3 PUBH5134 Occupational Health and Safety Management II
Brad Maclean
Before You Begin:
To better prepare for the lesson, you may go into each session and start by reading the PRE-READ in blue textbox first.
All the best in your study!
Block 1
-
Session 1. Safety Ethics and Business Case Formulation – Brad MacLean (SVP Safety and OE, Wolfcreek Group, Houston)
- This session will begin with introductions and then an overview of the full program of workshops. Safety Ethics will be explored including employer responsibility and the Principle-Driven Culture, the No Blame overcorrection, Human Error and Safety, the public language of Zero, and the Just Culture Model. Business Case formulation will explore the basic concepts of ROI (Return on Investment) and Business Case framework(s) before walking learners through a practical example.
-
-
Safety Ethics and Public Lanugage
-
-
-
- YouTube Video “Paradox of Zero” (30 min)
- YouTube Video “Paradox of Zero” (30 min)
-
-
-
- YouTube Video “Start with Why” (18 min)
- YouTube Video “Start with Why” (18 min)
-
-
-
Business Cases
-
-
-
Session 2. Safety Management Systems, Policy Design, and Auditing – Robert Duda (President, Safety Science Management Consulting, Toronto)
Safety Management Systems are a key component of ensuring effective control of requirements, mitigation of hazards and risks and protection of workers, the public and the environment. The last twenty years has seen a tremendous uptake of formalized systems and the creation of various standards for management systems across industries. This session will explore the components of safety management systems, key processes, and tools to ensure they are fit for purpose, adequate and effective within a specific organization.
-
Safety Management Systems
-
PRE-READ
- OSH Management System: A Tool for Continual Improvement (International Labour Organization)
- Building an Effective Health and Safety Management System (Government of Alberta)
- COR ™ Handbook (Infrastructure Health & Safety Association, On)
- This handbook is developed to provide COR ™ Internal Auditor additional assistance to complete their auditing job. It could be a good reference guide on how to conduct an OHS audit.
- Occupational health & safety management systems (WorkSafe BC)
- Safety Management System (Federal Aviation Administration, US)
- SMS Explained
- Basis
- Components
- Safety Policy
- Safety Risk Management
- Safety Assurance
- Safety Promotion
- Quality and Safety Management
- SMS International Collaboration
- Reference Library
- FAQs
- SMS Explained
- Auditing, reviewing and certifying occupational safety and health management systems (OSH Wiki, EU)
- Introduction
- Definition and principles
- Types of audits
- Auditors – qualifications and abilities
- Audit programme
- Audit activities
- Utilisation of outputs of an audit in the management review
- External audits and certification of the OSH management system
- Weaknesses in certification of OSH management system
-
-
-
-
Session 3. Safety Culture and Employee Engagement – Bill Fournet (Founder & CEO of the Persimmon Group, Tulsa)
Success safety organizations build a “culture” around safety where employees pursue good practices because they want to, not because they have to. This session will focus on how to build a safety culture embraced by employees through engagement and leadership. We will review proven techniques to establish and measure your Safety Culture to optimize employee engagement and performance.
-
-
PRE-READ
- Action does not equal progress: How to Focus on Outcomes for Better Performance, by Fournet
- Wilderness Leadership—on the Job, by Kanengieter and Rajagopal-Durbin (Harvard Business Review)
- Make Your Values Mean Something, by Lencioni (Harvard Bsuiness Review)
- The Focused Leader, by Goldman (Harvard Bsuiness Review)
- The Art of Persuasion Hasn’t Changed in 2,000 Years (Harvard Business Review Staff)
-
Values, Culture and Company Performance:
- Values-based Leadership: Leading from the inside out (The Career Development Association of Alberta)
- This article gives you basic ideas on:
- how you do what you do – the living of deeply held value
- How values and beliefs of leaders interact with the culture of an organization
- How it interacts with company’s performance
- This article gives you basic ideas on:
- Culture Is A Company’s Single Most Powerful Advantage. Here’s Why (Forbes.com)
- Values-based Leadership: Leading from the inside out (The Career Development Association of Alberta)
-
What is a Safety Culture in Workplace?
- Safety Culture: Values, Beliefs and Actions (Safe Work Manitoba)
- Workplace culture is often described as “the way we do things around here.”
- Values and Beliefs Guide Safety Culture
- Examples of Safety Culture
- Adopting Workplace Safety Culture
- Understanding Safety Culture (Workplace Health and Safety Queensland)
- What is a safety culture?
