This article compares the humour used in university and corporate training programmes and discusses survey implications. Based on a survey of 183 university business professors and 243 corporate trainers, both groups were found to use similar types of humour (e.g. short stories,exaggeration), have similar reasons for using humour (e.g. help trainees relax, keep training interesting), and use humour in similar settings(e.g. humour occurs in lectures most often). Based on survey results and a literature review, both groups should consider making their humour understandable, non‐coercive, and relevant to the training situation. University and corporate trainers should also listen to what types of humour can be students like. Practising humour can be a way to gain these humour skills.
Article navigation
1 January 1991
Research Article|
January 01 1991
Humour in University and Corporate Training: A Comparison of Trainer Perceptions Available to Purchase
Gundars E. Kaupins
Gundars E. Kaupins
Boise State University, USA
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7492
Print ISSN: 0262-1711
© MCB UP Limited
1991
Journal of Management Development (1991) 10 (1): 33–41.
Citation
Kaupins GE (1991), "Humour in University and Corporate Training: A Comparison of Trainer Perceptions". Journal of Management Development, Vol. 10 No. 1 pp. 33–41, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/02621719110004204
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
Training of Trainers network
Education + Training (February,2001)
How to Deliver Training
The Electronic Library (June,2000)
The Team Management Resource in the Training Agency
Journal of European Industrial Training (April,1990)
VHF Communication for Trainers
Journal of European Industrial Training (June,1989)
Management Development: A Guide for the Profession
Industrial and Commercial Training (November,1999)
Related Chapters
Investigating the Effect of Training on Lecturers’ Pedagogy in Nigerian Universities With the Application of Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
The Emerald Handbook of African Studies
Art and Spirituality: Two Sides of the Same Human Coin
Art in Diverse Social Settings
The Jovial Aesthetics of the Death-Positivity Movement: Notes on the Appeal of Playfulness in Activism
Death, Culture & Leisure: Playing Dead
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
