IC 9489 - Roof Bolting Machine Operators Skills Training for a Walk-Thru Roof Bolter: Trainer?s Guide

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 52
- File Size:
- 1307 KB
- Publication Date:
- Aug 1, 2006
Abstract
This trainer?s guide is designed as a reference manual. The purpose is to offer information and examples to skills trainers to assist them in structuring training for new operators of Walk-Thru roof bolting machines. Trainers can use this manual as a resource for helping trainees learn, understand, and apply knowledge and skills. In this sense, the guide is not prescriptive. It is designed to offer information and trigger ideas on what might be done to accelerate learning to those who are new to the roof-bolting task. On-site trainers can modify this guide to fit their conditions, machines and equipment, and work procedures. They can integrate roof control plans, company policies and procedures, and operators? manuals from the manufacturers of the original equipment into this guide. Every trainee is different and will come to the job with varying levels of relevant knowledge and skills. The trainer?s decisions on where to start, how to organize the on-the-job and classroom training portions, and when and how to offer different aspects of the training will be based on (1) a pretraining assessment of the trainee?s knowledge and skills and (2) the trainer?s experience in conducting skills training. The ?Skill Check? section might be useful for deciding where training should start among miners who have underground experience but limited knowledge of roof-bolting techniques. Every job carries a learning curve and likely has a number of ?teachable moments? where significantly new knowledge and skills can be learned.
Citation
APA:
(2006) IC 9489 - Roof Bolting Machine Operators Skills Training for a Walk-Thru Roof Bolter: Trainer?s GuideMLA: IC 9489 - Roof Bolting Machine Operators Skills Training for a Walk-Thru Roof Bolter: Trainer?s Guide. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 2006.