eLearning has been promoted as a replacement for classroom training. As a consequence, it has also been viewed as a technological replacement for paper.
However it is not easy to spend time reading a computer screen - although new virtual ink technologies such as Sony's may help resolve that problem. Fact is, most people like the feel of a book and it is very easy to move around in a book - stop, start, go back and forward. And portability is a real problem too. So is the need for electric power - even if the charge on a notebook were to last.
So I suggest that the best use of eLearning is to complement the classroom and the book. Use the technology to access really good learning material quickly and cheaply - but choose the right medium to communicate different styles of coaching and learning.
Monday 20 November 2006
Thursday 16 November 2006
Fraud Management and Wireless Forensics
There has been a trend, by both the defence and the protectution in courts, to verify or supplement evidence given in court, using Call Data Records which can provide a history of the locatation of mobile phones. Similarily, we see computers being seized in evidence re emails and website usage and regularily read about emails being used in this or that case.
It seems difficult enough to keep one's own IT systems secure from "malware" but consider a telco's (mobile/ISP/fixed network operator) position whereby all subsribers' data, at least in Ireland, has to be held for three years and, when required to do so by the law enforcement agency, the net operator must search for and release as required: subscriber details, CDRs, emails, usernames, email addresses etc. while guarenteeing the data's security, integrity and authenticity. The same network operator may also be required to provide expert witnesses to face challenges re the above in court.
Sometimes it seems difficult enough to set up an email account or a new mobile phone but consider the also the law enforcement agency officer tasked with the job of assessing what data may be relevant, what is technically or logistically possible to gather as evidence within the IT domain. If you catch a suspected child pornographer, terrorist or fraudster what should he or she be looking for on the suspects' phone, PC or smart cards. Also, what do the lawyers, judiciary envolved in these cases need to know.
Finally, what privacy laws exist to protect Joe Citizen?
On the one hand there are via databases new tools available to track and help convict criminals. On the other hand there is the potential for privacy to be intentionally or mistakenly invaded, for data to fall into the wrong hands, for identity theft.
But it's not just cops and robbers who are effected by these new issues. Anyone can get drawn into it, take for example, the case of a retailer whose premises' security cameras (CCTV) just happened to be pointed to the position of an alleged offence. The law enforcement agency may require the retailer to provide tapes/DVDs re this or that camera over any extended period in or around the alleged offence. This may cost the retailer a day or two to gather depending on the request.
The point I make is that regardless of one's views re being tracked, the fact is everybody is any time they go out, use their phone, write an email, surf the web, or buy anything with plastic. But why should one group, pay to enforce the law while other sectors aren't obliged to do so? A cost of doing business? Perhaps.
It seems difficult enough to keep one's own IT systems secure from "malware" but consider a telco's (mobile/ISP/fixed network operator) position whereby all subsribers' data, at least in Ireland, has to be held for three years and, when required to do so by the law enforcement agency, the net operator must search for and release as required: subscriber details, CDRs, emails, usernames, email addresses etc. while guarenteeing the data's security, integrity and authenticity. The same network operator may also be required to provide expert witnesses to face challenges re the above in court.
Sometimes it seems difficult enough to set up an email account or a new mobile phone but consider the also the law enforcement agency officer tasked with the job of assessing what data may be relevant, what is technically or logistically possible to gather as evidence within the IT domain. If you catch a suspected child pornographer, terrorist or fraudster what should he or she be looking for on the suspects' phone, PC or smart cards. Also, what do the lawyers, judiciary envolved in these cases need to know.
Finally, what privacy laws exist to protect Joe Citizen?
On the one hand there are via databases new tools available to track and help convict criminals. On the other hand there is the potential for privacy to be intentionally or mistakenly invaded, for data to fall into the wrong hands, for identity theft.
But it's not just cops and robbers who are effected by these new issues. Anyone can get drawn into it, take for example, the case of a retailer whose premises' security cameras (CCTV) just happened to be pointed to the position of an alleged offence. The law enforcement agency may require the retailer to provide tapes/DVDs re this or that camera over any extended period in or around the alleged offence. This may cost the retailer a day or two to gather depending on the request.
The point I make is that regardless of one's views re being tracked, the fact is everybody is any time they go out, use their phone, write an email, surf the web, or buy anything with plastic. But why should one group, pay to enforce the law while other sectors aren't obliged to do so? A cost of doing business? Perhaps.
Wednesday 15 November 2006
eLearning telecom security
Here at Ossidian we are considering developing new courseware modules on security and forensics. Seems like the crossover between telecom and financial services has so many potential vulnerabilities that lots of people need to be trained up.
