The following is a recap of the various sessions I made it around to at DevLearn.
Day 1: Tuesday
Breakfast bytes:
Management: Challenges, Ideas and Best Practices
This discussion group turned out to be a bit of a bust. I'm not sure what happened, but our instructors seemed to think that the small group size and room arrangement was not condusive to having discussions. They tried to release us to other morning discussions, but most of us hung around to see what could be salvaged. Somehow we ended up dancing around the topic of "what is eLearning really?" My takeaway was that eLearning will probably mean different things to different people, so I should use more specific terms like "web-based-training" or "interactive multimedia presentation."
Session 1:
The 10 Most Common Reasons eLearning Projects Fail and What To Do
For some reason the common reasons listed in my notes don't add up to 10. From my count I have 8 problems and 9 solutions, so either I got lost deep in thought at some point or maybe "top 10" was just catchier. Either way, here is what I have:
The eLearning Solution Challenge
1. Poor quality courses
2. Underestimated infrastructure challenges
3. End-user not motivated and incentives not clear
4. Dependency on a single solution approach
5. Culture doesn't support it
6. Resistance from instructors and administrators being forced from their zones
7. Subject matter unavailability
8. Attending training sessions is considered a perk
What we can do:
1. Conduct an eLearning study
2. Better define your training goals
3. Develop cost of ownership projections - understand that content maintenance increases over time
4. Build schedules that assume SME delays
5. Identify potential attrition problems and implement solutions
6. Focus on transfer of learning to the job - Learners typically forget what they learn over time
7. Don't put too much into a course - Build a workable course that includes support tools
8. Design courses to engage learners
9. Leverage the community
Session 2
Scalable and Repeatable Training Development: Processes, Tools, and...
Another wonderful session. This session focused on how to rapidly create quality eLearning products with a dispersed workforce. This topic was of particular interest to me since our production teams have been asked to do this for years, but the push back has always been that you can't plan that way when everything we do is a custom job. This session gave some examples of how Accenture has done just that, making almost an assembly-line of custom eLearning.
The 7 secrets to success mentioned were:
1. Maintain focus on business alignment and business results
2. Establish and clearly use entry criteria
3. Clearly define and communicate roles and responsibilities
4. Leverage predictable factory efficiences
5. Adopt an integrated development platform
6. Implement estimating, planning, and activity tracking tools
7. Leverage a web-enabled process and methodology
Session 3:
Ensuring Quality and Consistency of eLearning by Using Standards
This session was also a demonstration of what one company is doing to rapidly create eLearning. The speaker also discussed using templates, as was mentioned in Session 2, but this speaker did one better; he actually had stacks of them printed out! While the show and tell was interesting, I think what kept everyone there to the end was the fact that he was giving away templates.
Wow, my brief recap took me longer than expected. I am going to have to work on Days 2 and 3 another time. I hope some of this was useful to any readers that missed these sessions.
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
DevLearn notes are on the way
Well it's been a week since DevLearn 2007 and I miss it already. I took many notes at each session, which I review daily to keep the creative juices from slipping away as I get caught up at the office. I still plan on putting a recap of the sessions I attended into Blog form before it's all lost.
I would like to thank Tony Karrer for linking to my unfulfilled blog before I let it sink into obscurity. Thanks Tony, some of us just need a little nudge. :-)
My goal will be to get notes up by the end of the day.
I would like to thank Tony Karrer for linking to my unfulfilled blog before I let it sink into obscurity. Thanks Tony, some of us just need a little nudge. :-)
My goal will be to get notes up by the end of the day.
Monday, November 5, 2007
Good night San Jose
Well, I just set up my first blog. After much deliberation I named this blog "Training and Development," which hopefully will last the week.
I created this blog to record my week at DevLearn 2007 in San Jose, CA, and possibly beyond. I hope to get even more out of the conference by blogging my thoughts from the various sessions. Ideally I'll capture at least a portion of the fire hose I will be drinking from over the next few days. If you come across this blog I'd love to get comments on anything you find interesting.
I hope to see some of you at DevLearn.
Cheers.
I created this blog to record my week at DevLearn 2007 in San Jose, CA, and possibly beyond. I hope to get even more out of the conference by blogging my thoughts from the various sessions. Ideally I'll capture at least a portion of the fire hose I will be drinking from over the next few days. If you come across this blog I'd love to get comments on anything you find interesting.
I hope to see some of you at DevLearn.
Cheers.
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