THE PROMISE OF e-LEARNING

E-Learning has hastened the development of a new business model and the results contain the seeds for more profitability in business and industry — potentially!

Instead of formal classroom instruction and formal learning labs, with their prescribed media courseware curriculum, e-Learning has allowed a demand-based approach that has effectively replaced the “everyone takes everything at the same time” regimen.

Combined with the cost savings inherent in on-line skills assessment tests, the rapid development and changes in technology over the last decade has had a resounding impact on the learning industry. Technology, coupled with the explosion of knowledge requirements in the information age, has led to the emergence of a new learning modality — e-Learning!

However, with the recent flood of new products into the e-Learning market, customers are faced with an extensive range of programs that have been developed without assurance of quality methodologies. The challenge for e-Learning courseware developers is to ensure that their e-Learning courses are of the highest quality and achieve the intended learning outcomes that parallel, or exceed, the results of the best instructor-led training and education.

Unfortunately, several misconceptions have marred the development of e-Learning thus far. Converted PowerPoint presentations and adapted written procedures continue to delay the promise of e-Learning as a premiere training tool. And that is because too many courseware developers have regarded the e-Learning medium as a “reading” or page-turning activity. Of course, that resultant instruction leaves behind the nearly 40% of America’s workforce which tests below a fifth grade reading level.

In striving to build a winning e-Learning curriculum, courseware development has been more focused on the mechanics of using the Web rather than in effectively applying Web-based technology to achieving the intended learning outcomes. So it is not surprising that more than 60% of learners, who have begun an asynchronous on-line course, do not complete the training.

The many financial advantages that e-Learning can offer business and industry will only be fully realized if this new courseware has sound instructional design; is based on the learning principles inherent in full motion video and optional word-for-word audio; while being offered in bite-sized chunks.

More on Tuesday – – –

— Bill Walton, Founder, ITC Learning
www.itclearning.com/blog/ (Tuesdays & Thursdays)
e-Mail: bwalton@itclearning.com

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