Business managers and technical security people need to be able to communicate clearly and effectively. Unfortunately they don't speak the same language - or have the same goals in life.
The tech folks need to be taught business and communication skills. The business managers need enough technical grounding to be able to make budget cases to their bosses.
eLearning seems to be an ideal way to get such information out to everyone quickly. If you can use a browser then you can do a 15-minute tutorial and take a self-test. Painless ?
Business managers and technical security people need to be able to communicate clearly and effectively. Unfortunately they don't speak the same language - or have the same goals in life.
The tech folks need to be taught business and communication skills. The business managers need enough technical grounding to be able to make budget cases to their bosses.
eLearning seems to be an ideal way to get such information out to everyone quickly. If you can use a browser then you can do a 15-minute tutorial and take a self-test. Painless ?
Tuesday 14 November 2006
Who owns elearning ?
So Blackboard is claiming ownership of the 'lms' idea ! Great move - why can't patent office people take a look around them. There is so much prior art on the idea of web-based and computer-based learning, going back decades, that it is impossible to imagine how this filing got through.
The problem for open-source developers is that institutions and corporates may feel exposed in implementing infrastructure that may get them drawn into legal battles in the future. Even if they are not responsible.
Perhaps only the commerical lms vendors can afford to defend patent suits and/or pay up if it goes against them. But it seems ridiculous that educational processes can be patented by one US corporation. Smells a little like the genome patents ?
The problem for open-source developers is that institutions and corporates may feel exposed in implementing infrastructure that may get them drawn into legal battles in the future. Even if they are not responsible.
Perhaps only the commerical lms vendors can afford to defend patent suits and/or pay up if it goes against them. But it seems ridiculous that educational processes can be patented by one US corporation. Smells a little like the genome patents ?
Monday 13 November 2006
Testing your knowledge
How do you measure what you have achieved with eLearning ? Do you expect your students to take a classroom test, or do you just put it up there and assume that because the content is available that people will use it ?
One approach is to put the content into a library and wait for students to come along. But you are only as good as you last access - so unless you have a promotional program to build loyalty, then volumes may disappoint you. That applies equally in in-house corporate eLearning progams as much as commercial eLearning portals.
Another approach is to tie the eLearning to something else. That could be a dedicated website of reference learning. Or it could be more eLearning ! But for me the optimal strategy is to follow the eLearning with a test (hopefully randomized) - and possibly even precede the learning with different one. That can serve multiple objectives :-
One approach is to put the content into a library and wait for students to come along. But you are only as good as you last access - so unless you have a promotional program to build loyalty, then volumes may disappoint you. That applies equally in in-house corporate eLearning progams as much as commercial eLearning portals.
Another approach is to tie the eLearning to something else. That could be a dedicated website of reference learning. Or it could be more eLearning ! But for me the optimal strategy is to follow the eLearning with a test (hopefully randomized) - and possibly even precede the learning with different one. That can serve multiple objectives :-
- the student gets to see whether their knowledge has progressed, and
- the manager gets to measure the worth of the program
Friday 10 November 2006
Just who buys employee training ?
It seems as if senior management (and I include HR management too) ignore the importance of employee training. I mean they pay lipservice to the concept - but they don't get down and dirty with what is really required.
And the first things to go in any cost reduction plan often include training.
The best corporations empower individuals to plan their own needs and some even devolve the training budget down to individuals. That means everyone can purchase some basic training every year - whether it is technical, business or personal skills.
Too many organizations, living in the twentieth-century or before(!), still hand the budget to a 'training manager' who may not, and probably does not, have any functional or operational knowledge of the business. Even worse, as training goes on-line, how can such managers evaluate whether specific eLearning content meets the needs of their people ? They should not be expected to do so - how can they possibly go to line managers and ask for people to be taken off jobs to 'evaluate training products or services' ?
One way forward is to take the focus off annual, corporate (or departmental) budgets. Things that are seen as purely a cost are usually not valued like things that are seen as 'strategic'. If bookkeepers are forever looking for the elusive 'return on investment' then the point has been lost.
So give everyone a few dollars/yen/euro/pounds (or whatever) and let them purchase what they think they need. It does not have to be a large sum of money - but it will make everyone aware the organization cares.
And the first things to go in any cost reduction plan often include training.
The best corporations empower individuals to plan their own needs and some even devolve the training budget down to individuals. That means everyone can purchase some basic training every year - whether it is technical, business or personal skills.
