Edusign

In-person training: definition, legal framework and administrative management for training organisations

The Edusign team · 10 mars 2026 · 6 min
In brief: In-person training refers to any training activity that brings trainers and learners together in the same physical location, synchronously. It is the traditional format for professional development. For training organisation managers and L&D departments, it involves precise obligations around attendance signing, proof of presence and quality-certification compliance.

In-person training: definition

In-person training, also called classroom training or face-to-face synchronous training, is a pedagogical modality in which learners and the trainer are physically in the same place at the same time. It is the counterpart to distance training, which takes place without physical co-presence, and differs from blended training, which combines both modalities.

Despite the rise of digital learning and virtual classrooms, in-person training remains the dominant format by volume of hours in professional training. Sector surveys regularly confirm this: businesses and training organisations continue to give it a prominent place, particularly for technical training, practical exercises and behavioural skills development.

Characteristics of in-person training

  • Physical co-presence. Trainer and learners share the same space at the same time, enabling spontaneous interactions, non-verbal communication and group dynamics difficult to replicate remotely.
  • Synchronicity. All participants follow the same programme at the same pace, allowing the trainer to adapt in real time to the group's reactions.
  • Rich interactions. Breakout groups, role plays, hands-on practice with real equipment and materials: pedagogical activities that require or benefit from physical presence.
  • Logistical demands. Room, equipment, transport, accommodation if needed, certified attendance sheet: in-person training generates an administrative and logistical load that remote formats considerably simplify.

For training organisations subject to quality certification or seeking funding from training bodies, in-person training is governed by precise obligations:

  • The signed attendance sheet. Any training action that receives financial support must be evidenced by an attendance sheet signed by learners and the trainer for each half-day. This is a legal obligation and a quality-audit criterion.
  • The training agreement. A contract must formalise the terms of the service between the organisation and the funder or client company, specifying the pedagogical modality (in person, duration, location).
  • Completion certificates. Each learner must receive, at the end of the training, a certificate stating the nature, dates and duration of the programme completed.
  • Tracking criteria in major quality frameworks relate directly to the traceability of in-person sessions.

Benefits and limits of in-person training

In-person training offers well-documented pedagogical advantages:

  • Group dynamics and collective emulation: learning is stimulated by interaction with peers, debate and sharing of professional experience among participants with diverse backgrounds.
  • Real-time adaptation: the trainer perceives non-verbal signals (fatigue, confusion, disengagement) and adjusts their approach immediately.
  • Direct practical application: some training programmes (safety, equipment handling, behavioural skills) require physical presence.
  • Social connection and networking: in-person training creates networking opportunities that enrich the experience beyond the content itself.

Its limits are equally real:

  • High logistical cost: transport, room, accommodation and productivity loss during training days weigh on organisational training budgets.
  • Geographic constraints: learners spread across multiple sites or working remotely may find it difficult to gather regularly.
  • Administrative burden: managing paper attendance sheets, agreements and certificates represents significant time for training organisations' administrative teams.

In-person attendance signing: challenges and solutions

Attendance signing is the act by which a learner certifies their presence at a training session by signing an official document. In person, this traditionally takes the form of a paper attendance sheet, signed each half-day.

This procedure, simple in appearance, concentrates several critical challenges:

  • Fraud risk: a signature made by a third party, a sheet completed after the fact, or inconsistent data between attendance sheet and invitation can invalidate funding and expose the organisation to penalties.
  • Administrative burden: collecting, scanning, archiving and retrieving paper attendance sheets represents unproductive working hours, multiplied across sessions.
  • Audit traceability: if attendance documents are absent or incomplete during a quality audit or funder inspection, the result is often repayment of received funds.

The Edusign in-person attendance solution allows this process to be fully digitalised: learners sign from their smartphone or a shared tablet, the signature is timestamped and certified, and documents are automatically archived and available for inspection.

Edusign and in-person training management

Edusign is designed to eliminate the administrative friction that accompanies in-person training, without compromising its pedagogical richness:

  • Digitalised in-person attendance signing: learners sign electronically on a tablet or smartphone in seconds, with certified timestamping and automatic archiving.
  • NFC attendance signing: learners tap at the entrance with their NFC smartphone, with no additional steps. Ideal for organisations with multiple sessions and large learner volumes.
  • Electronic signature for training agreements, apprenticeship contracts and attendance certificates, directly in the Edusign interface.
  • Satisfaction questionnaires sent automatically at the end of each session, with aggregated results usable for quality tracking.

For training organisations, this guarantees compliance with regulatory obligations without burdening administrative teams, and provides irrefutable evidence during quality audits and funder inspections.

Frequently asked questions about in-person training

In-person training brings trainer and learners together in the same physical location. Distance training takes place without physical co-presence, via digital tools (virtual classrooms, e-learning, asynchronous modules). The main difference is the interaction dynamic: in-person favours spontaneous exchanges and reading of non-verbal signals; distance training offers greater geographic and temporal flexibility. Both formats are complementary in a blended learning arrangement.

For any funded training programme, a signed attendance sheet is mandatory for each half-day, signed by each learner and the trainer. It must state the training title, date, hours and participant identities. In the event of an audit, the absence of these documents can result in repayment of funds received. Digitalisation via a certified tool such as Edusign fully satisfies this legal obligation.

Yes, in-person training is eligible for funding by training bodies and competency operators on the same basis as other pedagogical modalities, provided the organisation holds the relevant quality certification and the training is declared within the required timeframes. Supporting documents (agreement, attendance sheets, certificate) remain essential for reimbursement.

Yes, digitalisation is legally recognised. Timestamped and certified electronic signatures have the same probative value as handwritten signatures, provided they are produced by a certified trust service provider. Edusign meets these requirements and allows training organisations to present irrefutable evidence during quality audits and funding body inspections.

No, NFC signing is one option among other forms of digitalised attendance (tablet signing, link sent by SMS or email). It does, however, offer speed and convenience advantages for sessions with large numbers of learners or frequent rotations. The obligation relates to the traceability of attendance, not the technical means used to collect it.

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