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AICC
These standards apply to the development,
delivery, and evaluation of training courses that are delivered
via technology. The Aviation Industry CBT (Computer-Based
Training) Committee (AICC) is an international association
of technology-based training professionals that develop training
guidelines for the aviation industry.
API
An Application Program Interface (API) is
a language and message format built-in to an application that
allows it to communicate with operating systems or other computer
programs such as database management programs, ERP applications,
etc. APIs provide a way for computer applications to speak
to each other and work together, sharing data and functionalities.
ARCS
Keller's theory of motivation, which includes
Attention, Relevance, Confidence , and Satisfaction.
ASP
An Application Service Provider (ASP) is
a company that offers access over the Internet to software
applications that would otherwise need to be located on a
client's own computer. Using ASP applications frees a company
from the cost and effort of software installation and upgrades
since the application resides on the ASP's servers.
Asynchronous
Asynchronous e-learning is when communication
between people does not occur simultaneously. Some examples
of asynchronous e-learning include taking a self-paced course,
exchanging e-mail messages with a mentor, and posting messages
to a discussion group. The advantages of asynchronous learning
are convenience, accessibility, and the fact that it is self-paced.
The disadvantages of asynchronous learning are that the student
may feel isolated or be less motivated without any real-time
human interaction. In addition, asynchronous e-learning does
not provide immediate feedback on a student's performance,
leaving adjustments to training until after an evaluation
is completed. See also Synchronous.
Authoring Tool
A software application used by non-programmers
that uses a metaphor (book, flow chart) to create online courses.
Behavior
An action that is an overt, observable,
measurable performance.
Business Requirements
Business requirements define conditions
that any acceptable solution should meet. Business requirements
identify the needs of the learner, manager, and training administrator
regarding what the system can do for them. See also System
Requirements.
CBT
Computer-Based Training, typically delivered
on CD-ROM or from a mainframe.
CMI
Computer Managed Instruction is a feature
built-in to computer training that will feed data on learner
progress/results to an LMS.
Chunk of Content
Instruction required to teach an objective.
Collaborative Tools
Collaborative tools allow learners to work
with others via e-mail, threaded discussions, or chat. In
some cases, collaboration is used on team-based projects.
Collaborative tools can sometimes provide the ability to host
moderated discussion groups, where students and instructors
can collaborate on course related materials or assignments
in an asynchronous environment. In addition, real-time synchronous
chat allows learners to communicate with their peers and instructors,
emulating a physical classroom setting.
Competency Management
Competency management is used to identify
skills, knowledge, and performance within an organization.
Such a system helps an organization spot gaps and introduce
appropriate training, compensation, and recruiting programs
based on current or future needs.
Content Gathering
The process of gathering all of the content
required to teach instruction. The designer works closely
with the SME during this process and independently identifies
"dead wood."
Content Management System
Content Management Systems (CMS) are used
to store and subsequently find and retrieve large amounts
of data. CMSs work by indexing text, audio clips, images,
etc., within a database. In addition, CMSs often provide version
control and check-in/check out capabilities. Using robust,
built-in search capabilities, users can quickly find a piece
of content from within a database by typing in keywords, the
date the element was created, the name of the author, or other
search criteria. Content management systems are often used
to create information portals for organizations and can serve
as the foundation for the practice of knowledge management.
They can also be used to organize documents and media assets.
For example, a newspaper agency may use a content management
system to provide an archive of every story ever written for
the paper. Likewise, they might use the CMS to provide an
extensive library of photographs that are reusable for future
stories.
Criterion Reference Test
Items designed to measure performance for
one objective.
Discussion Forums
Not to be confused with a chat application
where people exchange typed messages in real time, discussion
forums allow people to communicate about various topics by
posting messages and replies to messages under the heading
of a particular topic. A collection of messages and replies
about a topic is often referred to as a thread.
Distance Learning
Instruction provided by a human separated
by place.
Entry Behavior
Specific competencies a learner must possess
in order to master new content.
EPSS
Electronic Performance Support System, typically
used for software applications.
