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The Impact of Training and Education Characteristics Upon Plant Operator Maintenance Proficiency

David J. Edwards (Department of Civil and Building Engineering, Loughborough University)
Ruel R. Cabahug (Doctoral Research Student)
John Nicholas (School of Engineering and Built Environment, University of Wolverhampton)

Journal of Engineering, Design and Technology

ISSN: 1726-0531

Article publication date: 1 February 2003

171

Abstract

Hiring, selecting or assessing plant operatives' proficiency in the UK construction industry is an increasingly difficult task. A number of plant operator certification schemes are available to practitioners and each scheme trains to a myriad of bespoke standards. Consequently, the decision to employ a candidate often rests upon the employer's intuition and judgement and creates an unnecessary dilemma. To address this aforementioned problem, findings of research work that modelled plant operators' maintenance proficiency is presented. A UK nationwide survey was conducted to elicit plant professional opinion on what ‘training and educational’ (T&E) attributes constitute ‘good’ operator proficiency. The data was then arranged into three categories of operator maintenance proficiency: good, average and poor Multivariate Discriminant Analysis (MDA) was used on 75 percent of a simulated data set. The model utilised five T&E attributes, namely: duration of training provided, operator holder of alternative training card (not Certificate of Training Achievement (CTA) or Scottish/National Vocational Qualifications (S/NVQ)), operator's oral communication skills, operator's planning skills and operator's mechanical knowledge. Performance analysis revealed that model classification accuracy was 89.10 percent. The remaining 25 percent hold out sample was then modelled for validation purposes using the derived MDA model. Accuracy of the sub‐sample model was high at 77.60 percent whilst a paired sample T‐tests for the 75 percent and 25 percent sample data established that there was no significant statistical difference between actual and predicted classifications. Future work is proposed that aims to model other factors that influence operator maintenance proficiency; namely, work situational, motivational management and personal factors.

Keywords

Citation

Edwards, D.J., Cabahug, R.R. and Nicholas, J. (2003), "The Impact of Training and Education Characteristics Upon Plant Operator Maintenance Proficiency", Journal of Engineering, Design and Technology, Vol. 1 No. 2, pp. 119-134. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb060893

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2003, MCB UP Limited

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