- Culture Action 1 Communicate Company Values
- Culture Action 2: Demonstrate Leadership
- Culture Action 3: Clarify Required and Expected Behaviours
- Culture Action 4: Personalise Safety Outcomes
- Culture Action 5: Develop Positive Safety Attitudes
- Culture Action 6: Engage and Own Safety Responsibilities and Accountabilities
- Culture Action 7: Increase Hazard/Risk Awareness and Preventive Behaviours
- Culture action 8: Improve Understanding and Effective
- Implementation of Safety Management Systems
- What is a safety culture?
- Safety Culture: Values, Beliefs and Actions (Safe Work Manitoba)
-
How to create a Better Safety Culture
- Enhancing health & safety culture & performance (Work Safe BC)
- Workplace Culture
- Improving Health and Safety Culture
- Active health and safety management
- Planning for safety
- Leadership and commitment
- Supervising for health and safety
- Engaging workers
- Due diligence
- Assessing your health and safety culture
- Common topic 4: Safety culture (HSE, UK)
- Please download from the link in the website: Common topic 4: Safety culture – Extract from inspectors human factors toolkit (PDF)
- Keeping Patients Safe: Transforming the Work Environment of Nurses. (NIH Library of Medicine)
- 7 Creating and Sustaining a Culture of Safety
- ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF AN EFFECTIVE SAFETY CULTURE
- Organizational Learning from Errors and Near Misses
- NEED FOR A LONG-TERM COMMITMENT TO CREATE A CULTURE OF SAFETY
- BARRIERS TO EFFECTIVE SAFETY CULTURES FROM NURSING AND EXTERNAL SOURCES
- PROGRESS IN CREATING CULTURES OF SAFETY
- NEED FOR ALL HCOS TO MEASURE THEIR PROGRESS IN CREATING CULTURES OF SAFETY
- RECOMMENDATIONS
- By Engaging Employees
- How Increasing Employee Engagement Improves Your Environmental Health and Safety Efforts (Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health)
- How to keep your employees engaged in health and safety (OHS Canada)
- Employee Engagement and Commitment – A guide to understanding, measuring and increasing engagement in your organization (Society for Human Resource Management)
- Although this document is not directly related to safety culture, the strategies in employee engagement is valuable to learn.
-
Question
How you will tailor make your employee engagement in occupational safety culture?
- Enhancing health & safety culture & performance (Work Safe BC)
-
Organizational Psychology
- Industrial-Organizational Psychology Basics and Overview (International Online Medical Council (IOMC))
- Chapter 1: What Is Organizational Behavior? (Seneca College)
- Want to know more about organizational behavior?
-
Leadership Techniques:
- A Primer on Leadership Technique (Monash University, Au)
- Leadership Theories and Styles: A Literature Review (Full Article)
- Nawaz, Z. A. K. D. A., & Khan, I. (2016). Leadership theories and styles: A literature review. Leadership, 16(1), 1-7.
- TRAITS, SKILLS, AND STYLES OF LEADERSHIP (American College of Healthcare Executives)
-
Block 2
-
Session 4. Introduction to Energy-Based Safety & Hazard Identification – Ramsey Robertson (President, Triad Solutions Consulting, Houston)
Most of the hazard recognition and mitigation occurs on a task level, which typically places a focus on experience and procedures to determine hazards and controls (e.g. Job Hazard Analysis). This session will showcase how Energy-based Safety improves the effectiveness and efficiency of hazard recognition, hazard prioritization, and hazard control. By integrating the concepts of energy, high-energy, and controls into planning, monitoring, classification, and learning, the participants will be able to deploy an approach to hazard recognition and mitigation that is based on the most up-to-date scientific research and emerging best practices.
-
Hazardous Energy Control Programs
-
-
-
-
- What is hazardous energy?
- What are the types of energy?
- Are lockout and hazardous energy control the same thing?
- What is the purpose of a hazardous energy control program?
- What methods, other than lockout, exist to control hazardous energy?
- What are the elements involved in a Hazardous Energy Control Program?
