article thumbnail

Simulations Games Social and Trends

Tony Karrer

I received some interesting questions (and you know I love questions) from someone doing eLearning industry market research around trends in simulations, games, social learning. This is further complicated by the fact that there’s expectation that learning is going to be more and more part of day-to-day knowledge work.

article thumbnail

Formal Learning All the Way.Baby

Kapp Notes

The processes have been formalized, in knowledge work, many of the processes are formalized. We like to think knowledge workers spend all day "problem-solving" but in reality they spend all day finding out what procedure should be followed in what situation. Tags: simulations Learning at Work Education.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Q&A With Student from King's College

Kapp Notes

Your book, "Gadgets, Games and Gizmos for Learning" highlights an often overlooked fact about video games and other technological devices: their educational value. Trying to convince non-techies of the learning potential and value of video games for learning is a daunting task.

article thumbnail

The Rise of the Servant Leader

CLO Magazine

During the Industrial Revolution of the 19th century, efficient production of goods was the name of the game. In the 20th century, information became as important as materials, leading to what my friend and mentor Peter Drucker called knowledge work.

Server 73
article thumbnail

What Agile Means to Me

ID Reflections

Don’t we need to document so that in case a point comes when the blame-game starts (I assumed it would), we have our backs covered? Apparently not because there is no blame game! A dictum like “Just deliver; don’t document unless the document is going to add value” would throw me into a tizzy. There is no one to blame.

Agile 179
article thumbnail

Seven Things I Learned This Year

Tony Karrer

What I wrote more about in 2010 than past years: Text-to-Speech (8) OCW (3) SharePoint (8) eLearning Strategy (16) eLearning Tools (34) Corporate eLearning (18) Knowledge Worker (8) Authoring Tools (8) Voice (15) Knowledge Work (4) Captivate (11) Adobe Captivate (6) Enterprise 2.0 (6)

article thumbnail

eLearning Topics

Tony Karrer

this would be down notable dropping topics: games, simulations, knowledge, interactive and blended Karyn Romeis commented: Hmm. 130) Work Skills (26) PWLE (16) Flash Quiz (8) Knowledge Work (40) That's a pretty fair representation of topics that I talk about. I have doubts about the validity of these data.