Abstract

Universities have three essential functions. One is educational and other is about generating knowledge and technology. The last one is related to the bridge between the theory and practice that is being practically engaged to the society that is generally called “Service”. In many of them, to educate the citizens and citizen-leaders for the society is a much more important mission then the latter. They do this through their commitment to the transformative power of a liberal arts and sciences education. While focusing on the educational issues of students, university administrators should also take into consideration the training needs of their own administrative personnel, since they are among the fundamental internal customers of the university. Creating an innovative workplace for all is essential at a contemporary university, since it is accepted as one of the role model workplaces within society. This paper emphasises the crucial need and the steps of in-service training programmes for administrative personnel, which contributes to the educational and managerial quality of higher education institutes. As a sample case, an in-service training programme is shared for the training needs of the administrative personnel of a Turkish State University, located in Istanbul, after conducting a detailed needs analysis. Following the response of the sample university to the research findings, the paper concludes with reflections on alternative institutional structures, based on Quality Circles / İmece Circles.

Highlights

  • Organisations and their human resources, as well as their needs, are constantly changing and both must develop new skills to maintain effective operation

  • The data related to the in-service training needs and demographic characteristics of the employees of the university were processed at the Computer Centre of the university

  • “one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA)”

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Organisations and their human resources, as well as their needs, are constantly changing and both must develop new skills to maintain effective operation. Some of the major corporations see themselves making a continuing investment in their human resources, though some still have the tendency to consider training as an unnecessary expense or waste of time. The latter meets their needs for training in an ad hoc and haphazard way. The others set about identifying their training needs, design training activities around this, carry out the training, and assess the results of training. Such organisations engage in a systematic approach to the training and development of their employees

Methods
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call