-
-
-
-
Energy Hazards Identification:
PRE-READ
- The Energy Wheel: Review of the Art and Science of Energy-Based Hazard Recognition (safetyfunction.com)
- Read the White Paper at the bottom of the page using the link above
- Content of the White Paper (PDF):
- Introduction
- Situational Awareness
- Hazard Recognition Skill
- Strengths and Limitations in Hazard Recognition
- Thought Experiments
- Empirical Research
- The Energy Wheel
- Impact of the Energy Wheel on Hazard Recognition Performance
- Best Practice for Energy Wheel Implementation
- Conclusions
- Energy Based Hazards Management
- The Energy Wheel: Review of the Art and Science of Energy-Based Hazard Recognition (safetyfunction.com)
-
-
Session 5. Incident Classification, Causation, and Corrective Action Design – HYBRID
-
Part A: Incident Classification – Mike Quashne (Manager, Business Transformation and Performance Assessment, Baltimore Gas and Electric, Baltimore)
This session will introduce common and emerging methods of classifying incidents and will explore the strengths, weaknesses, and impacts of each. At the end of the session, students will be able to recognize the terms and basis of a regulatory classifications, near miss reporting, serious injuries, and the safety classification and learning model.
-
Regulatory Classification:
-
-
-
-
-
PRE-READ
- Incident Rates (Rochester Institute of Technology)
- Some Calculations on:
- DART Rate (Days Away/Restricted or Transfer Rate)
- Lost Time Case Rate
- Lost Work Day Rate
- Occupational Injury
- Occupation Illness
- Recordable Incidents Rate
- Severity Rate
-
Near Miss Incident
-
Serious Injuries
- Report a Serious Incident (Government of Manitoba) (In Provincial Context)
- Requirement to Notify WSH
- Definition of Serious Incident
- When a Serious Incident Occurs
- Reporting and investigating Potentially Serious Incidents (PSI) (Government of Alberta)
- Report a Serious Incident (Government of Manitoba) (In Provincial Context)
- Safety Classification and Learning
-
PRE-READ
-
-
-
Part B: Causation, and Corrective Action Design – Caleb Scheve (Director of Safety and Health, Price Gregory International, Houston)
This part of the session explores the theories and principles of application for Accident Causation and Corrective Action Design. Topics will include the history of accident prevention and analysis, current accident investigation practices and techniques, barriers to high performance accident investigation and causation determination, and effective corrective action design and follow-up. Participants will practice Causal Factor Charting, Fault Tree Analysis, and Root Cause Charting. Additionally, recent research re overcoming biases that present in the investigation process and corrective action planning will be shared.
- Incident Investigation (CCOHS)
-
- What is an incident and why should it be investigated?
- Who should do the investigating?
- Should the immediate supervisor be on the team?
- Why look for the root cause?
- What are the steps involved in investigating an incident?
- What should be looked at as the cause of an incident?
- How are the facts collected?
- What should I know when making the analysis and recommendations?
- Why should recommendations be made?
- What should be done if the investigation reveals human error?
- How should follow-up be done?
-
- Indirect and Root Cause Reference Guide (PDF) (Government of Saskatchewan)
- Indirect causes
- Root causes
- Management Controls
- Incident Causation Model
-
Causation
-
PRE-READ
- Models of Causation Safety (PDF) (OHS Body of Knowledge, Au)
- Introduction (P.1)
- Historical Context (P.2)
- Evolution of models of accident causation (P.3)
- Simple sequential linear accident models (P.4)
- Complex linear models (P.7)
- Complex non-linear accident models (P.16)
- Implications for OHS practice (P.19)
- Summary (P.21)
- Models of Causation Safety (PDF) (OHS Body of Knowledge, Au)
- Theories of Accident Causation (Power Point Slides) (PDF) (Cleveland State University)
-
- Incident Investigation (CCOHS)
-
-
-
-
Causal Factors Analysis
- Root Cause Analysis For Beginners (PDF) (American Society for Quality)
- Events and Causal Factors Analysis (PDF) Technical Research and Analysis Center) (from The Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, UK)
- Root causes analysis: Literature review (PDF) (HSE, UK)
- Identification of Critical Events (P.13)
- Barrier Analysis
- Change Analysis
- Fault Tree Analysis
- Root Causes Identification – Tree Techniques (P.20)
- Root Causes Analysis – Checklist Methods (P.33)
- Root Causes Analysis – Other Methodologies (P.40)
- Identification of Critical Events (P.13)
