HR Management & Compliance

Do You Know the 7 Steps of OSHA’s Training Guidelines?

Step 1. Determine if training is necessary. How do you know what training is necessary—or whether training is needed at all? Before you can answer that question, you have to ask yourself:

  • Does an OSHA regulation or other law mandate safety training?
  • Has there been an increase in workplace accidents recently?
  • Are new processes, procedures, equipment, or substances being introduced into the workplace?
  • Are employees performing certain jobs getting injured at a higher rate than other workers—for example, a high rate of back injuries among material handlers?
  • Are hazardous operations conducted in the workplace, such as those involving hazardous chemicals or hazardous equipment?

Training best addresses problems, such as:

  • Lack of knowledge;
  • Unfamiliarity with equipment or substances; and
  • Incorrect performance of a particular task.

Step 2. Identify training needs. Once you know that training is necessary for certain needs and problems, you have to figure out what the training should accomplish.


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OSHA says that if training is to familiarize employees with something new (a new piece of equipment, a recently introduced hazardous substance), you should gather all the information you can find about the issue—for example, operation manual, engineering data, safety data sheet (SDS), and any applicable OSHA standards. From these sources, you can pinpoint the information employees will need to know to work safely.

If the training deals with an existing job—such as the operation of a complicated stamping machine—you can conduct a job hazard analysis and determine where risks can be reduced or eliminated.

As for the question, who needs training, OSHA says to train:

  • Employees who are required to be trained by OSHA regulations;
  • Employees who may face particular hazards on the job;
  • Employees who may reasonably be expected to be assigned to a job that requires safety training;
  • Supervisors of these employees; and
  • Technical supervisors or technicians who work in potentially hazardous areas.

Step 3. Identify goals and objectives. What should training accomplish? OSHA emphasizes that safety training goals should be absolutely clear and put into written, action-oriented, specific language. An objective such as “being able to use a fire extinguisher” is too vague. A stronger objective is: “An employee will be able to tell where the fire extinguishers are located, which classification to use for which types of fires, and demonstrate how to operate a fire extinguisher safely.”

By the way, each lesson plan in Safety Meeting Repros states a specific goal or goals for that particular lesson. You can easily customize these goals to suit your own training goals.

Step 4. Design learning activities. The best training uses interactive learning activities that engage employees and are designed to resemble or simulate the actual job or situation. For instance, an appropriate learning activity for the example in Step 3 might be to have employees mark fire extinguisher locations on a floor plan and then demonstrate how to operate an extinguisher using the Pull, Aim, Squeeze, and Sweep (PASS) technique.


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Here’s another example: Safety Meeting Repros’ handout on accident reporting asks trainees to read an accident scenario and then fill out a report form using the information. This is a proven way to test comprehension.

In executing Step 4, remember to consider workers with special needs—such as hearing or visual impairment or those whose primary language isn’t English—when planning the content and delivery of the training.

In tomorrow’s Advisor, we’ll conclude with the last three guidelines, plus share information about an essential training resource that will help you meet current and future safety training objectives easily and effectively.

2 thoughts on “Do You Know the 7 Steps of OSHA’s Training Guidelines?”

  1. United States congress handed the OSHAct (Occupational Safety and Health Act) of 1970, to “assure safe as well as healthful working environment for working men or women”. Under the OSHAct, the OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) was created to make sure that organizations had to take the required measures to maintain their workers safe.

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