A 24-minute video prepared for the closing conference of “Establishing a Collective Understanding and Raising Awareness on Informal Learning in Turkey in the Context of Lifelong Learning” in Ankara, Turkey.
Informal learning across cultures
November 28th, 2008 — general
Tomorrow at 10:00 Pacific, moi live on Training Mag Net
November 17th, 2008 — general
My life just hasn’t been busy enough lately. Too much time on my hands. So, in the midst of Corporate Learning Trends and Innovation, I said okay to participate in another event. An email just reminded me:

>> INFORMAL LEARNING: JAY CROSS – “Learning Their Way or Yack at Them: Your Choice”

Don’t miss this fun session on discovering how leading organizations are building platforms to support collaboration, informal learning, and real-time problem solving. Register.
Alternatively, join Tony Karrer’s talk on Work Literacy at Corporate Learning Trends. We’re speaking at precisely the same time. Both talks are being recorded. I imagine my content will be superior, but Tony is taller and better looking, so you’re facing a tough choice on this one.
Experimenting with CoverItLive for Tweets
November 17th, 2008 — general
Training Technology in Action Awards Ceremony
November 12th, 2008 — general, time
Bryan Chapman and Julie Groshens presided over Training magaine’s Technology in Action Awards Ceremony.
Here’s an interview with a guy at DoD who qualifies for one of my Slam-Dunk-ROI awards. They cut delivery cost from $300/learning to $4! The cost for developing a course-hour of instruction fell from $34,000 to $10,000. In year one, the program saved the U.S. Joint Forces Command > $50 million! Wow!
Find more videos like this on Internet Time
Some friends and I drifted into the awards ceremony last night after dinner, attracted by the promise of complimentary vino. Once in the room, I realized that I had been one of the judges for this competition. (It’s easy to forget stuff like this when you do it for free). In fact, I was the only judge who showed up. Also, the folks I voted for didn’t win. I don’t plan to volunteer for this one again.
DevLearn 08 Photos
November 12th, 2008 — general
My DevLearn photos of the last 24 hours

Brent Schlenker’s debut as a conference impresario
(Watch out, Elliott!)

