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SCORM, AICC, xAPI – Which one do I need?

eLearning 24-7

Fast forward to the early 2000s, and a US government-sponsored group, the ADL Initiative, took the best of AICC, added some much-needed changes, and SCORM 1.0 vs SCORM 2004 as it was newer. Well, besides following the adage that newer is better, there are two significant, consistent factors that SCORM 2004 3rd (and 4th edition) supply.

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Why SCORM 2004 failed & what that means for Tin Can

eFront

“SCORM 2004 is dying (if not already dead!).” 10 years after the initial release of SCORM 2004 [1] [2]. Sign #2: There is no certification process for tools and packages for the latest SCORM 2004 4 th edition. Sign #2: There is no certification process for tools and packages for the latest SCORM 2004 4 th edition.

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What happened in 2023 and what’s next for eLearning standards

Rustici Software

The Rustici Software team regularly contributes to the evolution of the standards through involvement with the IEEE, ADL and 1EdTech eLearning standards groups. or SCORM 2004. These communities and large group discussions help set the direction on how learning tools should play nicely together now and in the future. What’s next cmi5 2.0

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Adapting to change: Going hybrid and supporting standards

Rustici Software

xAPI was a glimmer in the eye of ADL, Rustici and in particular Ben Clark, who was spearheading Project Tin Can development. If you were going to market with a corporate learning application, SCORM was the only standard you really worried about supporting. SCORM 2004 and AICC. We’re not just the SCORM folks.

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What is SCORM? A Complete Guide on SCORM Files and Packaging

learnWorlds

A SCORM-certified course has passed and was certified by ADL, the organization behind the SCORM standard. SCORM 2004 (formerly known as 1.3). SCORM 2004 is the latest version of the standard used today. The downside of the 2004 version is that fewer LMS vendors support it due to its complexity. SCORM Certified.

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SCORM Compliance and Tin Can Api

Paradiso

SCORM was originally developed way back in the 90s by Advanced Distributed Learning (ADL), an initiative of the U.S. in 2000) was followed by a very slow progression of updates, culminating in SCORM 2004 in, unsurprisingly, 2004 which introduced sequencing, among other things. Department of Defence. Developments.

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SCORM – Set of Standards that make Courses and LMS Compatible

Paradiso

SCORM 2004 is another majorly used version, which is slowly getting superseded by Tin Can. There are a number of authoring tools available in the market for the creation of SCORM compliant courses. So, normally it is ADL (Advanced Distributed Learning – a research group) that handles all the aspects related to SCORM.

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