Human resource development of non-commissioned officers in the army; a cognitive style perspective?
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 15:44authored byArthur Morgan, Steve Rayner
This article considers the assessed performances of non-commissioned officers in a programme perceived as an important career enhancing activity for British military personnel. We introduce the idea of cognitive style as an important
individual difference affecting performance on programmes of training and
development and the implications for career progression. The research
methodology adopted involved mixed methods as an alternative way of `seeing',
`researching' and `theorising' human resources development in this context. The
research drew upon a mix of data from course participants and organizers, and it
comprised cognitive style testing, within course assessment data and notes
recorded during field observation. The results revealed relationships between the
factors associated with `styles', `assessed learning performance' and `course
experience'. Key perspectives on the experiences of training in terms of success and strategic direction were also identified. The study provides a deeper
understanding of career-development processes in the military organization,
considers the implications in which knowledge of an individual's style may have for the individual and course organizers and imports new theoretical frameworks into the study of human resource development.