|






|
 |
Learning Management Systems
Learning Management Systems (LMS) are beginning to grow in
popularity. They are a terrific companion to your Corporate University since
they allow you to track the degree plans you create in a customizable
database. The mist critical part of your corporate University is the
tracking - especially if you do best practices and tie compensation and
promotion to the degree plans.
To understand more about Learning Management Systems, read
this article by Clive Shepherd...
A day in the life of a learning management system

by Clive
Shepherd


Every training
manager thinks they know what a learning management system is. The problem
is that they're all thinking different things. Is it a learning portal? A
training records system? An authoring tool? A competency management system?
A virtual classroom? The answer is that it could be all of these things, but
rarely is. The term 'learning management system' (LMS) embraces just about
any use of web technology to plan, organize, implement and control aspects
of the learning process.

This article looks at the
ways in which an LMS can support the full range of everyday functions of the
training department - a metaphorical day in the life of a learning
management system. You'll be able to see whether the support that is
available at each hour of the day - or stage in the learning process - is
important to you, or even necessary given the systems and processes that you
already have in place.
Contents

Under pressure
9am Assessing the job
10am Assessing the student
11am Measuring the gap
12am Creating learning
resources
1pm Cataloguing resources
2pm Filtering resources
3pm Building the plan
4pm Agreeing the plan
5pm Offline delivery
6pm Online delivery
7pm Monitoring progress
8pm Assessing results
Bedtime
Under pressure

By now, you're probably feeling the pressure. In the 21st Century, no
self-respecting, aspiring e-business can consider itself worthy of the name
without the support of a enterprise-wide, web-enabled, learning management
system (LMS). We're not quite sure what it is, but we know we're going to be
left behind if we don't own one pretty damn soon. After all, we're told by
such luminaries as John Chambers, CEO of Cisco, that 'the biggest growth in
the Internet, and the area that will prove to be one of the biggest agents
of change, will be e-learning'. We also know that 'managing learning' is
what training managers are paid to do and that a learning management system
should therefore be of more than passing interest.

Every training manager thinks
they know what a learning management system is. The problem is that they're
all thinking different things. It's the same thing as a learning portal. No
it's not, it's an authoring system. It's another name for a training records
system. No, no, no, it's a way of managing skills and competencies. Way off
- it's a virtual classroom.

OK, so what is it then? The
answer is that it could be all of these things, but rarely is. The term
'learning management system' embraces just about any use of web technology
to plan, organize, implement and control aspects of the learning process.
Hardly any system supports all these processes and hardly any organization
needs them to. Matching your needs to what's available is incredibly complex
and confusing, because you're usually left comparing apples with pears.

So, in this article, we're going
to look at the ways in which an LMS can support the full range of everyday
functions of the training department - a metaphorical day in the life of a
learning management system. You'll be able to see whether the support that
is available at each hour of the day - or stage in the learning process - is
important to you, or even necessary given the systems and processes that you
already have in place.


9am - Assessing the job

'Assessing the job' is probably not the first thing you want to do at 9am -
perhaps after the coffee and croissants and an update on Big Brother, but
not before. But an LMS is so logical and hard working that it starts right
on time and with the right tasks.

You can't - or shouldn't - be
organizing training without first knowing what skills and competencies are
required to effectively fulfill the responsibilities of each of the major
roles in your organization. An LMS can't help to reduce the painstaking work
required in defining competency frameworks across an organization. What it
can do is record these in a systematic way, so that - later in the day -
they can be used as the basis for curriculum planning and the analysis of
training and developmental needs.

Of course, competencies aren't
the only way of looking at job requirements. In some cases, specific
qualifications or certifications are essential prerequisites to landing a
job. In other cases, employees have to obtain a license in order to carry
out a particular task and then be re-licensed on a regular basis. The LMS
can do more than store this information - it can act on it to ensure
employees are informed of their obligations and are pointed to the
appropriate learning resources.
Which LMS?
LMSs that can help you assess the job include: Saba, Docent, Ingenium,
Teamscape.
Many other HR systems provide this functionality but do not incorporate
sufficient additional learning management functionality to be regarded as
LMSs. On the other hand, some LMSs, such as Solstra and Registrar, do not
contain competency management features but can be integrated with third
party systems.