ERP/HRIS
Enterprise Resource Planning is an industry
term for large, often multi-module software applications that
manage many facets of a company's operations, including product
planning, parts purchasing, maintaining inventories, interacting
with suppliers, providing customer service, tracking orders,
and managing resources and financials. SAP, PeopleSoft, and
J.D. Edwards are some well-known ERP providers. Human Resource
Information Systems (HRIS) are similar to ERP applications
but are aimed specifically at the management of a company's
human resources.
Feedback
Information provided to learners about the
correctness of their response (different from remediation).
Formative Evaluation
Evaluation designed to improve a program
while the program is being developed (e.g., quality assurance).
Goal
A broad general statement of course or instruction
intent (higher than an objective).
ILT
Instructor-Led Training provides instruction
in a classroom or virtual classroom under the direction of
an instructor or facilitator.
IMS
The Instructional Management System is a
set of technical specifications defining how learning materials
will be exchanged over the Internet and how organizations
and individual learners will use these materials. Initiated
by Educom and developed through a partnership of academic,
commercial, and government organizations, the goal of these
specifications is the adoption of a set of open standards
for Internet-based education.
Instructional Analysis
Procedures to determine what type of skills
or knowledge is required for a learner to achieve a goal.
Instructional Strategy
Plan of activities (with or without an instructor)
to teach content and sequence learning experience.
Instructor Guide
A set of materials that provide direction,
answers to tests, helpful hints, or any supplemental information.
ISD Model
The Instructional Systematic Design model,
developed in the 1960's, provides a methodical process for
the design and development of instruction.
JDBC
Java Database Connectivity is an application
program interface to connect programs written in Java to the
data in popular databases. Whereas programs written for Microsoft,
Windows, UNIX, OS/2, and Macintosh platforms often use the
Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) standard, programs written
in Java use JDBC.
Job Aid
Often generated in paper or electronic format,
job aids are used to relieve the learner from relying on memory
to remember a skill (typically a procedure).
Kirkpatrick Training Evaluation
Many years ago, Donald Kirkpatrick created
four levels of evaluation for training. Level One answers
the question: Did the trainees like the training? Level Two
assesses whether they understood the material and could pass
a test on it. Level Three, usually involving a follow-up to
the training six months down the road, examines whether the
training changed the behavior of the trained. Level Four evaluation
tries to determine whether the training had a bottom-line
impact on the company; e.g., did trainees sell more or waste
less or somehow affect the financials of the company in a
positive way as a result of the training?
Knowledge Management System
A knowledge management system is an application that collects,
stores, and makes information available among individuals
in an organization. This system's primary purpose is to capture
a company's collective knowledge and then make it simple to
retrieve and reuse. A knowledge management system can help
companies avoid reinventing the wheel. It can also enhance
the exchange and dissemination of understanding within an
enterprise and can increase the level of collaboration between
employees.
LCMS
A Learning Content Management System, or
LCMS, is an environment where developers can create, store,
reuse, manage, and deliver learning content from a central
object repository, usually a database. LCMSs generally work
with content that is based on a learning object model. These
systems usually have good search capabilities, allowing developers
to quickly find the text or media needed to build training
content. Learning content management systems often strive
to achieve a separation of content – which is often
tagged in XML – from presentation. This allows many
LCMSs to publish to a wide range of formats, platforms, or
devices such as print, Web, and even wireless information
devices (WID) such as Palm and Windows CE hand-helds, all
from the same source material.
LMS
A Learning Management System, or LMS, is
software that automates the administration of training events.
All LMSs manage the log-in and registration of users, manage
course catalogs, record data from learners, and provide reports
to management. There used to be a distinction between learning
management systems and more powerful "integrated"
learning management systems. That distinction has now disappeared.
The term learning management system is now used to describe
a wide range of applications that track student training and
may or may not include functions such as:
- Authoring
- Classroom management
- Competency management
- Knowledge management
- Certification or compliance training
- Personalization
- Mentoring
- Chat
- Discussion boards
Learning Object
Learning objects (LO), also called reusable
learning objects, are not really a set technology, but rather
a philosophy for how content is created and deployed. Learning
objects refer to self-contained chunks of training content
that can be assembled with other learning objects to create
courses and curricula, much the same way a child's Lego blocks
are assembled to create all types of structures. Learning
objects are designed to be used in multiple training contexts,
aim to increase the flexibility of training, and make updating
courses much easier to manage. Update a part of a learning
object, and the change should appear in any course using that
learning object. The size of a learning object differs based
on the instructional designer, from as small as a single page
of content to as large as is required to contain an objective,
presentation material, a practice section, and an assessment.
