July 14, 2008

SCORM 2.0 and Web 2.0 Considerations

I've posted before about how I think that much of the technical architecture that underpins the commercial e-learning marketplace is several years behind the 2.0 Web and how efforts like ADL/SCORM/LETSI need to jump ahead in order to maintain relevance and to do the job that I think still needs to be done - namely serving as a focal point for addressing those unique aspects of the commercial learning/training space.

I do think that LETSI is trying to head down this road with their SCORM 2.0 Call for Papers and the upcoming SCORM 2.0 Workshop. I am particularly heartened by this passage that describes some the Challenges and Objectives facing SCORM 2.0:

"Support existing and emerging technologies and architectures and encourage innovation in applications across the LET life cycle: authoring and ISD, learning management, content management, knowledge management, HR systems, mobile delivery, Web 2.0, service-oriented architecture, and hosted learning activities."

I do think that efforts like the recently launched Information Card Foundation need to be included in these deliberations.

January 08, 2008

The Crunchies....a new Web award backed by some high-powered folks...

From The Crunchies site:

"The 2007 Crunchies is our first annual competition and award ceremony to recognize and celebrate theLogo_crunchies most compelling startups, internet and technology innovations of the year. The Crunchies is a collaboration project between GigaOm, Read/WriteWeb, VentureBeat and TechCrunch."

So now we have the edublog awards, the Webby awards, and now the Crunchies. The edublog awards  clearly dominate in terms of domain relevance, the Webbys are the "Oscars" of the Web but the Crunchies do bring something powerful to the table...their co-hosts. Between them GigaOm, R/W Web, Venture Beat and TechCrunch account for hundreds of thousands of readers on a daily basis (TechCrunch alone has over 600K Subscribers). All those eyeballs mean that whoever even gets nominated for a Crunchioe will be winning a ton of PR..makes it easier to keep track of who is winning and losing in certain fields.

I also like these awards programs because they introduce me to sites I may not have found otherwise. Be sure to check out the Best Tim Sink and  Best Enterprise Start-Up categories.

December 10, 2007

2007 edublog winners announced!

Congratulations_2Congrats to all the 2007 edublog award winners...you can find the whole list here. Special shout out to Tony Karrer for winning in the Best Corporate education blog category. While I think its great for these people and while I think they are all doing very good work, I would still like to see something else developed that would help broaden the view of folks especially of new folks coming into the field. I mean, I track something like 200+ feeds in netvibes and a good chunk of those are related to education/learning. Maybe we need something like a longevity award...

December 06, 2007

2007 edublog awards are now open for voting...and I'm torn

Edublogawards_3Hurry, hurry, step right up and cast your vote! The 2007 edublog Awards are now open for voting. I do have to give a big shout-out to Michael Feldstein for offering up my humble blog as one of his nominations (especially since Michael is a nominee himself!). Evidently though, I fell a few thousand votes short of an actual nomination but that's OK because then this would be even tougher.

You see, like any good incestuous community, I know and/or read a lot of the folks who have been nominated; especially in the "Best e-learning / corporate education" category. Clive's blog is great, so is Tony's and Wendy is a great, relative newcomer with wonderful insight into her daily worklife, I've read Susan Smith Nash's e-Learning Queen for a while and really respect her work and while I don't know Mohamed Amine, I'm sure he does great stuff too.

So who to vote for? Evidently this isn't Chicago, so I can't vote early and often...so I'll say two things:

1. People should look at the lists and vote, but more importantly than voting, visit those sites that you have ever been to.

2. Let's think about how we can do awards differently...now I don't mean some BS thing where everybody gets a ribbon for just showing up, but maybe we set a baseline and if you get so many votes, you get to display some sort of badge...I don't know the answer, I just know that there a ton of good, smart people in this community and awards tend to narrow the field vice expand the field that people look at. I want to both reward the hard, exceptional work of folks while helping to get visibility for the lesser-known or newer folks in our field as well.

Congrats to all the nominees!

December 15, 2006

If You Believe It's Broken - How Do You Change Our Industry/Models/etc?

Tony Karrer posted a summation to LCB's November Big Question, "Are ISD / ADDIE / HPT relevant in a world of rapid elearning, faster time-to-performance, and informal learning?" Tony is very good at this (you should read his Top Ten Reasons to Blog and Top Ten Not to Blog).

This summary though really got me thinking because as it outlined the problems that people had either with the models themselves or their implementation - I just kept thinking that this was like continually running a car into a lake and wondering why it doesn't float - perhaps the problem is not with the car. Then I read the comments and the suggestions there for new models or ways to work with existing models or even the opinions of Clark Quinn and Wendy Wickham who sang that the models were broken. I just kept seeing this vision where we are trying to stop or change the course of a river just before it reaches the sea. I think we need to go WAAAYYY upstream for this one.

I have said it before but I want to mention it again - I am an outsider, an interloper albeit an interested and involved one. I did not grow up in ISD, did not get my undergrad or advanced degrees in ISD. My undergrad is in management I did my Masters in anthropology and history and was on my way to history PhD when I decided that instead of that degree, I'd actually like to work for a fair wage (but I'm not bitter). All that just sets the stage for me saying that I think that I look at this problem a bit differently (not better just different) than folks who have been in this field for longer than I.

