eLearning and return on investment
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Transcript of eLearning and return on investment
OCSLD
Designing (e)learning to meet the needs of the learner, the manager and deliver return on investment
Chartered Insurance Institute10 May 2007
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Who, me?Education• 1968 - DEC PDP8 & FORTRAN• 1972 - BA (English Lit)• 1986 - MPhil (Historical & Comparative Linguistics)• 2001 - MA (Education w/Open and Distance Education)• 2004 - PhD study at U of Southampton
• The extent to which beliefs about learning and teaching are embedded in the artefacts of learning technology
Work & Related• 1987 PEP Preparatory Education Project• 1988 ACE adult community continuing education tutor• 1989 College of Petroleum and Energy Studies• 2000 Brookes• 2003 Open University
• ALT• Writing
George RobertsEducational [email protected]
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Outline
• Issues
• Objectives
• ROI
• Learning Design
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Exploring the issues
Consider the following images
1. What are the issues, wide and narrow?
2. What are the training issues?
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
The issues?
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
The issues?
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
• 1970 Equal Pay
• 1974 Rehabilitation of Offenders
• 1975 Sex Discrimination
• 1976 Race Discrimination
• 1995 Disability Discrimination
• 2000 Part-time Workers
• 2002 Fixed term workers• SENDA 2001 (prevents
discrimination in education & training)
• Race Relations (Amendment) Act 2001
• Employment Act 2002
• Sexual Orientation, Religion & Belief 2003
• Gender Recognition Act 2004
• Civil Partnership Act 2005
• Disability Discrimination Act 2006
• Age 2006
• Equality Act 2006
The issues?
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Consider the preceding images: with your neighbour, in pairs or small groups
1. What are the issues, wide and narrow?
2. What are the training and development issues?
Exploring the issues?
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
At the end of this session you should be able to explain
• the role of continuing professional development in a knowledge-based enterprise
• a balanced approach to ROI• a multi-modal approach to CPD• basic principles of Designing for Learning
• and bust some sad myths
Learning objectives
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
• One firm training manager surmises that it will take between 50 and 200 development hours to produce one instructional hour
• … industry insiders say that initial development costs can run from $5,000 - $35,000
• … lack of human contact can create a static learning environment
Activity
• In pairs or small groups, identify at least one counter example to each of these statements.
Sad myths?
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Learning is not just content delivery
• Communication => Channel
• Community => Relationship
• Content => Topic
Busting the myths
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
1. Socio-economic-political environment• stakeholders, shareholders, principals and agents• legislation and regulation• governance and accountability• assurance
2. Cultural environment• working practices• family patterns
3. Natural environment
4. Personal environment• your own aims, ambitions
The role of CPD:Managing change in…
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Compliance
• Compliance is practically a full-time job by itself, not just because of the constant changes, but because of the mandatory training requirements (Cormier 2006)
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
1.Too hard
• Research by Ashridge Business School has found that it is almost impossible to quantify ROI around management development because there are so many variables involve
• net programme benefits cannot be accurately predicted and require complex assumptions concerning the future effectiveness of a programme
ROI: two perspectives
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
2. Has to be done
• Measuring the impact of training comes down to asking the right questions to find the data that can be linked to changed behavior
ROI: two perspectives
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
In pairs/small groups produce a short list of:
1. What you need to know: what data will be useful
2. What questions will elicit that data
ROI: Activity
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
• Measuring the impact of training comes down to asking the right questions to find the data that can be linked to changed behavior
Superficial• ask learners to rate how happy they were • list the “take homes”• Use psychometrics (Myers Briggs, Belbin) to relate multiple motivation
to departmental objectives• establish Learning Transfer Climate, e.g. making sure someone's boss
had been on a course before them• Apprenticeships are cost-effective and low-risk methods of identifying
people with high potential: trainees AND mentors• treat entry-level jobs as development opportunities. • hire college students to do entry level jobs part time with a view to
talent spotting• Formal coaching demonstrates high return-on-investment
Significant
ROI: has to be done
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Philips evaluation methodology• Reaction and planned action (near term)
• e.g. 90% of participants indicate intention to apply new knowledge within 1 month
• e.g. 80% of participants indicated the training “represented good value for the company”
• Learning (near to mid term)• compliance testing
