, along with the associated and assignments.

Reading is on E-Reserves identifies readings that are available on E-Reserves through the library.

Module 1: Getting Started
Lesson 1: Introduction to Implementing Training and Development Interventions
Readings:
  • Cummings and Worley, Chapters 1 and 2
  • Read Lesson 1 Commentary to Course
  • Review Syllabus
Activities:
  • Introduce yourself through Bongo
  • Watch introduction videos on Bongo (both the instructor's and the other students')
Lesson 2: Effective OD Practice
Readings:
  • Lesson 2 Commentary
  • Cummings and Worley Chapter 3
  • GTSI Corporation: Mission Impossible? (A) (UV3272-PDF-ENG) [Harvard Business]
  • Context for your Engagement in the GTSI Case
  • The Velveteen Rabbit, or, How Toys Become Real
  • Sims, D. (2004). The velveteen rabbit and passionate feelings for organizations. In Gabriel, Y. Myths, Stories, and Organizations: Premodern Narratives for Our Times. Oxford University Press. 209–222. (Chapter 13) Reading is on E-Reserves
Activities:
  • Participate in Discussion 1: Sims’ Article
Module 2: Contracting and Diagnosing
Lesson 3: Entering and Contracting
Readings:
  • Lesson 3 Commentary
  • Cummings and Worley Chapter 4
  • Review GTSI Corporation: Mission Impossible? (A) (UV3272-PDF-ENG) [Harvard Business]
  • Ogbor, J.O. (2001) Critical theory and the hegemony of corporate culture. Journal of Organizational Change Management. Emerald. 14(6). 590–608
Activities:
  • Submit Project 1 Rough Draft in Project 1 Rough Drafts Discussion
  • Team Summarizer submits Discussion 1 Summary
  • Participate in Discussion 2: Ogbor’s Article
Lesson 4: Applying a Critical Lens
Readings:
  • Lesson 4 Commentary
  • Cummings and Worley Chapter 5
Activities:
  • Review classmates’ Project 1 Rough Drafts and post replies to provide feedback
  • Team Summarizer submits Discussion 2 Summary
Module 3: Interventions & Discourse, Designing & Developing an Intervention
Lesson 5: Discourse and Diagnosing
Readings:
  • Lesson 5 Commentary
  • Revisit Cummings and Worley Chapter 5
  • Cummings and Worley, Chapter 6
  • Diagnosis Data from GTSI
  • Heracleous, L. (2002) The contribution of a discursive view to understanding and managing organizational change. Strategic Change. 11(5). Wiley-Interscience. 253–261. DOI: 10.1002/jsc.601
  • DuFrene, D. D. and Lehman, C. M. (2014). Navigating change: Employee communication in times of instability. Business and Professional Communication Quarterly. 77(443) DOI: 10.1177/2329490614544736.
Activities:
  • Submit your revised Project 1 Diagnosis Proposal
  • Participate in Discussion 3: Heracleous / Dufrene & Lehman
Lesson 6: Designing and Developing Interventions
Readings:
  • Lesson 6 Commentary
  • Cummings and Worley Chapter 7 & 9
Activities:
  • Team Summarizer submits Discussion 3 Summary
Module 4: Getting Ready and Manage the Change
Lesson 7: Taking Action and Managing Change
Readings:
  • Lesson 7 Commentary
  • Cummings and Worley, Chapter 8
  • Satell, Greg. To Create Change, Leadership Is More Important Than Authority Business Premier Database (free): Follow these instructions to find the articles.
  • Kotter, John P. Leading Change: Why Transformation Efforts Fail (Go to the HBR website).
Activities:
  • Submit Project 2 Rough Draft to Project 2 Rough Drafts Discussion
  • Participate in Discussion 4: Satell’s and Kotter’s Articles
Lesson 8: Getting Ready
Readings:
  • None
Activities:
  • Review classmates’ Project 2 Rough Drafts and post replies to provide feedback
  • Team Summarizer submits Discussion 4 Summary
Lesson 9: Case Study
Readings:
  • Read case studies
    • McLean, G. N. (2015). Evaluation of Organization Development Interventions in a Video Simulation Game: A Case Study of Football Manager 2014 (TM). Organization Development Journal, 33(4), 27.
    • Shukla, K., Heda, N., & Panda, R. (2015). Implications of Organization Development Interventions: Case Study of an Edible Oil Company. Review of Management, 5(1/2), 19.
Activities:
  • Submit Project 2 Intervention Proposal, which includes
    • Your refined version of the Project 1 contents
    • Project Plan for Intervention
  • Participate in Discussion 5: Case Studies
Lesson 10: Special Issue
Readings:
  • Read special issue contents
    • Practicing Organization Development : A guide for leading change (select 2 chapters from chapter 19 to 30)
Activities:
  • Team Summarizer submits Discussion 5 Summary
Module 5: Measuring Success & Process
Lesson 11: Intervention Evaluation
Readings:
  • Cummings and Worley Chapters 9, 11, and 12
Activities:
  • Participate in Participate in Discussion 6: Special Issues
  • Begin working on Final Project Deliverables
Lesson 12: Process Approaches & Restructuring
Readings:
  • Cummings and Worley, Chapters 15, 16, and 17
Activities:
  • Team Summarizer submits Discussion 6 Summary
  • Submit Project 3 Rough Drafts
Module 6: Other Important Considerations
Lesson 13: Performance-Talent Management & Diversity
Readings:
  • Cummings and Worley Chapter 18
Activities:
  • Review classmates’ Project 3 Rough Drafts and post replies to provide feedback
Lesson 14: The Proposal to the Client-Final Project
Readings:
  • None.
Activities:
  • Submit Project 3 Final Proposal, which includes
    • Your refined version of the Project 1 & 2 contents
    • Intervention Success Measure & How Data Collection will occur
    • How change is institutionalized (with comment on Performance-Talent Management & Diversity)
    • Process for Restructuring
    • Summary
Lesson 15: Wrap-up
Readings:
  • None
Activities:
  • Submit Project 3 Video to Bongo
  • Submit Final Reflection paper

Note: If you are planning to graduate this semester, please communicate your intent to graduate to your instructor. This will alert your instructor to the need to submit your final grade in time to meet the published graduation deadlines. For more information about graduation policies and deadlines, please go to the Graduation Information on the My Penn State Online Student Portal.