Too many organizations, living in the twentieth-century or before(!), still hand the budget to a 'training manager' who may not, and probably does not, have any functional or operational knowledge of the business. Even worse, as training goes on-line, how can such managers evaluate whether specific eLearning content meets the needs of their people ? They should not be expected to do so - how can they possibly go to line managers and ask for people to be taken off jobs to 'evaluate training products or services' ?
One way forward is to take the focus off annual, corporate (or departmental) budgets. Things that are seen as purely a cost are usually not valued like things that are seen as 'strategic'. If bookkeepers are forever looking for the elusive 'return on investment' then the point has been lost.
So give everyone a few dollars/yen/euro/pounds (or whatever) and let them purchase what they think they need. It does not have to be a large sum of money - but it will make everyone aware the organization cares.
Thursday 9 November 2006
Authoring tools - LMS integration
There are lots of tools for creating on-line learning. But just how good are any of them for integrating different sources of information ? And just what is involved technically in harnessing the Web to provide useful learning content ?
Simple is best
Our experience here at Ossidian shows that the simplest approach works best. We tried all the leading authoring tools and eventually concluded that it was cheaper, quicker and easier to author in a basic Word Processing package such as Open Office or Word. Then everything can be assembled together with graphics using Macromedia Flash. This produces minimal filesizes and quick on-line response - and, real importantly, there are lots of Flash developers around.
Reload is a great free tool for creating and maintaining Scorm manifests (and packaging the results).
But Scorm ...
Well Scorm is not really that difficult, is it ? Standard Javascript wrappers are available free, and integration with server-side LMS is well-proven. In our own technology (all open source using PHP, Apache, Linux and MySQL) we wrote the basic code in 2 weeks - and all the Scorm javascript is created dynamically by PHP. To get a basic Scorm system running - you don't need all the functions and weird metatags that the standard contains. There are only 4 or 5 key functions needs to start off and provide tracking and scoring.
Anyway, the authoring tools really don't need to optimize for Scorm. As long as you are passing the tracking and scoring data out of your SCOs - then the LMS work is pretty easy.
Simple is best
Our experience here at Ossidian shows that the simplest approach works best. We tried all the leading authoring tools and eventually concluded that it was cheaper, quicker and easier to author in a basic Word Processing package such as Open Office or Word. Then everything can be assembled together with graphics using Macromedia Flash. This produces minimal filesizes and quick on-line response - and, real importantly, there are lots of Flash developers around.
Reload is a great free tool for creating and maintaining Scorm manifests (and packaging the results).
But Scorm ...
Well Scorm is not really that difficult, is it ? Standard Javascript wrappers are available free, and integration with server-side LMS is well-proven. In our own technology (all open source using PHP, Apache, Linux and MySQL) we wrote the basic code in 2 weeks - and all the Scorm javascript is created dynamically by PHP. To get a basic Scorm system running - you don't need all the functions and weird metatags that the standard contains. There are only 4 or 5 key functions needs to start off and provide tracking and scoring.
Anyway, the authoring tools really don't need to optimize for Scorm. As long as you are passing the tracking and scoring data out of your SCOs - then the LMS work is pretty easy.
Have you heard of Web 2.0 yet ?
Collaboration is the new Web paradigm - and since elearning (and CBT) is not everyone's preferred way of acquiring new skills, the Web 2.0 model needs to be taken on board quickly.
The WWW has terrabytes of useful information on just about any topic. But finding the right information and assembling it into meaningful chunks is not easy. That is why eLearning - ie structured on-line content - can be so accessible and effective.
Unfortunately, force-feeding people with information does not oftenwork. They may not need the particular topic today. Or they may be focussed on something else. People just don't want to have irrelevant information stuffed down their throat !
So anything that makes it easier to collaborate with other people must be good. Learning has to evolve under the influence of new tools. These will include better ways of linking up with other learners, better ways of structuring information feeds, and better information-sifting tools.
The purpose of this blog is to provoke some comments on how corporations can add 'unstructured' web-based sources as a new learning tool.
The WWW has terrabytes of useful information on just about any topic. But finding the right information and assembling it into meaningful chunks is not easy. That is why eLearning - ie structured on-line content - can be so accessible and effective.
Unfortunately, force-feeding people with information does not oftenwork. They may not need the particular topic today. Or they may be focussed on something else. People just don't want to have irrelevant information stuffed down their throat !
So anything that makes it easier to collaborate with other people must be good. Learning has to evolve under the influence of new tools. These will include better ways of linking up with other learners, better ways of structuring information feeds, and better information-sifting tools.
The purpose of this blog is to provoke some comments on how corporations can add 'unstructured' web-based sources as a new learning tool.
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