E-Learning

E-Learning

Today's leaders are the global generation

Today's up-and-coming business leaders are a "global generation" unhindered by barriers of geography, culture or communication – but lacking in business education.

E-learning is a boring distraction

Managers are far too busy getting on with their jobs to try e-learning - and even when they do, they find what's on offer is dull and irrelevant.

The changing face of corporate training

Corporate trainers are under growing pressure to minimise the time staff spend undergoing training "off the job", resulting in a decline in classroom training and a greater emphasis on e-learning.

Employers 'don't get' e-learning and workers don't like it

Businesses have fundamentally failed to understand how e-learning technology should work, and as a result are not getting the most benefit from it, an academic has argued.

E-Learning is great, but not a panacea

E-learning has been the big buzz in the training world, but decision-makers need to realize the pros, cons, and limitations of E-learning’s capabilities.

E-learning: effective but awkward

The majority of organisations find it difficult to implement e-learning within their training and development initiatives, according to new research.

Hard lessons from the big e-learning experiment

The dotcom boom led to many hyped-up claims, not least that, by now, we would all be sitting at computers instead of in classrooms when it came to workplace training.

What to look for with online learning

You can save money using online learning, but it has to work for the learners or they won’t want to use it. If that happens, they learn nothing at all and you haven’t saved a thing.

E-learning: the reality

At the height of the dotcom boom, many wild predictions were made about the spread of e-learning to the workplace. The reality, as delegates to a conference on blended learning will hear this week, is somewhat different.

Government announces e-learning consultation

UK Education and Skills Secretary Charles Clarke has launched a consultation document on the Government's e-learning strategy. The consultation will run until January 2004 with an e-learning strategy to be unveiled later that year.

Trolley loads of learning at Sainsbury’s

Sainsbury’s and the Learning and Skills Council have formed a partnership to provide an estimated 15,000 hours of training per week to help tackle England’s IT skills shortage. The £15 million venture will serve IT qualifications to shoppers by creating three new I.T.Now@Sainsbury’s learning centres.

E-Learning: The business

E-Learning is moving up the agenda for nearly every employer, university or college. The government has proved to be a major champion of making the UK a leading player in "virtual" distance learning.

City workers reveal compliance training shortfall

According to a survey by Wide Learning, leading providers of online compliance and financial training, almost one in three City workers have not received compliance training as regulated by the Financial Services Authority (FSA) in November 2001. More surprising still, half of those workers do not even expect to be trained in the next six months.

How do people learn? New CIPD research provides the answers

The latest research report from the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) How do People Learn? goes back to basics to explore what we know about how people learn.

The compliance dilemma

The introduction of the Financial Services and Markets Act on November 30 makes senior managers personally responsible for the actions of their firms and customer-facing staff. But how can firms establish whether their staff are competent and ensure that this competence is maintained? An intranet- or Internet-based solution may be the only cost-effective answer.
Copyright © 2000-2012 Management-Issues Ltd. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy | Contacts | Submission Guidelines