CLO magazine

 

Effectiveness - Jay Cross

 

Adaptation

 

We are in the midst of a great transition to an era of networks and service and the question is how do we adapt?

Don’t Call Them Trainees

 

Hans Monderman is a Dutch traffic engineer who is gaining fame for what he doesn’t do

Forever Beta

 

Everything is connected to everything else. That’s the heart of the network age. And it’s why every product is beta.

Card Tricks

 

 

Changes Ahead

 

Is your organization ready for massive change? Have your people learned how to cope with increasingly fast cycle times, escalating ambiguity and avalanches of incoming information? Do you have a Plan B if your current structure proves too brittle? Futuris

Connections: The Impact of Schooling

 

Your 16-year-old daughter says she’s going to take sex education at school and you’re relieved, but she tells you she plans to participate in sex training and you’re unnerved. Why? Because outside of education, you learn by doing things. Small wonder t

Courses are Dead

 

 

Emergent Learning

 

Not so long ago, e-learning was a utopian dream. Networked learning would educate the world. E-learning promoters saw themselves as innovators writing corporate history. Excitement filled the air. That future has arrived. Today a healthy percentage of

Extreme Learning: Decision Games

 

 

Improv Education

 

The first wave of e-learning brochures invariably touted the benefits of focusing on the learner. Schools and classes had always been organized for the convenience of the faculty—one size fits all. In the e-era, learners received personalized instruction— Informal Learning: A Sound Investment

 

Workers who know more get more accomplished. People who are well connected make greater contributions. The workers who create the most value are those who know the right people, the right stuff and the right things to do. It’s all a matter of learning

Intangibles Rule

 

 

Meta-Lessons From the Net

 

 

Personal Intellectual Capital Management

 

Ultimately, you’re responsible for the life you lead. It’s up to you to learn what you need to succeed. That makes you responsible for your own knowledge management, learning architecture, instructional design and evaluation.

Podcasting: Broadcast Your Organization’s Knowledge

 

 

Semantics

 

 

Storytelling: PowerPoint’s New Best Friend

 

Slide after slide of bulleted sentence fragments is an awful thing to sit through. If the speaker giving the presentation reads them to you word for word, it makes a bad spectacle even worse. Regardless of these unpleasantries, PowerPoint has become the l

The Business Singularity

 

 

The Learner Lifecycle

 

 

The Learning Mixer

 


Page Information

  • Changed 2 months ago [show history]
  • View page source
  • You're not logged in
  • No tags yet learn more

Wiki Information

Recent PBwiki Blog Posts