VR and AR on the Jobsite: From Simulation to Certification
For years, safety training has carried an inherent contradiction: [...]
For years, safety training has carried an inherent contradiction: [...]
Most safety managers and supervisors were taught that good [...]
Most safety managers and supervisors have had the same frustrating experience. An incident happens, you pull the training records, and everything looks right. The worker attended the training. The rules were covered. The procedure was signed off. On paper, the system worked. And yet, someone still got hurt.
Every safety manager knows the moment. You look around the room during a safety session and you can tell who a long time has been there. Arms crossed. Eyes half on you, half on the clock. No questions. No resistance either. Just quiet disengagement.
Adapting training for physical and cognitive change is not about lowering standards or protecting feelings. It is about protecting people while respecting experience.
The Day the System Asked a Question Back
From Discipline to Dialogue
Most safety professionals can point to a moment when the [...]
If safety engagement has gone flat, tenured employees are [...]
Most safety conversations still follow a familiar script. A [...]