Letter from UK
Trainers, know your place!
London (UK), November 2009 - (by Bob Little) IMC (UK) Learning Ltd has revealed research that looks at the barriers organisations encounter when providing training/learning. It also reveals attitudes towards adopting eLearning tools, as well as organisations' current use of new and emerging technologies for training. The research shows that 83% of respondents agree that enabling employees to learn is very important and say their organisations have defined training systems in place. Some 32%, however, agree that employees have little, if any, time for organised learning as they are too busy working for the survival of the business.
Other findings are:
- 75% of respondents' organisations use or plan to use eLearning tools; while 14% stated that they do not use or plan to use them.
- Externally hosted learning management systems (LMS) (21%) and virtual classroom applications (21%) are used significantly less by respondents' organisations than self hosted LMS (41%), authoring tools (41%), off-the-shelf eLearning content (38%) and discussion forums (45%).
- 42% of respondents highlighted indirect costs of training, such as time off work to train, as a large barrier to increasing training in their organisations; while 30% pointed to the disruption of work patterns.
- Switching from classroom to online learning where appropriate is seen as important for improving training provision by 43% of respondents.
- 46% of respondents believe that online learning helps organisations reduce the overall cost per head of training employees, while 42% agree that online learning introduces flexible learning practices without the loss of employee productivity. Some 42% also believe that appropriate off-the-shelf eLearning content is hard to find.
For over 20 years, Bob Little has specialised in writing about, and commentating on, corporate learning - especially elearning - and technology-related subjects. His work has been published in the UK, Continental Europe, the USA and Australia.
You can contact Bob.