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HIGH IMPACT SAFETY MEETINGS

NUTSEA PRESENTS. HIGH IMPACT SAFETY MEETINGS. Bill Koepnick wkoepnick@wi.rr.com. Program Objectives. Participants will be able to use ice breakers to open their meeting. Participants will be able to achieve employee involvement.

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HIGH IMPACT SAFETY MEETINGS

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  1. NUTSEA PRESENTS HIGHIMPACT SAFETY MEETINGS Bill Koepnick wkoepnick@wi.rr.com

  2. Program Objectives • Participants will be able to use ice breakers to open their meeting. • Participants will be able to achieve employee involvement. • Participants will be able to determine the factors which influence training effectiveness. • Participants will know how adults learn. • Participants will know how to deal with distinct personalities.

  3. Get Into Your Comfort Zone

  4. If a person is starving to death they will search for food until one of four things happen. What are they? They find food. They starve to death. They search and find water. They rest/sleep.

  5. Key Principle Employee involvement is key to effective employee training. Employees attending training are preoccupied with their own thoughts and problems. Some are willing to learn and some are not.

  6. Obtaining Employee Involvement • Use ice breakers • Provide graphics • Breakout sessions • Case studies Movie clips Role playing Internal pictures Ask questions Demonstrations

  7. Ice Breakers

  8. Ice Breakers Strengths • They do not require much preparation. • They bridge the gap between trainers and participants and also among participants. • They help participants to feel at home during the training course. • They increase active involvement in the training sessions. • Icebreaking exercises and energizers are interesting and enjoyable, and do not require much time.

  9. A Matter Of Interpretation

  10. LOGICAL/PERCEPTUAL THINKING • I Went to bed a eight o’clock in the evening and set the alarm to get up at nine in the morning. How many hours of sleep would this allow me? (An old fashion wind up alarm clock) • Do they have a fourth of July in England? • Some months have thirty days, some have thirty-one. How many have twenty eight days? • If you had only one match and entered a dark room where there was an oil lamp, an oil heater and some kindling wood, which would you light first?

  11. LOGICAL/PERCEPTUAL THINKING • If a doctor gave you three pills and told you to take one every half hour, how long would they last? • You build a house that has four sides to it, a rectangular structure, each having a southern exposure. A big bear comes wondering by. What color is the bear? • A farmer had 17 sheep. All but nine died. How many did he have left? • Divide 30 by ½. Add ten. What is your total? • Take two apples from three apples. What do you have? • 10 How many animals of each species did Moses take aboard the ark?

  12. Pick which symbol best fits your personality. Rectangle Square Circle Sine-Wave Triangle

  13. Squares: Squares are the workers.  They are left-brained and highly task oriented.  They are analytical, detail oriented, linear, logical, and sequential.  They seek uniformity, balance, organization and accuracy.

  14. Rectangles: Rectangles are more flexible than squares, not as precise.  They are also left-brained and well grounded as represented by the broad base of the rectangle.  Rectangles are team players, consensus oriented, and co-operative.  Most of all they strive for fairness.

  15. Triangles: Triangles are mid-left brained.  Highly task oriented.  They always want to "get to the point".  They are the movers and shakers of the world. They are adapt at doing several tasks at once.  They are interested in power and moving up.  The motto of the triangle is "ready, fire, aim".

  16. Circles: Circles are right-brained, smooth and accommodating.  They are adapters, well rounded and social.  Circles are people oriented.  They dislike details but love to talk.

  17. Sine-waves: The sine-wave is right-brained, open-minded, flexible and free thinking.  Sine-waves are non-directive.  They like change and absolutely hate details.  They are pictorial people.  They can be heard saying "whatever it takes".  Sine-waves are intuitive, non-linear concept people.  The motto of the sine-wave is "fake it till you make it".

  18. Test Your Awareness First Read the Sentence Enclosed In The Box FINISHED FILES ARE THE RE- SULT OF YEARS OF SCIENTIF- IC STUDY COMBINED WITH THE EXPERIENCE OF MANY YEARS. Now count the F’s in the sentence. Count them only Once and do not go back and count them again.

  19. Case Studies Johnny Puffer is a forklift driver at your facility. He is a known smoker. There is a company rule of no smoking in the plant because of the potential for fires. You notice cigarette butts on the floor in the area that Johnny is responsible for, though you have never actually seen him smoking. What would you do?

  20. The facility has just instituted a policy of no jewelry because of the potential for injuries. One day after the rule has taken affect you notice Bob Diamond with his wedding ring on. You approach Bob to discuss the rule with him and he barks back “I have been married for 35 years and this ring is a symbol of my love. I will not take it off. We could always wear our rings in the past, why do I have to take it off now! My job is still the same.” Bob has been an excellent employee for the past 22 years. What would you do?

  21. Case Studies • Why would someone violate a safety rule or commit an unsafe act?

  22. Case Studies Bob Slavin was given a work order to repair a leak on a water pipe at 2:00 p.m. He found a straight ladder standing in the corner of the shop. He carried the ladder to the “area” indicated on the work order and set up the ladder. He was checking for the origin of the leak which Bob thought was further down the pipe from where the ladder was set. He leaned to get a better look when the ladder kicked out sending Bob to the floor. He suffered a broken arm and bruised hip. What questions would you ask if you were to analyze this case? Develop ?’s that can not be answered with a yes or no.

  23. Safety Incentives

  24. Use Pictures

  25. Ladder Safety

  26. EmergencyEvacuation

  27. Chemical Safety

  28. Machine Guarding

  29. Machine Guarding

  30. Crane Safety

  31. Electrical Safety

  32. Just For Fun

  33. Hints for a successful presentation: • Plan carefully • Do your research • Know your audience • Time your presentation •  Practice your presentation •  Speak comfortably and clearly 

  34. Training Considerations What are your training goals for this session? New skills New techniques for old skills Better workplace behavior A safer workplace A fair and equal workplace free of discrimination and harassment

  35. Training Considerations Who is being trained? New employees Seasoned employees Upper management What is your training budget? How much time has been allocated for training within your organization? What training resources and materials do you have at your disposal?

  36. Text guidelines Generally no more than 6 words a line Generally no more than 6 lines a slide Avoid long sentences Larger font indicates more important information  Font size generally ranges from 18 to 48 point

  37. Text guidelines Be sure text contrasts with background Fancy fonts can be hard to read Words in all capital letters are hard to read Avoid abbreviations and acronyms Limit punctuation marks

  38. Program Preparation

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