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The future of e-Learning, according to Kasper Spiro | Change to learn

Challenge to Learn

Therefore, here is the first raw concept version of “The future of e-Learning, according to Kasper Spiro”. e-Learning started out as digitized versions of courses, the so-called page-turners. We published them on CD-ROM’s as Computer Based training (CBT). I call this the “if then else adaptive learning”.

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Interview with Instructional Design Pioneer, Dean Pichee

eLearning 24-7

When CBT rumbled in, those 640mb CD-ROMS definitely was a game changer. Then at some point, WBT appeared (now referred to as elearning courses and content by way too many vendors – when it actually was devised as an umbrella term and spelled e-learning). Think about how you would have to create courses for such endeavors?

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Workflow learning vs. the "me-focus" culture

The Learning Circuits

It reminds me of the mid-to-late 1990s when I was promoting online learning to a resistant training community, who could not believe that anyone would prefer a computer to a classroom, or that any online learning could be as effective as that delivered by a trainer.

Culture 40
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The Ultimate Glossary of eLearning Terms

LearnUpon

It’s a five-phase framework that instructional designers use; a guideline for building effective training and learning support tools. In today’s fast-paced learning environments, the AGILE method is often seen as more efficient than ADDIE. ADL (Advanced Distributed Learning). LTI (Learning Tools Interoperability).