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[IN DEPTH ANALYSIS] Do your employees know how to learn?

KnowledgeOne

In this knowledge-based economy that technologically evolves every day, being able to “learn how to learn” is THE key skill of the new worker. Learning that needs to be known. This does not mean that apart from these opportunities we will not acquire any knowledge or develop any other valuable skills.

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EPSS and ePerformance

Tony Karrer

Searching on eperformance I ran across your 2003 LearningCircuits blog entries (E-Performance Essentials) separating eperformance into edevelopment, einteraction and esupport. Do these still hold to you (a search on esupport or e-support gets you mostly remote software support sources)?

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Long Live?

Tony Karrer

To be fair to Saul, he points us to some important numbers from the ASTD State of the Industry Report: Despite a steady climb in the availability of e-learning, the overall percentage of instructor-led training is nearly unchanged: 71.97 percent in 2003 and 70.58 percent of all training in 2003 to 6.39 percent in 2008.

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Informal Learning – the other 80%

Jay Cross

The start-up stiffed me but the paper morphed into the Informal Learning book. I’ll be leading a series of master classes on informal learning and working smarter in Europe. Informal Learning – the other 80%. Because organizations are oblivious to informal learning, they fail to invest in it.