eLearning is a human performance improvement initiative that employs electronic technology. By that definition, consulting an Internet-based dictionary to find out the meaning of a word is a form of eLearning. Indeed, learning is occurring, therefore improving performance by the means of an electronic technology. Though it is incidental and informal, it falls within the parameters of eLearning.
One of the pitfalls many encounter when developing an eLearning strategy is ignoring the wide spectrum of eLearning possibilities. They limit their potential by centering their approach around the digitization of content via impressive technology. They forget that, much like in the case of the user consulting the Internet-based dictionary, meaningful learning is personal, context-related and most effective when answering a specific need.
This error often occurs because somewhere along the line, we forgot that learning is an activity and we tried to turn it into a product. We packaged it, made it stand-alone and made it so universal that it lost its meaning. This approach might have been successful for short tutorials, but doesn’t work well within an eLearning strategy geared towards performance improvement.
In order to make your performance improvement driven eLearning strategy a success, you must:
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