PsyAsia International is pleased to announce that we have just 3 places remaining on our Human Resource Management Course which will run from 12-15 December 2011 in Hong Kong. The course will welcome delegates from Hong Kong, mainland China, Philippines, Singapore and Australia to name but a few! This course will not run again for another year in Hong Kong, so if you are interested, please do register soon. The course outline is below and you can find full details of the course at the Human Resource Management Course webpage.
Module 1: An Introduction to HRM - Day 1
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Defining HRM

Difference between Personnel Management and HRM

HRM as an international model

Broad and Narrow, Soft and Hard HRM

Why study and practice HRM?

HRM as a strategy - internal and external
We’ll spend some time getting to know each other and discussing the course content and the HR Cycle. Methods of assessment (for those who are aiming for our certificate of competence) will also be discussed, alongside different learning and study skills.
We will then move on to consider what HRM is and where it has come from. Personnel management will be introduced and its links with HRM discussed. Different formulations of the HR model such as narrow versus broad and soft versus hard will be cited. We will discuss the extent to which HRM has been applied in delegate's workplaces and whether it is a useful model to apply. This will require some understanding of HRM as a corporate strategy as well as understanding of your organisation’s strategy in general. Cultural issues within HRM will be introduced, but focused on in greater detail in a subsequent module.
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Module 2: Job Analysis - Day 1
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What job analysis is

The importance of job analysis

The principal methods of job analysis and their advantages/disadvantages

The type of data that is collected during job analysis

Criticisms about the lack of reliability in job analysis

Criteria for assessing job analysis

How job analysis informs the job description and person specification

Why organisations use or are turning to competency-based job analysis

Links between job analysis and the HR cycle
During Module One it was noted that job analysis is often viewed as the most important element within the HR cycle. This is because it links with all aspects, and if done poorly or not at all, there will be negative repercussions in, for example, selection, training and development and performance appraisal. This module introduces job analysis, underlines its importance and demonstrates a number of methods of conducting this important task. We will consider the advantages and disadvantages of each type of job analysis and briefly practice some methods. We will also consider issues of reliability in job analysis and introduce how reliability is a theme which recurs within HR practices and methods and something to be aware of throughout the course. Finally, delegates will learn about competency-based job analysis and person specifications and why these are becoming more popular among today’s top organisations.
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Module 3: Planning, Recruitment, Selection - Day 1
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The link between forecasting of personnel needs and strategic HRM

Ways in which personnel and competency requirements can be planned

Sources of internal and external candidates

How and why recruitment policy should be consistent with the company’s strategy, image and other policies

How to design application forms that mirror best practice and do not violate employment law

How to select applicants from the recruitment pool to transfer to the selection phase
In this module, delegates will learn about forecasting the supply and demand of candidates in order to fill jobs and cover required organisational competencies. We will consider some of the principles of manpower planning. Delegates will be asked to consider the needs of their own organisations given the current and future environments within which they operate. We will then move on to consider the potential sources of job candidates to ensure that our recruitment procedure results in a high quality selection pool. Design of job application forms in line with local and international employment law and best practice will be covered. Finally, we will start to build expertise in selection by considering how to sift through job applications. We will discuss the dangers in using CVs at this stage. This will prepare us for the next two modules where we will look in some detail at selection tools, namely interviews, assessment centres and psychometric tests (among others).
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Module 4: Assessment Methods (Excluding Psychometric Tests) - Day 2
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Methods of assessment available such as assessment centres, application forms, interviews and more

Controversial methods such as graphology, astrology and phrenology

Reliability and validity of various methods

How to prepare for and design objective, behaviour-based interviews
So far we have seen how HRM must be strategic and that in order to be so, we must understand both our internal and external environments. We have also seen how it is necessary to thoroughly and competently analyse all jobs within an organisation and to make personnel plans on the basis of predictions of trends and changes to our environments. In the previous module we considered how to recruit in line with the organisation’s strategy and image and how to design a legal and scoreable application form. In this module, we move on to look at how we select employees on the basis of all of the information that we have available. The focus will be on objective assessment. Many of the methods considered may also also be used to assist in employee development.
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Module 5: Assessment Methods: Psychometric Testing - Day 2 
What a psychometric assessment is

The major competence issues in psychometric assessment

Why proper training and practice is required in order to make psychometric assessment useful

Why standardisation is a key repetitive theme in psychometrics

Psychometric Test Reliability and Validity

Error associated with tests as well as all other methods of assessment

How to ensure that bias does not occur in testing using the 4/5 rule

The use of psychometric tests in Asia

Whether using indigenous tests has any incremental validity over and above internationally-developed tests in Asia
This module takes the theme of selection and assessment within the HR function further by considering psychometric assessment in some depth. This is probably one of the areas of HR that is practiced with least competence in Asia at the current time. The competence issue also existed in other parts of the world in their early HR development. It was only with the set-up of institutions and bodies that ensured competence in psychometrics that things became better. If psychometric tests are not used in a competent manner they are of no use. This module will provide delegates with an overview of some of the major areas of necessary competence in psychometrics. The second part of the module will address the extent to which psychometric tests work in Asia by looking at local published research. International models of personality will be addressed alongside local ones and we will consider the incremental validity of using indigenous tools in psychometric testing in Asia.
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Module 6: Training and Development - Day 3
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The difference between training and education