I think that first, if we are serious about changing how we work, then we need to start back in the way college programs in the field are taught and that means changing the way professors think about this field. I think that if we don't do that, along with other things, then every year, colleges will graduate wonderful students who will go forth and do as they have been taught and then years later, will come to the same realization we have and then start about changing things.

I think back to my undergrad and grad school days and one lesson that was hammered into me both in "B" school and in history and to a degree in anthropology - was to question everything. True, there was the Canon but there were also good chops to be made by successfully exposing the weaknesses in the Canon. No one got a free ride. I used to tell the newest members of my Fraternity that the greatest gift they could bring to the organization was their ability to think critically about it. The ability to think critically about your field and its theoretical underpinnings, now there is a model I can get behind.

So we have "critical thinking" now I'd add interdisciplinary. Some ISD programs are couple with technology programs that great. many are lodged within Education departments - good. How many are aligned or offer courses taught by neurobiologists? Economists? Anthropologists? Sociologists? How many are infused with Peter Senge and Chris Argyris maybe even a little Peter Drucker? My point is learning in the corporate world is a cross-cutting exercise. We had better not be operating in vertical silos or we aren't serving the org to well. So maybe, if we're cross-cutting in our jobs, we need to be cross-cutting in our curriculum.

So now we have critically thinking, interdisciplinarians and they are confronted with models - well they now have the tools and the skills to successfully analyze those models, contextualize them for given situations and move ahead. Wow. Sounds like what we do every day right? The only difference is that this is not how the majority of them are currently educated. Ask how long did it take us all to get that point. I'm not saying we fix the whole issue with changing some courses but I think we need to re-consider the skill sets that we need to focus on.

October 25, 2006

Brandon Hall Network (again) and Why Didn't I Think of This Sooner?

As I mentioned earlier, I've signed up for and been impressed with the new Brandon Hall Network. OK. So lots of people are joining and everybody is making friends and then Doug Nelson makes a comment that "Now we just need it to integrate with the uber social network database that links up Linked In, Friendster, MySpace, Tribes, Flikr...."

And I'm all like 'duh, why didn't I think of that earlier?' I just listened to a podcast from IT Conversations with Marc Senasac from Broadband Mechanics.  They are coming out with a product/service called People Aggregator. Think of it as the product/service that Dough was asking for...take a look at their site but also have a look at this diagram below - got any more requests Doug? :-)

Schema

The Brandon Hall Network - nicely done

Brandon_hall_network

Brandon Hall has now created a sort of Friendster/LinkedIN specifically for the e-learning crowd.  I was a little skeptical at first but after my friend Brent Schlenker plunged in, I thought 'what the heck!' To tell the truth, I have been pleasantly surprised.

You can look at my public profile page here and get an idea of the kind of tool set available once you join the network. The functionality set looks good. The UI is pretty good - I find the initial color set to be a bit jarring but they do make the CSS available to you which will allow folks to really customize their  profile page.

So congrats on a nicely designed, functional network!

October 16, 2006

Ambient Insight Publishes New Research on Size of e-Learning Market

From the fine folks over at Ambient Insight comes this new report:The US Market for Self-paced eLearning Products and Services: 2006-2011 Forecast and Analysis. Now I have not shelled out the bucks for the whole report but here are some tidbits from the abstract:

  • The largest buyers in 2006 are still the corporations and the federal government but by 2011 the combined non-profit and for-profit higher education segment will be the largest buyer segment. The fastest growing market is the PreK-12 academic segment followed closely by higher education, associations, and healthcare.
  • A new type of product called education-based marketing purchased by vendors with advertising budgets, but provided to consumers for free is creating revenue declines in the consumer market
  • There is pronounced cannibalization of Self-paced eLearning by newer learning technologies in the federal government agencies, particularly in the military
  • There is robust growth of hosted LMS services in the non-enterprise corporate segments, but particularly in the SMB

September 29, 2006

HP follows Dell in grabbing for some high-end cred...

Logo_black If you have never heard of Voodoo PC then you are a n00b who should be pwned and you just have never wanted to spend $6000 on the ABSOLUTE MOST SLAMMING GAMING RIG EVAR!! Seriously, Voodoo - along with Falcon NW and Alienware - were kind of like the Big 3 of boutique shops making high-end gaming rigs. Well now we are down to one. Alienware was bought by Dell and now HP has bought Voodoo...wonder if the guys at Falcon are in talks with Lenovo .....

September 13, 2006

Trend-setting KM Products for 2006 (KM World)

As I look through this list of products from KM World and their associated capabilities and think about them in the context of informal learning, I am struck by the feeling that many of these products seem much more ready to enable informal learning that many of our learning products.

gapingvoid

My latest additions to del.icio.us

del.icio.us stuff

stat counter


  • View My Stats
Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 08/2003

Quoth he...


  • "The hallmark of revolution is that the goals of the revolutionaries cannot be contained by the institutional structure of the society they live in. As a result, either the revolutionaries are put down, or some of those institutions are transmogrified, replaced, or simply destroyed. We are plainly witnessing a restructuring of the music and newspaper businesses, but their suffering isn’t unique, it’s prophetic." --Clay Shirky

kaboodle

  • Oehlert's Book...
    www.kaboodle.com

The Digested Digest

Kurt Lewin on del.icio.us

  • The Lewin Links
    This link should take you to the page I have on del.icio.us where I am linking to all the Lewin stuff I find. If you find something, just tag it with kurt+lewin to add it to the mix.

Me in Second Life