-
Incident Investigation:
-
Basics of Incident Investigation
- Health and Safety in Canadian Workplaces (Open Book) (Athabasca University Press)
- Incident Investigation Guide (PDF) (Worksafe Saskatchewan)
-
Investigation Techniques
-
How to Conduct Invesitgation:
-
-
Bias in Investigation
-
What is Bias and its Types
-
How to avoid bias? You can learn from the followings although the content is not OHS focused
-
- Why Incident Investigations Fail (COVE Center of Visual Expertise.com)
- An illusion of objectivity in workplace investigation: The cause analysis chart and consistency, accuracy, and bias in judgments (Full article available on CBU Library Online)
- MacLean, C. L., & Read, J. D. (2019). An illusion of objectivity in workplace investigation: The cause analysis chart and consistency, accuracy, and bias in judgments. Journal of safety research, 68, 139-148. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30876505/
- Safety Barriers Identification, Classification, and Ways to Improve Safety Performance in the Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (AEC) Industry: Review Study (Full Article)
- Maliha, M. N., Abu Aisheh, Y. I., Tayeh, B. A., & Almalki, A. (2021). Safety barriers identification, classification, and ways to improve safety performance in the architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) industry: Review study. Sustainability, 13(6), 3316. https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/6/3316
- Challenges to Investigations:
-
Formulating Corrective Actions:
- OHS Body of Knowledge (Australia)
- Occupational Health and Safety Program Manual (PDF) (Southern Methodist University, US)
- Please read:
- Chapter 17 Preventive and Corrective Action
- Introduction
- Procedures to Address Preventive and Corrective Actions
- Preventive and Corrective Actions Response
- Chapter 17 Preventive and Corrective Action
- Please read:
-
-
-
Session 6. Contractor Management Essentials – John Kirwin (Safety Director, Bannister Pipelines, Toronto)
A successful safety management program is dependent on a comprehensive contractual relationship between the contractor and the client, and between the contractor and its subcontractors. Taken in a Part A and Part B sequence, this session will delve into the basics of contracting through a “safety-focused” lens. We will explore the critical components of this contractual relationship including senior management commitment, various types of contracts, incentives and penalties, performance measurement metrics, client expectations, roles and responsibilities, obligations, and accountabilities. We will examine the importance of the prequalification process, pre-project/kick-off meetings, contractor and client inspections and monitoring and post-job evaluations. We will also explore some the unique challenges of safety accountability and responsibility within the owner/contractor scenario.
-
-
Concept In brief:
- Contractor Management (Safeopedia.com)
- What Does Contractor Management Mean?
- Safeopedia Explains Contractor Management
- Delegating Safety (OHSCanada.com)
- Contractor Management (Safeopedia.com)
-
-
-
-
Introduction to Contractor Management
- Introduction to Contractor Management (Center for Chemical Process Safety)
- Element Overview
- What is it?
- Why is it important
- Where/When Is It Done?
- What Is the Anticipated Work Product?
- How Is It Done?
-
Legal responsibility of employer in outsourcing:
- OH&S Legislation in Canada – Due Diligence (CCOHS)
- See section:
- How does an employer establish a due diligence program?
- See section:
- Responsibilities – General Contractors and Subcontractors (Construction Safety Nova Scotia)
- Summary
- Internal Responsibility System, The extent of Duties and Requirements, Specific Duties and Requirements
- Summary
- OH&S Legislation in Canada – Due Diligence (CCOHS)
- Introduction to Contractor Management (Center for Chemical Process Safety)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Legislation
- Workplace Health and Safety Regulations N.S. Reg. 52/2013 – Part 1 Interpretation and Application
- Occupational Safety General Regulations N.S. Reg. 44/99 – Part 2 General
- Legislation
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Occupational Health and Safety Act S.N.S. 1996, c. 7
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Resources
-
-
-
Contractor Management, Some Theories, Guides and Practices:
- The Fundamentals of Contract Management (Business News Daily)
- Elements of successful contract management
- Activities that comprise good contract management
- What are the stages of the contract management process?
