Edusign

In-person training: definition, pedagogical benefits and challenges for training organisations

The Edusign team · 10 mars 2026 · 6 min
In brief: In-person training brings learners and a trainer together in the same physical location at a defined time. The most widely used format in professional training, it is distinguished by the quality of human interactions, the trainer's real-time adaptability and the emotional grounding of learning. For training organisations, it implies rigorous traceability management: attendance sheets, signatures, now fully digitisable without losing evidentiary value.

Definition of in-person training

In-person training refers to any pedagogical arrangement in which learners and the trainer (or instructor) are physically gathered in the same space, for a predetermined duration and programme. Learners are present simultaneously, which enables direct and immediate interactions between participants and with the trainer.

It differs from distance training, where learners learn from different locations, and from blended training, which combines both modalities within the same programme. In-person training can take place at the training organisation's premises, at the client company's site, or any other dedicated space.

It comes in several variants depending on the pedagogical configuration: lecture, small-group training, practical workshop, intensive classroom course, residential seminar. Each variant implies different organisation, logistics and monitoring requirements.

Characteristics of the in-person format

  • Physical co-presence. Trainer and learners share the same space simultaneously. This co-presence is both a constraint (travel, logistical organisation) and an asset (immediate interaction, reading of non-verbal behaviour).
  • Fixed programme and duration. In-person training requires a defined time frame: timetable, breaks, session duration. This rigidity makes attendance management critical: every early departure or partial absence must be traced.
  • Varied pedagogical methods. Lectures, practical work, role-plays, simulated situations, group debates: in-person allows a wide diversity of methods that distance training replicates with difficulty at the same level of effectiveness.
  • Mandatory attendance sheet. For any training organisation, the attendance sheet is the legal proof that training took place. It must be signed by each learner and the trainer for every half-day.

Pedagogical benefits of in-person training

  • Human connection and emotional anchoring. Face-to-face interaction builds trust between the trainer and learners, and among learners themselves. Learning also works through emotions: a demonstration experienced live in a room is better retained than an e-learning module watched alone.
  • Real-time adaptability. A skilled trainer reads the room and continuously adjusts pace, level and examples. This responsiveness is almost impossible to replicate in asynchronous remote learning.
  • Concentration and structure. Being physically in a dedicated room reduces distractions. The learner is less solicited by their professional or domestic environment.
  • Effectiveness for complex content. Subjects requiring hands-on practice, manipulation or peer experience sharing are significantly better handled in person than online.
  • Group cohesion. Classroom training creates collective dynamics that foster engagement, motivation and long-term retention.

Limits and modern challenges

  • Logistical costs. Venue rental, travel, accommodation, catering: in-person is the most expensive format per learner-hour. For long programmes or geographically dispersed groups, these costs become prohibitive.
  • Scheduling rigidity. Gathering all learners in one place at the same time is increasingly difficult, particularly for working professionals, apprentices or career changers.
  • Administrative management. Attendance sheets, signatures, archiving: in-person generates a significant document burden. Without the right tools, this management is a source of errors, losses and non-compliances during audits.
  • Carbon footprint. Travel linked to in-person training is a growing concern in companies' CSR policies.

In-person attendance signing: challenges and digitisation

The attendance sheet is the central document of in-person training. It proves, for each half-day of training, the effective presence of each learner and the trainer. For training organisations, it conditions:

  • Funding by skills operators (without a valid attendance sheet, no reimbursement)
  • Compliance with quality certification criteria (traceability of training hours)
  • Issuance of attendance certificates and completion certificates

Digitising attendance signing via tools like Edusign resolves the classic paper problems: lost sheets, illegible signatures, forgotten signatures, manual archiving. Tablet or NFC-based signing is timestamped, secured and automatically archived. Exports are ready in seconds for audits.

Edusign and in-person training management

  • In-person attendance signing: learners sign on a shared tablet or their own mobile, the trainer validates in one click, PDF or CSV export instantly available.
  • NFC attendance signing: fast badge-in for large cohorts, ideal for apprenticeship centres and large institutions with high learner throughput.
  • Electronic signature: training agreements, contracts, attendance sheets, everything signed without printing, with full legal value.
  • Online questionnaires: immediate satisfaction assessments, pre-training positioning, end-of-session knowledge tests.

For a training manager or organisation director, Edusign turns in-person administrative management into an automated flow: no more time lost on documents, zero risk of lost sheets, guaranteed compliance for quality audits and funding body controls.

Frequently asked questions about in-person training

The two terms are often used interchangeably, but a distinction can be drawn: an "in-person course" generally refers to a single session or isolated pedagogical sequence (a lecture, a workshop), while "in-person training" refers to a complete programme, with objectives, total duration, assessments and administrative traceability. For training organisations subject to quality certification and funding body requirements, it is the notion of "training" that triggers regulatory obligations.

Yes, handwritten signatures remain legally valid. But they pose growing practical problems: risk of loss, illegibility, archiving costs, inability to share evidence instantly during a control. Electronic attendance signing (via tablet, NFC or signature link) is now accepted by all major funding bodies, provided the solution guarantees document integrity, timestamping and signer identity. Edusign meets these requirements.

A declaration to the funding body requires: a complete training file (agreement or contract, programme, attendance sheets signed per half-day, attendance certificate or completion certificate). Funding bodies systematically verify the concordance between declared hours and attendance records. A tool like Edusign automatically generates exports in the expected formats, which significantly reduces processing times and rejection risks.

Several solutions exist, with varying security levels: signature on a shared tablet (learners sign in turn), QR code-based signature from their own mobile, or NFC badge-in (the fastest for large cohorts). The common requirement: the solution must guarantee timestamping, signer identity and document integrity. Edusign offers all three modes, with automatic archiving and exports compliant with funding body and quality certification requirements.

Yes, unambiguously. Remote learning has proven it can cover a large part of training needs, but in-person retains irreplaceable advantages: quality of human interaction, effectiveness for practical content and simulations, group cohesion, concentration. The underlying trend is towards blended learning: combining both formats to optimise both cost and pedagogical quality. In-person training is not disappearing; it is repositioning on what it does better than digital.

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