Key report findings include:
By 2015, 25 million post-secondary students in the United States will be taking classes online. The number of students who take classes exclusively on physical campuses are expected to plummet, from 14.4 million in 2010 to just 4.1 million five years later, according to a new forecast released by market research firm Ambient Insight.
With a new generation of worker, having previous experience with both online classes and social learning, entering the work force it is imperative for all businesses to re-evaluate the way they offer job training. The shift in the teaching and learning paradigm (the old Carnegie model) is steadily evolving as technology itself does (the Computer-mediated model). Learners are becoming more responsible for discovery and self-learning while teachers take on the role of facilitator. Occupying a seat in a physical classroom for a specific period of time is fast becoming the exception rather than the rule. With online access and a laptop computer or mobile tablet, learners are never more than a click away from the classroom.
Social Learning is here to stay.
The rapid growth in social learning isn’t likely to fade anytime soon either. Social learning takes place at a wider scale than individual or group learning, up to a societal scale, through social interaction between peers. According to What is Social Learning? by Mark Reed, to be considered social learning, a process must:
Social learning is not necessarily based on Computer Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL). Rather it’s where learning takes place via social interaction often times through the Internet (Skype, YouTube, Dropbox, Facebook, Moodle, etc.). The process assumes that knowledge (as meaning and understanding) is socially constructed. Learning takes place through conversations about content and grounded interaction about problems and actions. Social learning is one of the best ways to gain a deeper understanding and learn something because it allows you to teach it to others. It also aligns very well to how adults tend to learn the best.
Adults are autonomous and self-directed. They need to be free to direct themselves and are relevancy-oriented relying heavily on life experiences and knowledge that may include work-related activities, family responsibilities, and previous education to advance their learning.
E-Learning budgets Increasing
ASTD’s 2010 State of the Industry Report shows that elearning is still increasing as it now accounts for 27.7 percent of corporate training, its highest level since ASTD began collecting data on the use of technology for this report 14 years ago (in 2008, it was 23.1 percent). By virtually every measure, traditional learning model are shifting away from the classroom experience as e-learning experiences unprecedented growth and will likely continue to do so for the foreseeable future.
With new technology being developed and continuously implemented, it isn’t surprising that successful companies are those that believe in lifelong learning for their workers. In order to survive in this new learning environment your company will need to develop strong online and social learning processes.