Mark Oehlert trying to convince Tim O’Reilly he’s an alpha geek

The Tweet board is converting people into Twitterers
The Great eLearning Research Panel
November 12th, 2008 — general
The Great eLearning Research Panel, Session 101 here at DevLearn
- Kevin Oakes, Institute for Corporate Productivity
- Claire Schooley, Forrester Research
- Chris Howard, Bersin & Associates
- Kevin Martin, Aberdeen Group
- Will Thalheimer, Work-Learning Research
My observations will appear in red.
- WT: Steve Wexler has left the post of director of research for the Guild.
- KO: The Institute for Corporate Productivity was born in the sixties, founded by George Odiorne and Rensis Likert.
- CS: Claire, describing Forrester’s independence, says they don’t do white papers for clients.
- CH: Chris Howard is next, describing Bersin & Associates as an amalgam of Kevin’s and Claire’s approaches. (Bersin does write white papers for clients. And endorsements. But I don’t consider this a taint on Josh’s reputation.)
- KM: Kevin Martin has done Human Capital Management for Aberdeen since before it was called eLearning.
What are the top trends?
- CH: Learning 2.0. Get informal out sooner, get people working with one another. It addresses the informal and on-the-job.
- CS: It’s collaborative. It’s also putting the learner in charge.
- KM: Learning finally come to the point where learning is the strategic driver. Talent management. This is the year when Learning and Performance Management converge.
- KO: 86% companies more likely to use 2.0 than they do today. 41% respondents using informal learning to a high extent. Learning is getting left behind as talent management becomes the new focus.
I had to jump into the conversation. 41%??? Every company has informal learning going on. Some are better at it than others. KO said the 41% referred to companies that support informal learning with technology.
CH: Talent management and learning 2.0 are antithetical. Talent is organized; learning 2.0 is chaotic.
Learning 2.0
- KO: Trust is a big barrier. Culture of knowledge hoarding retards it. Silos. Time issues.
- CH: Culture is the big issue. Sharing information is the key.
- KM: Start small, go to CEO.
- CS: (Seconded by others). It must be top down.
Hold it, folks. Web 2.0 is about empowerment, bottom-up, start small and grow, and beta-beta-beta. While it’s great to have the backing of senior management, it’s no longer an imperative. Intelpedia became a success before managers ever heard of it.
The imploding economy
Auto sales in the 3rd quarter off 32%. Yuck.
- CH: Training budgets already down.
- CS: Still a lot to do with technology. People getting creative about use.
- KM: Economic crisis pushing learning agenda. Lower retirement rates in store. Focus on improving productivity.
- KO: 99% of the companies cut training in economic downturns.
Talent management: leaving training function behind?
- CS: Learning and talent management are peas in a pod.
- CH: Makes learning more important, not less.
- KO: “About us” descriptions of LMS vendors — all of them say they’re into talent management. Talent function and learning functions fight one another for scarce corporate resources. Innovation is hot, hot, hot.
- KM: Definition of quality hire: new employee retention, performance reviews, informal reviews, time to productivity.
Measurement
- KO: Top priority, but using business measures
- CH: Not a top priority
- WT: Only 17% happy with their measurement process now
- KM: They are not doing it…
What proportion of a learning professional’s time should be devoted to informal learning?
- 20%
- 20%
- 25%
- 50%
Uh, do people not understand what this means?
Let me spell out what I think is at work here:
KO: Informal learning good for process, not for things like leadership.
Argh. Leadership is best learned experientially and informally, is it not? Anyone have an example of a leadership course that’s worth its salt? At Crotonville, they tout the informal sessions at the big house as the secret sauce.
What should elearning professionals be doing differently?
- CH: Recognize that things are changing all the time.
- CS: You have to listen to the employees today, to understand their needs. What are their interests?
- KO: To get funding, you must clue in senior management to what problems you are solving.
- KM: Be business problem finders as well as solvers. Use business metrics and review against performance. Set up a process for gap identification and analysis. Web 2.0 is a learning style thing, not a generational thing.
DevLearn 08
November 10th, 2008 — general
November 14:
1765 - Robert Fulton was born (steamboat, submarine)
1832 - First streetcar (New York)
1840 - Claude Monet is born (waterlilies)
1851 - Moby Dick published
1900 - Aaron Copland is born (Fanfare for the Common Man)
1922 - BBC begins radio broadcasts
1940 - Luftwaffe bombers demolish Coventry Cathedral
1948 - Prince Charles is born
1954 - Condoleezza Rice is born
1971 - Mariner 9 becomes first spacecraft to orbit another planet (Mars)
2008 - Jay leads two sessions at DevLearn (Hot Topics at 7:15 & Learnscaping: When Learning is the Work at 11:15)
New version of Learnscaping released
October 30th, 2008 — general
A new version of the Learnscaping un-book became available for purchase today.
Learnscaping 1.32 consists of 150 pages in print, 80 articles online, and a handful of videos. The price for the hardcopy book remains unchanged at $25. The completely electronic edition is $36.
Check out the preview. Purchase here.

The red version (two months ago) had but 100 pages.
Tony the K on Work Literacy
October 28th, 2008 — general

This is where I’m headed this morning at 10:00 Pacific. I’m so confident Tony’s webinar will be great that I’ve already decided to come back in three weeks!

By the way, that’s not really the title of my upcoming talk. I mean “yack at them,” not “yack to them.” It’s more presumptuous (and typical) to yack at learners. More in their face. Take this.
No more pencils, no more books, no more teacher’s dirty looks
October 27th, 2008 — general

Howard Rheingold’s post on the Britannica Blog, R.I.P.: Lectures, Notes, and Tests (Scrapping the Old Ways), should be required reading for trainers and teachers the world over.
and since my classrooms did not have fixed chairs — what an abomination it is to attach chairs immovably to the floor! what does this tell students? — I asked the students to move their chairs into a circle.
So I began thinking about radically changing the way I taught. What about eliminating lectures entirely, and assigning the students to co-teach with me?
Collaborative inquiry requires individual commitment to active participation
These are the same issues my colleagues and I are facing in the corporate arena as we construct the Learnscape Sandbox.
Related posts:
Serge Ravel: Don’t teach them to learn; teach them to teach.
Secret Life of a Wiki Gardener (Beth Kanter)


