• Application (mid term)• formal and informal diagnosis of learning and planned action
through observation and conversation• Business impact (mid to long term)
• align departmental aims with corporate and individual aims and structure training interventions around departmental aims
• Value of Investment• growth, development, sustainability• shareholder value
• Intangibles
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Activity• In groups, suggest appropriate instruments for each
stage of the Philips methodology:
• Reaction and planned action• Learning• Application• Business impact• Value of Investment• Intangibles
Philips evaluation instruments
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Communites of Practice
The community is the expert system
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
The knowledge is in the network
• Communities of Practice• Benchmarking clubs• ROI networks• Reframe conceptions of learning and teaching in
the networked environment• Learner-centred experiential learning
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
• Development is continuous: a conversation with the world, life, and everything• punctuated waves• pressure boosting
• Use instruments to measure• Matrices• Checklists• Semi-structured interviews• 360 degree review• HRD Learning Management Systems (LMS)
• Value the informal along with the formal• Pareto rules• Counting everything is not efficient or effective
Discourse technologies
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Instruments as ways of seeing
From individual to social/organisational learning
• Spiral IRF• Kolb learning cycle and learning styles• Activity modelling• Pedagogical pragmatism• Five stages of learning socialisation• Learning Technology Support Architecture
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Spiral IRF
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Kolb learning cycle
Experience
Reflection
Conceptualisation
Experimentation
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Kolb learning cycle
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Activity model
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Pedagogical pragmatism:the Borg cube?
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Salmon’s 5-stage model
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Learning Technology Support Architecture
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Activity
• For each visualisation, develop an instrument to elicit evidence for the value of an intervention
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
The systematic approach
1. Write aims and outcomes2. Identify topics 3. Structure the programme4. Design teaching and learning strategies taking into
account student characteristics5. Identify, select and design learning resources6. Plan and design assessments7. Evaluate
Designing for learning (D4L)
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Learning outcomes describe:
• the kinds of knowledge the learner is expected to be able to employ
• the kinds of problems learners may be expected to solve
• the kinds of skills (intellectual, interpersonal, practical) which the student is expected to be able to use
• the conditions under which the student is expected to be able to demonstrate their attainments
• some indication of the level of performance that will be expected
Learning outcomes
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Why an outcomes-based approach?
• Outcomes define students knowledge, understanding, intellectual and subject specific skills at each level.
• Outcomes clarify the purpose of the course – for you and your students
• Outcomes help you decide and prioritise which topics to teach, and in what depth
• Outcomes help define appropriate teaching and learning strategies
• Thinking about how students demonstrate their learning leads naturally to purposeful assessment tasks
Learning outcomes
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
But,
• Outcomes have been criticised for being reductionist – especially when written for lower cognitive levels
• Outcomes usually focus on knowledge, neglecting attitudes, values, motivations and interests
• May limit the unexpected outcomes of learning
Learning outcomes
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
verb object context
By the end of this course, students will be able to…
Learning outcomes
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Levels of learning: Bloom
knowledge
comprehension
application
analysis
synthesis
evaluation
Learning outcomes
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Hierarchies of learning: Biggs
memorising
note-taking
describing
explaining
relating
applying
theorising
passive activeTeaching method
Deep learning
Surface learning
Learning outcomes
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Mix modes
• on-job coaching
• classroom training
• self-directed education
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
hi collocationhi collaboration traditional laboratorylo computerisation
hi collocation whiteboards in classroomshi collaboration virtual field tripshi computerisation
lo collocation CACL, online forumshi collaboration “Learning to teach online”hi computerisation
hi collocationlo collaboration video link lecturehi computerisation
lo collocationlo collaboration “traditional” DLlo computerisation
lo collocationlo collaboration CBT traininghi computerisation
Blended learning
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
• delivery• technology• locus • pedagogy• chronology • roles • focus• learning• knowledge• politics
10 Dimensions of blended learning
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Online programs provide:Myth or magic?