Media
Text, graphics, audio, video, or human element
used to teach.
Module
An integrated "theme" of content.
Typically, one component of a course or a curriculum.
Modality
Delivery medium determined for the delivery
of instruction; ranges from ILT, CBT, WBT, and distance learning
to paper-based, read-ahead packages, journals, and peer modeling.
Needs Assessment
Formal process of identifying discrepancies
between a learner's current performance versus an organization's
desired performance for that employee. In other words, identifying
whether training is the solution.
ODBC
Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) is an
application program interface to access information from numerous
different types of databases including Access, dBase, DB2,
etc. Although Microsoft Windows was the first to provide an
ODBC product, versions now exist for UNIX, OS/2, and Macintosh
platforms as well.
Pre-test and Post-test
Tests that are given to learners prior to
learning or after the learning experience. Pre-test judges
whether learners need to take training or can "prescribe"
which pieces of a course a learner must take. a post-test
will provide remediation for reinforcement and sometimes reports
back to management with scores.
QA
Quality assurance (QA) is a widely used
term to describe the techniques, processes, and workflows
used to ensure that a company's products and services meet
standards for excellence.
Remediation
Provides direction to students to review
specific content in a training program based on some performance
criteria.
RFP
A Request For Proposal is a document produced
by a company seeking goods and/or services and distributed
to prospective vendors. Vendors then provide proposals based
on the criteria specified within the RFP. A request for proposal
forces the company seeking goods or services to identify its
business and technical requirements. It also forces the vendor
to state in writing to what extent they can meet the company's
requirements.
SCORM
The Sharable Content Object Reference Model
(SCORM) is a set of standards that, when applied to course
content, produces small, reusable learning objects. A result
of the Department of Defense's Advanced Distributed Learning
(ADL) initiative, SCORM-compliant courseware elements can
be easily merged with other compliant elements to produce
a highly modular repository of training materials.
Skill Gap Analysis
A skill gap analysis compares a person's
skills to the skills required for the job to which they have
been, or will be, assigned. The purpose is to identify clearly
the skills employees need in order to succeed in their current
or planned positions and to compare employee skills against
those requirements. The result is an improved understanding
of exactly which skills employees need to develop further.
A simple skill gap analysis consists of the list of skills
required for a specific job along with a rating of the employee's
level for each skill. Ratings below a certain pre-determined
level identify a skill gap.
SME
A Subject Matter Expert is an expert in
the domain of the course. They are a critical component in
the success of task analysis and content gathering.
Summative Evaluation
Used after an instructional program to determine
the worth of a program and the usefulness to the learner.
Synchronous
Synchronous, or live e-learning, means that
communication occurs at the same time between individuals,
and information is accessed instantly. Examples of synchronous
e-learning include real-time chat and video/audio conferencing.
Synchronous e-learning can provide instant feedback on a student's
performance and allows the training to be adjusted immediately,
if needed. The disadvantages of synchronous e-learning are
that the training is not self-paced and the logistics of scheduling,
time zones, and student availability need to be managed. See
also Asynchronous.
System Requirements
System requirements focus on the technological
conditions, including the operating system, programming language,
database, hardware configuration, bandwidth, processing power,
etc., required to run a software application correctly. Business
requirements focus on the needs of people; system requirements
focus on the needs of machines. See also Business Requirements.
Task Analysis
Process by which an instructional designer
(through observation, questionnaires, focus group sessions,
or one-on-one Q&A with an SME) extrapolates the steps
necessary to perform a skill or to build knowledge. This identifies
learning objectives and sequence of instruction.
TBT
Technology-Based Training is an all encompassing
term that can include anything from online learning to CD-ROM,
and uses technology for learning, usually outside the classroom.
WBT
Web-Based Training is "self-paced"
training that is delivered using an Internet browser. |