- The bottom line
-
PRE-READ
- Contractor Management Systems Guideline (Energy Safe Canada, Ab)
- Step 1: Define Scope of Work (P.4)
- Step 2: Establish Contractor Expectations (P.7)
- Step 3: Conduct Contractor Pre=qualification and Selection (P.13)
- Step 4: Choose and Develop the Appropriate Agreement (P.17)
- Step 5: Manage the Contractor (P.24)
- Step 6: Keep Records and Exercise Due Diligence (P.30)
- Best Practices in Contractor Management (PDF) (Campbell Institute, National Safety Council, US)
- Introduction and Background (P.3)
-
Methods
-
Results
-
Best Practices
-
Common Challenge
-
Summary of Best Practices and Common Challenges
-
Discussion and Future Directions
- Contractor Management Systems Guideline (Energy Safe Canada, Ab)
- Contractors OHS Handbook (PDF)(Tetra Pak Occupational Health and Safety)
- The Fundamentals of Contract Management (Business News Daily)
-
-
Block 3
-
Session 7. High Performance Safety Metrics – Dr. Elif Erkal (Senior Associate, Exponent, Oakland)
We cannot manage what we cannot measure. The success of any safety management system heavily depends on the quality of metrics it measures to evaluate safety performance. Traditionally, the industries use incident rates that only capture the counts of incidents as their main method of safety performance measurement. However, recently both industry and academia concur that recordable injury rates are too limited in their capacity to facilitate robust safety performance measurements to inform safety decision-making and predictions. This session explores the limitations of injury rates and presents new and improved strategies that could help improve safety performance measurements. The students will get to explore the different strengths and limitations of various safety measurement methods and will be encouraged to think of balanced approaches.
-
PRE-READ
- Hallowell, Matthew R., Siddharth Bhandari, and Wael Alruqi. “Methods of safety prediction: Analysis and integration of risk assessment, leading indicators, precursor analysis, and safety climate.” Construction Management and Economics38.4 (2020): 308-321. (Full Article Available online via CBU Library)
- Lofquist, Eric Arne. “The art of measuring nothing: The paradox of measuring safety in a changing civil aviation industry using traditional safety metrics.” Safety science 48.10 (2010): 1520-1529. (Full Article Available online via CBU Library)
- Hinze, Jimmie, Samuel Thurman, and Andrew Wehle. “Leading indicators of construction safety performance.” Safety science 51.1 (2013): 23-28. (Full Article Available online via CBU Library)
- Lingard, Helen, Ron Wakefield, and Nick Blismas. “If you cannot measure it, you cannot improve it: Measuring health and safety performance in the construction industry.” the 19th Triennial CIB World Building Congress, Queensland University of Technology,, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. 2013. (Full Article) (PDF)
-
-
Session 8. Job Safety Analyses and the Measurement of Pre-Job Meeting Quality – Dr. Siddharth Bhandari (Associate Director of Research, Construction Safety Research Alliance (CSRA), Boulder)How to make safety meetings interesting
- Pre-job safety meetings are the cornerstone of any safety system. When done well, these meetings can mitigate most, if not all, dangerous conditions that may emerge during the work period. This session will equip learners on how to use the first of its kind scientifically validated tool to measure the quality of these safety meetings. These quality-measuring tools are designed to support crews by providing them clear guidance on expectations and targeted avenues of continual improvements. Learners will be able to use these tools as inspiration to measure the quality of other leading indicators within their safety program.
-
- Pre-job Safety Briefings: Why They Should Be Included in an OHSMS (PDF) (Full Article)
- Connor, W. J., & Mulroy, J. M. (2021). Prejob Safety Briefings: Why They Should Be Included in an OHSMS. Professional Safety, 66(11), 31-35. https://aeasseincludes.assp.org/professionalsafety/pastissues/066/11/F3Connor_1121.pdf?_ga=2.172185189.715113027.1644200162-127348607.1558883067
- Why Your Safety Management System Needs Prejob Briefings (American Society of Safety Professionals)
- A field guide to high-quality pre-job safety meetings
-
About Job Safety Analysis
-
Identifying Hazards and Assessing Risks
- Empirical measurement and improvement of hazard recognition skill (Full Article Available online via CBU Library)
- Albert, A., Hallowell, M. R., Skaggs, M., & Kleiner, B. (2017). Empirical measurement and improvement of hazard recognition skill. Safety science, 93, 1-8. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0925753516304751
- The ENERGY WHEEL The Art & Science of Energy-Based Hazard Recognition (Full Article Availble via CBU Login)
- Hallowell, M. R. (2021). The Energy Wheel: The Art & Science of Energy-Based Hazard Recognition. Professional Safety, 66(12), 27-33. https://www.proquest.com/docview/2605663005?pq-origsite=gscholar&fromopenview=true
- Empirical measurement and improvement of hazard recognition skill (Full Article Available online via CBU Library)
-
How to make safety meeting interesting
- Making construction safety training interesting: A field-based quasi-experiment to test the relationship between emotional arousal and situational interest among adult learners (Full Article Available online via CBU Library)
- Bhandari, S., Hallowell, M. R., & Correll, J. (2019). Making construction safety training interesting: A field-based quasi-experiment to test the relationship between emotional arousal and situational interest among adult learners. Safety science, 117, 58-70. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0925753518306635
-
Quality Measurements:
-
PRE-READ
- Assessing the Quality of SAFETY-FOCUSED ENGAGEMENT LEADERSHIP (Full Article Availble via CBU Login)
- Bhandari, S., Hallowell, M. R., Scheve, C., Upton, J., Alruqi, W., & Quashne, M. (2022). Assessing the Quality of SAFETY-FOCUSED ENGAGEMENT LEADERSHIP. Professional Safety, 67(1), 22-28.