• flexibility• accessibility• convenience• a consistent message• ease with updating• integration of learning and work
• increased impact of the money invested in training programs,• significantly reduced employee travel cost and time• the ability to train more people, more frequently and in shorter
sessions that are easier to coordinate and schedule• online training is scaleable because it offers the ability to add
instructors and students as needed, with fewer changes
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
A continuum of learning
• Learning, change, and innovation are part of the same continuum and are not discrete activities• Communication, Coaching, Consulting
• Value time• Plan ahead• Structure the programme• Make it mandatory• Keep it flexible• Build in reflection• Assess and evaluate every intervention
(Bates 2006, Howe & Kornfeind 2006)
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Human capital:ROI = Return on Intelligence
• Long-term organizational ROI in knowledge-based industries means making routine investments in human capital
• Value of the investment in training goes beyond the compliance requirements
• When combined with macro-level analysis… ROI studies supply the proof of the impact of learning and development
• Commit to your investment• Know your goal• Create a positive culture• Measure progress• Offer feedback• Structure applied learning
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Indicative list of providers• Brainshark, a provider of on-demand rich media communications solutions
http://presentation.brainshark.com/powerpoint-presentations-index.asp • Desire2Learn, providing innovative eLearning solutions
http://www.desire2learn.com/ • Eedo Knowledgeware, a provider of real time learning and knowledge system software
http://www.eedo.com/ • Epic: the UK market leader in e-learning, blended learning and knowledge solutions.
http://www.epic.co.uk/ • eVergance, a provider of consulting services for customer relationship management optimization
http://www.evergance.com/ • HyperWave, collaborative Information Management (CIM) with a fully integrated e-learning and web conferencing
environment.http://www.hyperwave.com/e/
• NIIT Global, a learning and knowledge solutions providehttp://www.niit.com/
• OutStart, a provider of software solutions for learning and knowledge-sharinghttp://www.outstart.com/
• Saba, human capital managementhttp://www.saba.com/index.htm
• Tribal: one of the largest providers of training and CPD in the UK, clients include government, the NHS, schools, colleges, and the private sector
http://www.tribalgroup.co.uk/index.php?ob=1&id=16 • WBT Systems, a provider of enterprise e-learning solutions
http://www.wbtsystems.com/ • Zeroed-in Technologies: provides software and services that help organizations visualize, measure, and execute
effective learning and business strategies.http://www.getzeroedin.com/
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
Reference
• anon (2005) HR urged to use ROI for training, People Management, 21 April 2005.
• anon (2006) Can Customized Online Training Boost Firm ROI? Compensation and benefits for law offices, May 2006, 1, 11-13.
• Baraban, R. and Kovaleski, D. (2006) Maximising ROI: Setting objectives for sales training, Financial and Insurance Meetings, May/June 2006, 9-10
• Bartley, S. J. and Golek, J. H. (2004) Evaluating the Cost Effectiveness of Online and Face-to-Face Instruction, Journal of Educational Technology & Society, 7, 167-175.
• Brannick, M. (2005) Reporting Results: Managing Measurement, Chief Learning Officer, June, 2005, 28-33.
• Bates, S. (2006) You can measure training ROI, Official Board Markets, November 2006, 18-19
• Howe, P. E. and Kornfeind, J. F. (2006) The New ROI: Return on Intelligence, Pennsylvania CPA Journal, Fall 2006
• Paton, Nic, Time to shift the focus from ROI? Training Magazine, Nov 2005, p4
• Phillips, J. J. (2005) The value of human capital: a micro-level approach, Chief Learning Officer, December, 2005, 52-54.
• “Training today”, Training; Sep 2006, Vol. 43 Issue 9, p12-13
• Weinstein, Margery, “Measuring ROI”, Training, Jan 2006, Vol. 43, Issue 1