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An All-In-One Resource for All Things xAPI

eLearningMind

But in 2010, after putting out a call for vendors to develop a set of next-gen eLearning standards, the governing body of SCORM, Advanced Distributed Learning (ADL), tasked a company—Rustici Software—with that responsibility. The result was SCORM 2.0. The effort was dubbed Project Tin Can. And what is xAPI used for? The answer?

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The ongoing work of learning standards

Litmos

After initial efforts in 1993, and bursts of energy circa 2000 and again in 2004, we’re seeing a new resurgence of activity and interest. The problem with committee work is well known; in this case vendors who participated wanted the standard to make it easy for their content to be made compliant. And you should be paying attention.

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#DevLearn retrospective: Start dreaming about the future of eLearning

Challenge to Learn

Thanks to the TinCan API (now renamed into ‘experience API’) the technique is ahead of us (learning developers and vendors). It will be a mutual challenge for the people who are developing this standard, for vendors and for eLearning developers. The guy sitting on the left is Aron Silvers from ADL. The vendors.

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Clarifying how xAPI relates to platforms, monitoring and testing

Experience API

Can xAPI monitor device activity? The Test Suite is managed and maintained by ADL , or the Advanced Distributed Learning Initiative, a US government organization that conducts research and development on distributed learning or eLearning. The LRS available via our SCORM Cloud product also undergoes this type of testing.

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Mike Rustici – Crystal Balling with Learnnovators

Learnnovators

It comprises stimulating discussions with industry experts and product evangelists, on emerging trends in the learning landscape. Tin Can will also cause us to think more analytically about our learning programs now that we have more data and visibility into a broader set of learning activities. That is incredibly powerful.

ADL 100
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MIKE RUSTICI – CRYSTAL BALLING WITH LEARNNOVATORS

Learnnovators

It comprises stimulating discussions with industry experts and product evangelists, on emerging trends in the learning landscape. Tin Can will also cause us to think more analytically about our learning programs now that we have more data and visibility into a broader set of learning activities. That is incredibly powerful.

ADL 100
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eLearning Standards—What They Are and Why They Matter

Trivantis

To accomplish this, the industry has come up with several eLearning standards that allow courses created by any vendor to “talk” with an LMS created by any other vendor. The AICC was dissolved in 2014, and all of its efforts have been transferred to the Department of Defense’s (DOD) Advanced Distributed Learning (ADL) group.