Training within industry: Difference between revisions
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Lowell Mellen Papers. 1923-1970. Collection #91-098, unprocessed. Western Reserve Historical Society Library. Cleveland, Ohio. | Lowell Mellen Papers. 1923-1970. Collection #91-098, unprocessed. Western Reserve Historical Society Library. Cleveland, Ohio. | ||
==External links & Additional Reading Materials== | ==External links & Additional Reading Materials== |
Revision as of 14:09, 27 March 2008
What is Training Within Industry?
Training Within Industry Service was an official department of the of the War Manpower Commission during WWII. TWI Service existed between 1940-1945, training over 23,000 supervisors in primarily three basic skills:
As time progressed an additional need was recognized and developed in the form of a fourth program, aimed at training directors:
A fifth program was developed sensitive to the unique characteristics of present within unions:
Through a planned "multiplier effect", four-hundred TWI Service representatives trained 23,000 supervisors in over 16,000 U.S companies during the war. In turn, those 23,000 supervisors trained and developed over 1.7 million U.S. workers in the TWI 'J' programs.
History 1940-1945
WWII Precedents
Peacetime
Linkage to Continuous Improvement Methodologies
Practical Applications
References
Training Within Industry Report. 1945. U.S. Government Printing Office.
Training Within Industry Materials. 1945. Hardbound copy of TWI Materials. U.S. Government Printing Office.
Lowell Mellen Papers. 1923-1970. Collection #91-098, unprocessed. Western Reserve Historical Society Library. Cleveland, Ohio.
External links & Additional Reading Materials
Huntzinger, Jim. 2002. Roots of Lean — Training Within Industry: The Origin of Kaizen”. Target Vol. 18, No. 2, pp. 9-22).
Lund, Bryan. 2007. Training Within Industry. Lean Manufacturing Yearbook 2007. Society of Manufacturing Engineers.