The importance of training and development

Training and HRM

Learning styles

The training cycle

Training Needs Analysis

Training Design

Training Implementation

The training transfer problem

The often ignored evaluation and the importance of training evaluation

Solomon’s four-group training evaluation design

Kirkpatrick’s evaluation model

The learning organization and the concept of continuous learning

Cross-cultural comparisons of training
No organisation can boast that it has an HRM strategy if it does not include training and development. This module capitalises upon this statement and explores the issues surrounding the effective use of the training function. Delegates will be introduced to the training cycle and the necessity of following it. The lack of evaluation of training by organisations will be addressed, alongside how training needs analysis should be carried out, how training programmes should be designed, how training should be implemented and how the evaluation results should feedback into this cycle. We will compare training and development and its legislative context cross-culturally.
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Module 7: Performance Appraisal - Day 3
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History of performance appraisal

Purposes of performance appraisal

Advantages and disadvantages of linking performance appraisal with pay

The design of performance appraisal systems

Issues in the implementation of performance appraisal systems

Rating scales

Common errors in evaluation

Characteristics of effective performance appraisal interviews

Monitoring and maintaining appraisal systems

Improving performance appraisal for the future
The use of formal systems for appraising employee performance is on the increase. With this in mind, it is necessary for delegates to understand the advantages and disadvantages of these systems and to learn how to alleviate some of the common pitfalls in the design and maintenance of performance appraisal systems. Delegates will learn about the reliability and validity of different appraisal techniques, how appraisal should be carried out and how performance appraisal can be improved in order to be an effective HR tool.
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Module 8: Motivating and Rewarding Employees - Day 4
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The main theories of motivation: need, cognitive and reinforcement.

The evidence that supports or fails to support each theory.

The implications of each theory for workplace performance and motivation.

How to design work in order to maximise motivation and increase employee retention.

Why managers prefer to use Maslow’s theory despite the lack of evidence to support it.

What influences pay?

Pay and behaviour modification

Pay and equity

The importance of equity for employees and managers

Motivational issues in the design of salary-systems

Problems associated with different salary-systems

Performance-related pay and motivation

Performance-related pay and performance appraisal
Within a strategic HRM function, there needs to be room for consideration of how to motivate employees, and how top employees can be retained by the organisation. We have already seen how training and development and creation of a learning organisation may assist in this. Likewise, investment in career management may lead to affective commitment because the employee feels that the psychological contract has been upheld by the organisation. Additionally, it is important to consider other methods of motivation in order to enhance performance and quality of working life and increase employee retention. This module will consider the development of motivation theories over time and, given the research evidence, suggest that no theory is adequate on its own. The best insight can be gained by subscribing to a number of theories.
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Module 9: Ethical HRM & Equal Opportunities - Day 4
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What ethical HRM entails

Why HRM needs to aim to be ethical

What equal opportunities is and why it is required in terms of law and ethics

Factors affecting decision-making

Theoretical components of ethical HRM

The rhetoric versus the reality of ethical HRM

Rights and duties of employer and employee

The moral development of the organisation

A framework for ethical decision-making
This module considers the ethical processes and decisions that HRM is required to consider on an almost daily basis. First, we’ll reconsider some of the topics that we have already touched upon throughout the course in relation to equal opportunities. Then we’ll look at how ethics and ethical behaviour are shaped and fed into organisational culture. We’ll consider if HRM can ever be truly ethical given that some writers have noted that it is a morally conflictual function. We will look at some of the rights and duties of both employee and employer before finishing with a case study that aims to stimulate some thinking about the ethical issues facing HR professionals.
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Module 10: Global HRM and expatriate assignments - Day 4
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How to increase the chances of success of international assignments and expatriate assignees

Personal and organisational factors that lead to expatriate success

What issues need to be planned into an overseas assignment policy

Why training is rarely carried out (but should be)

Factors affecting the expatriate partner or spouse that ultimately also affect the assignment

Women and expatriate assignments: why the biggest barrier faced by females in expatriate assignments is often in the original country
This module will provide delegates with an overview of some of the international dimensions of HRM and organisational behaviour. The focus will be on expatriate assignments and how to plan and design expatriate packages that will lead to successful assignments overseas as well as positive reintegration at the end of the assignment. We will consider individual and organisational factors that lead to success, training for the assignment and new culture, the issue of expatriate partners/spouses and female expatriatism.