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The WR Hambrecht report lists some general e-Learning benefits as seen from
the corporate side of e-Learning.
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Benefits of
e-Learning
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Benefits
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Description
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Technology has revolutionized business; now it must
revolutionize learning.
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The need to transform how organizations learn points to a
more modern, efficient, and flexible alternative: e-learning.
The mission of corporate e-learning is to supply the workforce
with an up-to-date and cost-effective program that yields
motivated, skilled, and loyal knowledge workers.
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Anywhere, anytime, anyone.
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We estimate that approximately 80% of the professional
workforce already uses computers on the job. Technical
obstacles, such as access, standards, infrastructure, and
bandwidth, will not be an issue two years from now. The growth
of the World Wide Web, high-capacity corporate networks, and
high-speed desktop computers will make learning available to
people 24 hours a day, seven days a week around the globe. This
will enable businesses to distribute training and critical
information to multiple locations easily and conveniently.
Employees can then access training when it is convenient for
them, at home or in the office.
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Substantial cost savings due to elimination of travel
expenses.
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The biggest benefit of e-learning, however, is that it
eliminates the expense and inconvenience of getting the
instructor and students in the same place. According to Training
Magazine, corporations save between 50–70% when replacing
instructor-led training with electronic content delivery. Opting
for e-training also means that courses can be pared into shorter
sessions and spread out over several days or weeks so that the
business would not lose an employee for entire days at a time.
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Just-in-time access to timely information.
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Web-based products allow instructors to update lessons and
materials across the entire network instantly. This keeps
content fresh and consistent and gives students immediate access
to the most current data. Information can be retrieved just
before it is required, rather than being learned once in a
classroom and subsequently forgotten. Training Magazine reported
that technology-based training has proven to have a 50–60%
better consistency of learning than traditional classroom
learning (c-learning).
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Higher retention of content through personalized learning.
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Since they can customize the learning material to their own
needs, students have more control over their learning process
and can better understand the material, leading to a 60% faster
learning curve, compared to instructor-led training. The
delivery of content in smaller units, called "chunks,"
contributes further to a more lasting learning effect. Whereas
the average content retention rate for an instructor-led class
is only 58%, the more intensive e-learning experience enhances
the retention rate by 25 – 60%.
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Improved collaboration and interactivity among students.
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Teaching and communication techniques which create an
interactive online environment include case studies,
story-telling, demonstrations, role-playing, simulations,
streamed videos, online references, personalized coaching and
mentoring, discussion groups, project teams, chat rooms, e-mail,
bulletin boards, tips, tutorials, FAQs, and wizards. Distance
education can be more stimulating and encourage more critical
reasoning than a traditional large instructor-led class because
it allows the kind of interaction that takes place most fully in
small group settings. Another study found that online students
had more peer contact with others in the class, enjoyed it more,
spent more time on class work, understood the material better,
and performed, on average, 20% better than students who were
taught in the traditional classroom.
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Online training is less intimidating than instructor-led
courses.
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Students taking an online course enter a risk-free
environment in which they can try new things and make mistakes
without exposing themselves. This characteristic is particularly
valuable when trying to learn soft skills, such as leadership
and decision-making. A good learning program shows the
consequences of students’ actions and where/why they went
wrong. After a failure, students can go back and try again. This
type of learning experience eliminates the embarrassment of
failure in front of a group.
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The SunTrust Equitable report also specifies benefits that are more specific
to the learner and the content provider.
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Additional Benefits
of e-Learning
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Benefits
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Description
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Learner Controlled
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Technology has given the individual greater
authority over the learning environment. Learning does not have
to occur in a classroom. It may occur at one's own desk or the
home.
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Self-Paced
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An individual may proceed through a course or
program as the information is fully comprehended. Students can
convert information to knowledge on their own timetable.
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Uniformity of Content
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The information delivered can be consistent
to all users, therefore reducing the possibility for
misinterpretations.
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Customizable Content
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Information can be developed with individual
users in mind. Courses and programs can be created to deal with
each individual's strengths and weaknesses.
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Content Updated Quickly
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Product and procedural changes can be updated
and delivered in real-time. This increases the rate at which
knowledge is acquired, which is especially important in the
corporate market.
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Howard Block, PhD, and Brandon Dobell, in a Banc
of America report titled The e-Bang Theory, add a few more e-Learning benefits
that are more technical or managerial in nature.
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Learning Management
Benefits of e-Learning
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Benefits
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Description
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Modularity of presentation
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The content’s architecture is modular, which facilitates
different construction of learning events, both in design and
length.
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Manageable structure
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The electronic infrastructure supports managed (and
measurable) interaction between advisors and learners.
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Ability to measure the effectiveness of program
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E-learning software empowers administrators to track
performance and measure ROI. In addition, monitoring usage by
learners is simpler; i.e., the number of downloads per user can
be measured. This helps training managers evaluate
cost-effectiveness and provides assistance with license
negotiations based on estimated usage.
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Simpler data management
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The rapid rate with which new learning products are
introduced and older products become obsolete create a challenge
for individuals charged with updating libraries. However, if a
single version of each product is kept on a host, users get
instantaneous access to updated components.
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Greater storage capacity
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The Internet host has much greater capacity than most
physical locations or a user’s hard drive. This allows
learners access to more products and lets the advisor mix and
match courseware activities to fit specific needs. Learners can
preview presentations of different courses prior to selecting
one, or they can access a specific slide from thousands.
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Individual education programs (IEPs) can be generated from
a combination of the historical record of the students’ prior
learning (from monitored usage)
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As students progress, information is delivered based on what
they’ve learned and how they’ve performed. For example, a
student would log onto the learning server and a customized
course would be generated from the content database that knows
which courses the learner took, how well she did, what her job
description is, what problem is most pressing. This dimension
serves to focus the curriculum only on skill gaps, saving
organizations both time and money. A byproduct of IEPs, in our
view, is increased motivation from the self-centered nature of
the experience.
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