10am - Assessing the student

Jobs do not, of course, exist in isolation. Information about jobs is only
relevant when it is compared to information about the people that currently
hold them, or might hold them in the future.
We now know what competencies,
qualifications and licenses are required for each job. Our next task is to
find out what competencies, qualifications and licenses our people have. An
LMS can help you in doing this in a number of ways: by recording the
competencies, qualifications and licenses that a person already holds; by
listing the requirements of a person's current job or a job that they aspire
to; by enabling the person themselves, their manager, peers or subordinates
to rate them against these requirements; by delivering online assessments
linked to job requirements; by recording course completions that are linked
to job requirements; by recording a person's aspirations for their future
career; by recording a profile of the user's learning preferences in terms
of method, locations and times.
Which LMS?
Generally, only LMSs that assess jobs also provide the facility to
assess students against job requirements. However, many LMSs will record a
student's learning achievements, particularly when the learning is accessed
through the LMS. They will also be able to deliver online assessments,
recording the results in the individual's records.


11am - Measuring the gap

It's coffee time, but the work must go on. Trainers proficient in training
needs analysis will know that we now have enough information to measure the
learning gap - the difference between what the job requires and what the
person can offer.

An LMS can help you by comparing
an individual's profile with that of their current job; by comparing an
individual's profile with that of a job to which they aspire (typically
internal to an organisation, but could be across a sector, say the IT
industry); by identifying individuals best matched to a particular job's
requirements; by identifying the learning gap across all holders of a
particular job.
Which LMS?
Only those systems that record competencies for both jobs and
individuals can perform gap analysis.

12am - Creating learning
resources

Revealing the gap is informative, but it can also be scary, particularly if
you are short of the resources needed to do anything about it. No LMS will
help you to design classroom events or offline media, but many incorporate
tools that can help you to develop online materials.
Which LMS?
LMSs that include facilities for creating learning resources include:
Saba, Docent, Solstra, TopClass, WebCT, Click2Learn.

The best results are probably
obtained from stand-alone authoring systems - Dreamweaver (with the
Coursebuilder templates), Toolbook II, Trainersoft, DazzlerMax - the output
from which should work with just about any LMS.
An LMS should also be able to support
all popular off-the-shelf courseware from publishers such as NETg,
SmartForce, DigitalThink, Xebec, Maxim and SkillSoft.


1pm - Cataloguing resources

It can be extremely difficult for students to find the resources they need
to meet their learning needs, whether this is inside an organization or
externally. One of the simplest, yet most powerful functions of an LMS is to
list all of the resources available. Pretty well any LMS is capable of
listing online courses, but you may find it helpful to list all other
available resources, including classroom events and offline media (CD-ROMs,
books, workbooks, etc.).

LMSs that include competency
management facilities will also include the capability to cross-reference
learning resources to competencies. This means they can then automatically
list those resources that address an identified gap.

Some systems act more as
course-finders, providing access to the many 1000s of external courses in
the market, face-to-face and online. Although these systems can be extremely
useful, they are better categorized as learning portals or even learning
procurement systems, rather than fully-fledged management systems.
Which LMS?
Any LMS will catalogue all the resources that are loaded on to its
system for online delivery. Many will also catalogue classroom courses and
offline media.

LMSs that can cross-reference
resources to competency frameworks include: Saba, Docent, Ingenium,
Teamscape. LMS's that act as a
portal to internal and external courses of all types include: hotcourses.com,
thinq, worldoftraining.com, bookacourse.com, trainseek.com.

Major publishers, such as NETg
and SmartForce, provide their own LMSs. Although providing powerful
functionality, these are primarily geared to the support of the publisher's
own content.

Systems such as Registrar, that
were originally designed to manage classroom training, have been enhanced to
handle online training as well. As a result, Registrar can now be regarded
as a fully-fledged LMS.


2pm - Filtering resources

As anyone who has used a
search engine will know, it's next to useless to be presented with a listing
of 2000 items that match our criteria. An LMS can help to narrow down the
search for the right resources by acting as a filter: finding those
face-to-face and real-time online events that match our time constraints;
finding those face-to-face events that take place in suitable locations,
e.g. the Bahamas; finding those events that have available spaces; finding
resources that match our budget, from deluxe to cheapest possible; finding
resources that match our preferences for method (classroom, self-study,
etc.); finding those resources that have been reviewed favorably by previous
students; finding those resources that are provided by an organization's
preferred suppliers.
Which LMS?
LMS's will vary enormously in the sophistication of the filters they can
provide (if any!).
A site that specializes in providing reviews of e-learning courses is e-learningdirectory.com.


3pm - Building the plan
Of course it is possible for
students to simply find resources from the catalogue that meet their needs
and then go ahead and make use of them, as and when they please. But an LMS
can also help an organization to administer a more planned approach: by
allowing organizations to assign courses directly to individuals or groups;
by assisting individual students in selecting the right combination of
resources to meet their needs; by sequencing selected resources sensibly; by
recording this sequence in the form of a learning plan.
Which LMS?
LMS's that provide facilities for courses to be directly assigned to
individuals or groups, and which support the concept of individual learning
plans include: Saba, Docent, Teamscape, Solstra, Ingenium.


