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Aktuell und in Zeiten des Fachkräftemangels wird das digitale Lernen in der Pflegebranche immer wichtiger, da dieses eine flexible und effiziente Möglichkeit bietet, um Pflegekräfte aus- und weiterzubilden. Es ermöglicht den Zugang zu aktuellem Wissen und Fähigkeiten, die für die Erfüllung der Anforderungen in der Pflegebranche erforderlich sind. Zudem kann es dazu beitragen, die Motivation und die Arbeitszufriedenheit der Pflegenden zu erhöhen und sie somit an das Unternehmen zu binden. [...] Vor diesem Hintergrund soll im Praxisvortrag der Frage nachgegangen, wie die Qualität des digitalen Lernens in der Pflege verbessert werden kann. Dabei werden Best Practices und Herausforderungen im Zuge der Implementierung von digitalem Lernen unter Nutzung der Softwarte Articulate Storyline beim GALA-Praxispartner St. Gereon Seniorendienst gGmbH geteilt und diskutiert.
Eine der spezifischen Fragestellungen aus dem Projekt GALA ist der Aufbau eines agilen interaktiven Managementsystems als Wissensplattform. Diese kollaborative Wissensmanagementlösung wurde von der Modell Aachen GmbH in Form von Q.wiki entwickelt und bietet Wissenstransfer und -kommunikation über organisatorische Abläufe sowie eine Vereinfachung des Wissenszugangs über Navigation, Kontextbezug und einfache Strukturen. Im Beitrag wird ein Praxisbeispiel zum Einsatz dieses Tools beleuchtet.
Innovation is one of the key drivers of growth, development, and profitability, which increases competitive advantages and has recently been moving towards industry 4.0 technologically. This motivates companies to update their business models (BM) towards industry 4.0. Moreover, there is a technique with the primary characteristics for achieving this motivation called "cross-industry innovation". Cross-industry innovation is a new method of innovation that concerns the creative translation and imitation of existing solutions from other industries for responding to the needs of the current market, sectors, areas, or domains. The challenge is to find out how far managers can rely on that to innovate their BM towards Industry 4.0. The aim of this study was to investigate the application of cross-industry innovation for designing industry 4.0 BM and explore the extent to which companies can rely on it as it has not been used for this purpose previously. This study utilized a database analysis to compare cross-industry innovation practices with industry 4.0 BM's characteristics in terms of value proposition, value creation, and value capture levels. In addition, some interviews were conducted with companies that had previously implemented cross-industry innovation to validate and generalize the results. The results indicated that cross-industry innovation practices can better fulfill flexible and dynamic networks, connected information flows, high efficiency, high scalability, and high availability in terms of value creation as well as variabilization of prices and costs in terms of value capture. Therefore, it demonstrated that cross-industry innovation was a more dependable and applicable strategy for designing the BM of Industry 4.0 than current practices.
Digitization is constantly affecting the working world and is of enormous interest in many fields of science. But to what extent are innovative technologies actually being applied in regional SMEs and what are the obstacles to their introduction? From a psychological point of view, it is essential to consider the employee's health and the effects of innovative technologies on their everyday work. The aim of using innovative technologies should not be to completely replace human labor or to dequalify employees, but to relieve the workforce and free up working time for more meaningful activities. One concept that should be included in the human-centered design of human-machine interaction in artificial intelligence is the HAI-MMI concept (Huchler, 2020), which offers starting points for high-quality collaboration at various levels. To reduce the gap between science and industry, this paper focuses on the actual demands of SME in the Aachen region in Germany referring to a requirements analysis within the research project AKzentE4.0 (N = 50 SME) and discusses how appropriate innovative technologies of the Industry 4.0 and AI can be implemented and deployed in a human-centred way. Moreover, the establishment of a Human Factors Competence Center for Employment in Industry 4.0 is outlined, which is meant to be used for the dissemination of research results from the project and should narrow the gap between science and industry in the long run.
Forecasting-based skills management, which is oriented to the respective corporate goals, is gaining enormous importance as a central management tool. The aim is to predict future skills requirements and match them with existing interorganizational skills. Companies are required to anticipate changes in markets, industries, and technologies at an early stage as well as to identify changes in job profiles within an occupational profile by tapping into and evaluating various data sources. Based on these findings, they can then make informed decisions regarding skill gaps, for example, to implement targeted further training measures. Forecasting-based skills management offers the opportunity to optimally qualify employees for constantly changing tasks. At the same time, however, the targeted development of such skills requires a high level of time, financial and personnel resources, which small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) generally do not have at their disposal. In addition, many SMEs are not yet aware of the importance of this issue. Within the framework of research and industrial projects of the Smart Work department at the FIR (Institute for Industrial Management) at the RWTH Aachen University, an AI-based skills forecasting tool will be developed. The goal of the paper is to conceptualize the future machine learning method, that is able to generate individualized skills forecasts and recommendations for SMEs. This is achieved by linking societal forecasts and sector trends with company-specific conditions and skills. In order to generate a corresponding database, the derivation system is made available to various companies (large companies and SMEs) in order to obtain as many data sets as possible. The data sets obtained via the derivation system are then used as training data sets for the machine learning method, with the help of which an automatic derivation of competencies depending on new trends is to be made possible.
The Learning Organization
(2023)
This Research Full Paper deals with the institutionalization of diversity management in German universities, which only started after the Bologna Reform at the end of the 1990s, the Excellence Initiative starting in 2006 and the passing of the General Equal Treatment Act (AGG) in 2006. The aim is to explore the motives of universities behind the implementation of diversity management and identify isomorphic mechanisms in the process of the implementation.
Further, the paper conducts a first stocktaking of practical anti-
discrimination work at German universities carried out through the organizational practice to identify further connecting factors and problematic situations. To answer the research questions, five expert interviews were conducted with diversity officers from two universities and three engineering universities in five different German states. Among other things, it was found that the interviewees rejected the term diversity management due to its underlying economic logic and preferred the more current term diversity policies. Moreover, from a university perspective, a total of eight different motives for implementing diversity policies were identified: Anti-discrimination, external effectiveness, acquisition of external
funding, legislation, favorable investment compared to other measures, intrinsic motivation, potential approach, and exemplary function. Thus, universities initially try to appear diverse externally to meet the rationality expectations of their environment and only supplement this external effect with the appropriate measures and structures over time, while the motivation of diversity officers is intrinsic. This is also related to the fact that voting rounds slowed down processes, but universities would have to position themselves on current discourses, such as in the summer of 2020 after the racially motivated murder of George Floyd. Accordingly, it could be highlighted that the motives of diversity officers and their universities are not automatically congruent.
This full paper track proposal deals with the challenges of designing the onboarding of new employees in digital work settings. The increasing prevalence of home office workplaces due to the corona pandemic poses new challenges for managers in designing this phase given the physical separation of team members. In the context of this research project, the aim was to examine how managers experience digital onboarding in practice and which methods they use to trigger learning and teambuilding processes.
In particular, the initial period in a new company is accompanied by many learning and team-building processes at various levels: The newcomer must acquire new technical information, create social connections with other team members, and learn on a superordinate level which values are embodied in the organization. This introductory phase lays the foundation for the initiation of further learning processes as well as the learning climate and should therefore be designed with caution.
For this purpose, data was collected using guideline-based expert interviews with managers via digital video call platforms.
Most managers reported a preference for hybrid onboarding.
Overall, it appears that managers largely use adequate strategies for triggering learning and teambuilding processes in remote work. Nevertheless, not all potentials have yet been exhausted, so this paper describes implementation proposals for the conception of leadership development workshops regarding the design of a professional onboarding.