Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Our Story
    • Partner with us
    • Reach Us
    • Career
    Subscribe Newsletter
    HR KathaHR Katha
    • Exclusive
      • Exclusive Features
      • Perspectives
      • Friday Features
      • herSTORY
      • Case-In-Point
      • Point Of View
      • Research
      • HR Pops
      • Dialogue
      • Movement
      • Profile
      • Beyond Work
      • Rising Star
      • By Invitation
    • News
      • Global HR News
      • Compensation & Benefits
      • Diversity
      • Events
      • Gen Y
      • Hiring & Firing
      • HR & Labour Laws
      • Learning & Development
      • Merger & Acquisition
      • Performance Management & Productivity
      • Talent Management
      • Tools & Technology
      • Work-Life Balance
    • Special
      • HR Forecast 2026
      • Cover Story
      • Editorial
      • HR Forecast 2024
      • HR Forecast 2023
      • HR Forecast 2022
      • HR Forecast 2021
      • HR Forecast 2020
      • HR Forecast 2019
      • New Age Learning
      • Coaching and Training
      • Learn-Engage-Transform
    • Magazine
    • Reports
      • Whitepaper
        • HR Forecast 2024 e-mag
        • Future-proofing Manufacturing Through Digital Transformation
        • Employee Healthcare & Wellness Benefits: A Guide for Indian MSMEs
        • Build a Future Ready Organisation For The Road Ahead
        • Employee Experience Strategy
        • HRKatha 2019 Forecast
        • Decoding and Driving Employee Engagement
        • One Platform, Infinite Possibilities
      • Survey Reports
        • Happiness at Work
        • Upskilling for Jobs of the Future
        • The Labour Code 2020
    • Conferences
      • Leadership Summit 2025
      • Rising Star Leadership Awards
      • HRKatha Futurecast
      • Automation.NXT
      • The Great HR Debate
    • HR Jobs
    WhatsApp LinkedIn X (Twitter) Facebook Instagram
    HR KathaHR Katha
    zoha
    Home»Exclusive Features»Learning»How role plays help learning in real time
    Learning

    How role plays help learning in real time

    mmBy Dr. Prajjal Saha | HRKathaJanuary 13, 20156 Mins Read3312 Views
    Share LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp
    Share
    LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp

    Role plays can be powerful learning tools as they engage the participants and sustain their interest

    After spending a decade and a half in the learning profession, I continue to be amused with the difference that I observe in participants who attend a technical training and a soft skills session. In the former, there is often rapt attention seen at the start (missing only in those who come in with a hostage mentality).  In case of a soft skills session, on the contrary, the attitude is mostly that of, “Oh, I know it”. 

    zoha

    From a learning stages perspective, participants at technical trainings are ‘consciously incompetent’ while at the soft skills sessions they are ‘unconsciously incompetent’. A good behavioural trainer is quite adept at moving the participants from unconscious incompetence to conscious incompetence as quickly as possible, since without the awareness and acceptance that one does not know, no learning can happen. Various experiential learning techniques like simulations, games and outbound activities support this move/ shift. Role play is one such experiential tool used widely in learning sessions.

    Adults and Experiential learning

    A lot of research is done on ‘andragogy’, the art and science of making adults learn. A key point to be kept in mind is that an adult learner who enters the classroom is often not seeking learning, but rather looking for solutions—to current problems or future growth.

    The solutions often lie not in knowledge but in insights, which knowledge can create. Knowing that one needs to listen effectively is knowledge.  But the fact that one does not listen well while under stress is an insight that only an experiential activity can trigger. An effective trainer structures the session in such a way, that there is ample scope to create those insights, by incorporating experiential learning into it.

    A few years back, on running a business simulation with a group of senior executives we found one of the groups incurring losses year after year, which spoke volumes about their decision-making skills and business acumen, and opened them up to learning. In the absence of simulation, it would have been difficult to achieve this.

    Experiential learning effectively addresses many of the requirements of adult learners, according to American educator, Malcolm Knowles, who is known for the assumptions he made about the characteristics of adult learners. Key amongst them is the role of the learners’ experience, wherein, the learners are able to abundantly draw upon their knowledge and experience and feel valued in the process.

    zoha

    So, does it mean that experiential learning has no role to play in technical training? Not really!! The focus of technical training, as with any other training, is transfer of learning to the workplace, which is often an area of concern. Sensitising participants to the challenges of implementation through experiential activities can go a long way in facilitating learning transfer.

    Role plays in learning: Key utilities 

    Role play is a powerful experiential activity used in training. It provides a safe environment to encounter different scenarios, giving the team members an opportunity to build their confidence and  perform better in their day to day roles.

    Some of the key uses of role plays are as follows:

    • They trigger self-awareness about one’s behaviour, style and attitude. 
    • They spread awareness about the challenges posed by real life situations and ways of facing them.
    • They help understand others’ perspective and enhance empathy.
    • They teach one to handle conflicts.
    • They are a way to practise the skills learnt. 

    Various kinds of role plays are used in different contexts – from psychodramas used in therapy, to theatre where the purpose is pure entertainment. Role plays used in training sessions fall somewhere in between, where the objective is to create insights and drive learning.