4pm - Agreeing the plan

Providing easy access to
learning resources is one thing. Providing controls where those resources
are scarce (say places on classroom courses) or where budget is involved is
another. An LMS can help you by limiting access to resources which are aimed
at specific target groups; providing a wait-listing service for classroom
events; obtaining approvals electronically; providing a range of payment
schemes, including prepayments, credit lines and pay-as-you-go.
Which LMS?
LMS's vary in the extent to which they provide support in this area. The
need for e-commerce and authorization facilities depends on whether the
content is home-made or off-the-shelf and whether the LMS is operated by an
organization for its own needs or resources are offered to the public at
large, or even customers and suppliers.


5pm - Offline delivery

Even the most optimistic forecasts for e-learning do not predict the total
demise of traditional methods. Messy as it may be, organizations will have
to continue managing a wide range of formats, often in innovative new
combinations.

Here's just some of the ways in
which an LMS could support the delivery of learning offline: by providing
automatic, online messaging to course participants, including the
transmission of joining instructions and pre-work; by providing learners
with collaborative tools, such as discussion forums and chat rooms; by
managing inventory for items such as CD-ROMs, manuals and books.
Which LMS?
LMS's that provide at least some support for offline delivery include:
Saba, Docent, Ingenium, Registrar. Expect all major LMS's to gear themselves
to supporting all forms of learning.


6pm - Online delivery
Of course you would expect
an LMS to support the delivery of online learning resources and you wouldn't
be wrong. As a minimum, an LMS should be able to launch online, self-study
materials, whether these are interactive lessons or simple Word, PDF and
PowerPoint files. An LMS may also support collaboration between learners and
tutors, through discussion forums and real-time, virtual classrooms.
Which LMS?
Practically any LMS will support the delivery of online, self-study
materials.

LMS's that provide support for
asynchronous and real-time collaboration include Saba, LearningSpace,
TopClass and Solstra. Real-time
collaboration tools, such as Centra and LearnLinc, can be integrated with a
wide variety of LMSs.


7pm - Monitoring progress

It's getting late, but dedicated training managers will be keen to stay in
the office a little longer to see how their e-learners are doing. For the
first time, all interested parties - not just the training manager, but
administrators, students, managers and tutors - can keep right up-to-date
with events: who's done what to whom, when did they do it and where?

It's not difficult for an LMS to
track who has registered for what learning and, if that learning is online,
when and for how long they are logged on. To obtain much more information
about online learning, such as test scores, requires data to be passed from
the learning materials back to the LMS. For that to work smoothly requires
an adherence to standards by both the LMS and the content providers.
Which LMS?
All major LMS's provide comprehensive tracking facilities. Most will
also be committed to the emerging AICC, IMS and IEEE standards. You may want
to pass training records from the LMS to your existing HR systems, in which
case you should find out who has the facility to support this.


8pm - Assessing results

In the past, life's
always been too hectic to do a proper job of training evaluation - at least
that's been our excuse. With an LMS, excuses will no longer be acceptable,
because so much of the information we need will be served up on a plate.

How can an LMS help you to
evaluate your training? Well, first of all it can measure usage - bums on
seats. More importantly, it can measure completions - how many people are
actually finishing courses. It can record reactions (you know, the happy
sheets) and if your courses include online assessments, it can also provide
some measure of the learning that's been achieved.

Looking to the big picture, an
LMS can make it much easier for you to keep a track of costs. And if it
incorporates competency management facilities, you can plot how narrow that
learning gap is becoming. There's no guarantee that you'll like what you
discover, but then, as Bill Gates recommends in his book Business @ The
Speed of Thought, 'bad news must travel fast'.


Bedtime

It's been a long day for
you, but for the LMS work never stops. While you're at home recovering, your
international employees are busy accessing the system for learning on an
anytime, anywhere basis. No need for you to worry about this now, because
the records will be there for you to look at in the morning.

As you will have seen, LMS's
come with a great many knobs on and, as the great feature wars continue, the
number of knobs will grow exponentially. What you have to work out is which
of these knobs you'll ever need to turn. Look where can you get the most
added-value in a reasonable time and at a reasonable cost, without
sacrificing the opportunity to add more knobs later. Don't rely on this
article for detail - by the time you read it, many of the systems mentioned
here will be capable of doing much more.
top
|
 |


|