- https://www.proquest.com/docview/2619126362?pq-origsite=gscholar&fromopenview=true
- Assessing the Quality of SAFETY-FOCUSED ENGAGEMENT LEADERSHIP (Full Article Availble via CBU Login)
- Use this app to measure the quality of your pre-job safety meeting:
-
- Making construction safety training interesting: A field-based quasi-experiment to test the relationship between emotional arousal and situational interest among adult learners (Full Article Available online via CBU Library)
- Pre-job Safety Briefings: Why They Should Be Included in an OHSMS (PDF) (Full Article)
-
Session 9. Significant Injury and Fatality Event Precursor Analysis – Dr. Siddharth Bhandari (Associate Dire-ctor of Research, Construction Safety Research Alliance (CSRA), Boulder)
- Learn what are the unique differentiators of serious injuries and fatalities (SIFs) and how these events can be prevented. This session focuses on giving a definition for serious injuries, sharing findings on which, if any, factors predict serious injuries and fatalities vs. low-severity injuries, and considers how we can prevent these serious injuries by identifying the warning signs of SIF events before they occur through a brief but targeted field safety engagement. This session will equip learners with knowledge on how to better classify seriousness of any injury, understand and identify warning signs that can lead to those negative events, and utilize targeted responses to mitigate the risks.
-
Fatality Event Precursor Analysis
- On the Prevention of Serious Injuries and Fatalities (American Society of Safety Professionals)
- Precursour analysis
- Predicting likelihood of SIF exposure vs. Safety Success: Future of Safety
- Predicting Outcome Likelihood using precursor analysis
- Application to advanced data science methods to support precursor analysis
-
Block 4
-
Session 10. Human Factors Essentials – Mike Quashne (Manager, Business Transformation and Performance Assessment, Baltimore Gas and Electric, Baltimore)
- This session will present the models and approaches to human behavior and human error that have influenced safety management from the Industrial Revolution through today. The benefits and drawbacks of each approach will be discussed and compared within a safety context. The session will place a specific focus on contemporary approaches to human behavior in safety including Behavior Based Safety and Human & Organizational Performance. At the end of the session, students will recognize the major approaches to human factors and human error through three eras of safety management and be able to discuss the pros and cons of each. Students will also be able to compare and contrast Behavior Based Safety and Human & Organizational Performance and make a judgement about the merits of each.
-
What is Human Factor in OHS?
-
-
-
Era 1 – Human Factors Beginnings – Human Error
- Heinrich’s Pyramid (Thinkinsights)
- Human Error & Heinrich’s Domino Theory (UK Health & Safety Executive)
- P.1-10
-
Behavior-Based Safety
-
Human Factors Engineering
-
Era 2 – Organizational and Cultural Factors
-
Era 3 – Complexity and Resilience
-
-
-
Session 11. Safety Instruction and the Adult Learner – Dr. Logan Perry (Assistant Professor at University of Nebraska, Omaha)
This session will cover the basics of designing, delivering, and managing safety training programs. A brief introduction to learning theory will be given, followed by discussions around best practices for teaching and learning in the context of construction safety. At the conclusion of this session, participants will be able to create student-centered safety training modules for front-line adult workers.
-
-
-
Session 12. Safety and the Board Room – Brad MacLean (SVP Safety and OE, Wolfcreek Group, Houston)
This session will provide a retrospective of the program, Tying it all Together. Then, after some basic instruction on the Competing Values Model, organizational governance (Boards), ESG, and Enterprise Risk Management, learners will explore key success factors for the safety function supporting operational, organizational, and ultimately Board levels. To wrap up, there will be one last guest speaker. Jim Spigener (Chief Client Officer for DEKRA North America) is an authority in safety leadership and executive safety coaching. He will take 1.5 hours to share his experiences on Best Practices for safety managers advising operational, business, and governance (Board) leaders on safety risks and performance. His Q&A session will be a capstone for some of the best professional and career advice you’ll hear as you prepare to leave your Advanced Safety Management course!