Formal instruction will end on the last day of class. Provided that you have an active Penn State Access Account user ID and password, you will continue to be able to access the course materials for one year, starting from the end date of the academic semester in which the course was offered (with the exception of library reserves and other external resources that may have a shorter archival period). After one year, you might be able to access the course based on the policies of the program or department offering the course material, up to a maximum of three years from the end date of the academic semester in which the course was offered. For more information, please review the University Course Archival Policy.

Academic Integrity

According to Penn State policy G-9: Academic Integrity , an academic integrity violation is “an intentional, unintentional, or attempted violation of course or assessment policies to gain an academic advantage or to advantage or disadvantage another student academically.” Unless your instructor tells you otherwise, you must complete all course work entirely on your own, using only sources that have been permitted by your instructor, and you may not assist other students with papers, quizzes, exams, or other assessments. If your instructor allows you to use ideas, images, or word phrases created by another person (e.g., from Course Hero or Chegg) or by generative technology, such as ChatGPT, you must identify their source. You may not submit false or fabricated information, use the same academic work for credit in multiple courses, or share instructional content. Students with questions about academic integrity should ask their instructor before submitting work.

Students facing allegations of academic misconduct may not drop/withdraw from the affected course unless they are cleared of wrongdoing (see G-9: Academic Integrity ). Attempted drops will be prevented or reversed, and students will be expected to complete course work and meet course deadlines. Students who are found responsible for academic integrity violations face academic outcomes, which can be severe, and put themselves at jeopardy for other outcomes which may include ineligibility for Dean’s List, pass/fail elections, and grade forgiveness. Students may also face consequences from their home/major program and/or The Schreyer Honors College.

How Academic Integrity Violations Are Handled
World Campus students are expected to act with civility and personal integrity; respect other students' dignity, rights, and property; and help create and maintain an environment in which all can succeed through the fruits of their own efforts. An environment of academic integrity is requisite to respect for oneself and others, as well as a civil community.

In cases where academic integrity is questioned, the Policy on Academic Integrity indicates that procedure requires an instructor to inform the student of the allegation. Procedures allow a student to accept or contest a charge. If a student chooses to contest a charge, the case will then be managed by the respective college or campus Academic Integrity Committee. If that committee recommends an administrative sanction (Formal Warning, Conduct Probation, Suspension, Expulsion), the claim will be referred to the Office of Student Accountability and Conflict Response.

All Penn State colleges abide by this Penn State policy, but review procedures may vary by college when academic dishonesty is suspected. Information about Penn State's academic integrity policy and college review procedures is included in the information that students receive upon enrolling in a course. To obtain that information in advance of enrolling in a course, please contact us by going to the Contacts & Help page .

University Policies

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    In order to apply for reasonable accommodations, you must contact the appropriate disability resources office at the campus where you are officially enrolled, participate in an intake interview, and provide documentation based on the documentation guidelines. If the documentation supports your request for reasonable accommodations, your campus's disability resources office will provide you with an accommodation letter. Please share this letter with your instructors and discuss the accommodations with them as early in your courses as possible. You must follow this process for every semester that you request accommodations.

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  • Additional Policies:

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  • Military Students:

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  • Student Responsibilities and Conduct:

    1. Students are responsible for online course content, taking notes, obtaining other materials provided by the instructor, taking tests (if applicable), and completing assignments as scheduled by the instructor.  As a general rule, students should plan on logging into the course at least three times per week and spending at least three hours per course credit per week on the course, e.g., if the course is three credits, the student should plan on spending at least 9-12 hours per week on the course, just as they would in a residence course.
    2. Students are responsible for keeping track of changes in the course syllabus made by the instructor throughout the semester.
    3. Students are responsible for monitoring their grades.
    4. Students must contact their instructor (and teammates when working on any collaborative learning assignments) as soon as possible if they anticipate missing long periods of online time due to events such as chronic illnesses, death in the family, business travel, or other appropriate events. The instructor will determine the minimal log on time and participation required in order to meet course responsibilities. In the event of other unforeseen conflicts, the instructor and student will arrive at a solution together.
      1. Requests for taking exams or submitting assignments after the due dates require documentation of events such as illness, family emergency, or a business-sanctioned activity.
      2. Conflicts with dates on which examinations or assignments are scheduled must be discussed with the instructor or TA prior to the date of the examination or assignment.
    5. Students are responsible for following appropriate netiquette (network etiquette) when communicating with their instructor and classmates. For reference, see the Academic Success Kit.
    6. Behaviors that disrupt other students’ learning are not acceptable and will be addressed by the instructor.
    7. For severe and chronic problems with student disruptive behavior, the following will be applied for resolution:
      1. Senate Committee on Student Life policy on managing classroom disruptions: Office of Student Accountability and Conflict Response.
      2. Penn State Principles
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Disclaimer: Please note that the specifics of this Course Syllabus are subject to change, and you will be responsible for abiding by any such changes. Your instructor will notify you of any changes.



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