    Role play creation 

    Before creating a role play, one needs to ascertain whether role play is, in fact, the right tool. For example, with various intrapersonal skills, role play is often not the best tool. Understanding the exact challenges of the participant group and creating role plays, which reflect the same is essential. While the role play needs to be as close to reality as possible, for the participants to be able to relate to it,  care needs to be taken to camouflage it so that participants do not get entangled in details and lose their objectivity. For example, while the challenge remains the same, the name of the organisation or the industry could be different.

    Role play execution

    A well created, but ill-executed role play will have no impact. A role play typically has a protagonist and one or two more players. Learning happens when players participate spontaneously. To make this happen, briefs need to be given to them separately so that none of them have a grasp of the complete situation.

    In many cases, volunteers are invited to play the roles while the rest of the group watches. However, there is vicarious involvement of everyone and learning is derived during the debriefing. There are also cases, for example, when the focus is skill building, the entire group goes through it by splitting up into smaller groups. In this case, there needs to be an observer, usually an extra participant.

    While role play may feel like an artificial situation, the players reveal a lot through their words, tone and body language. For example, fear while dealing with an angry customer, frustration with an argumentative peer, stress due to overload and many such feelings find expression and the observer needs to closely watch these aspects.

    Debriefing

    The success of the role play depends on the effectiveness of debriefing. While the actual role play might be over in 5 minutes, debriefing can go on for much longer. The debrief needs to focus on the protagonist and care needs to be taken to ensure that he/she does not feel cornered. The best way would be to ask the person to share his / her experiences and feelings. Often, it becomes an ‘aha’ moment not just for the role player but for everyone else. That is when the shift from ‘the problem is out there’ to ‘the solution is right here’ takes place. 

    The trainer then needs to weave all the learning into a consolidated story and move the group forward with the statement ‘What can each one do differently?’ and translate them into action plans.

    Conclusion 

    With no props or material aids, role play is a fairly easy tool to organise. However, considering the emotions that can get triggered, it requires a seasoned professional to facilitate the same. When used well it not only makes the session interesting and engaging for participants, but also results in powerful learning.

    (The author is ?Head – L&D – Commercial Vehicle Business, International Business & Global Leadership at Tata Motors Ltd).

     

    Experiential learning Hemalakshmi Raju Learning Role Play
    Share. LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp
    mm
    Dr. Prajjal Saha | HRKatha

    Dr. Prajjal Saha is a business journalist and the editor-publisher of HRKatha. He writes on the realities of work and organisations, offering a clear-eyed view of how companies translate intent into action—often revealing the gap between the two. With over 25 years of experience, he focuses on interpreting workplace trends and leadership decisions in a way that is both insightful and accessible. He founded HRKatha in 2015 to create a platform for credible, insight-driven analysis of the evolving workplace.

    1 Comment

    1. Mukesh Kureel on September 21, 2015 9:46 am

      Hello Mam,

      Came across our article on role plays. Well, it’s an interesting one. Always thought on the part where role play is a methodology which can be used to bring out learning. Never thought whether role play can be used in all situations or to a specific learning outcomes based on the learning objective. I have recently done a transit from process training to behavioral training. Would request you to guide me on the debriefing. As you mentioned debriefing is the most imperative part after role play. What kind of questions to be asked to the participants and how to link it to the learning?

      Regards,
      Mukesh Kureel
      mukeshkureel@gmail.com

      Reply
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Related Posts

    FedEx trains 4,40,000 employees in AI skills

    March 24, 2026

    Why positive mood now matters more than pay at work: PwC

    January 7, 2026

    How are culture & business success correlated?

    April 23, 2025

    Edenred appoints Minaxi Indra as MD for India

    January 23, 2025
    Editorial

    The early morning email

    On Tuesday morning, March 31st, 2026, approximately 30,000 employees of Oracle across the United States,…

    The certainty tax: Why uncertainty makes bad decisions inevitable

    The conflict in West Asia has introduced real uncertainty into global markets. Oil supply routes…

    EDITOR'S PICKS

    44% of workers say jobs are changing faster than they can learn

    April 15, 2026

    HR Perspectives by Viekas K Khokha: “The more complex HR systems become, the harder they are to implement effectively”

    April 15, 2026

    The Sakai Principle: When excellence becomes a threat

    April 14, 2026

    Godrej Capital is learning that inclusion cannot be designed from a boardroom

    April 14, 2026
    Latest Post

    Dress code clash turns viral, sparks debate on workplace boundaries

    News April 15, 2026

    A workplace disagreement between a young employee and the human resources team has gained widespread…

    TCS Nashik case escalates: FIRs, arrests deepen probe into workplace misconduct

    Uncategorized April 15, 2026

    A widening investigation into alleged workplace misconduct at Tata Consultancy Services’s (TCS) Nashik BPO unit…

    Staff body pushes for higher pay, allowances in 8th Pay Commission proposal

    News April 15, 2026

    The staff side of the National Council–Joint Consultative Machinery (NC-JCM) has submitted an extensive memorandum…

    Pay dispute erupts after employee quits over ‘toxic’ workplace

    News April 15, 2026

    A workplace dispute shared on Reddit has drawn attention after an employee alleged that their…

    Asia's No.1 HR Platform

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn WhatsApp Bluesky
    • Our Story
    • Partner with us
    • Career
    • Reach Us
    • Exclusive Features
    • Cover Story
    • Editorial
    • Dive into the Future of Work: Download HRForecast 2024 Now!
    © 2026 HRKatha.com
    • Disclaimer
    • Refunds & Cancellation Policy
    • Terms of Service

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.