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PRESS INFORMATION ISSUED ON
BEHALF OF:
Giunti Labs
Abbazia dell'Annunziata, Via Portobello - Baia del Silenzio, 16039
Sestri Levante (GE), Italy
Phone: +39 0185 42123; Web
www.giuntilabs.com
7th November 2008
ELIG sets learning priorities in Europe for 2009
Exploring a compelling vision of learning in the 21st century;
demonstrating how 'learning' can ensure economic survival in the light
of the current global financial crisis, and promoting technology for
'upskilling' learning as well as building knowledge and skills within
professional communities are the priorities for The European Learning
Industry Group (ELIG) in 2009. These priorities were agreed at the
organisation's annual general meeting (AGM), which was held in Sestri
Levante, Italy, at the end of October and hosted by Giunti Labs, a
leading learning and mobile content management solution provider, whose
CEO, Fabrizio Cardinali, is chair of ELIG.
ELIG's Secretary General, Richard Straub, outlined ELIG's achievements
in 2007/08 - exploring the market for e-learning in the Near East and
North Africa; establishing a number of working groups, as well as
public policy groups which had held regular meetings with European
Union (EU) officials.
The 50 or delegates at the AGM, drawn from the group's membership of
leaders in the field of learning within the EU, also heard Elmar
Husmann, a senior policy advisor to ELIG, explain that ELIG needs to
re-think its positioning with regards to the EU. Husmann stated:
"E-learning has largely disappeared from the EU policy agenda.
"Consequently, we need to take a broader vision of next generation
learning that is enabled by information and communications technology.
This will include supporting informal learning and knowledge creation
via social networks."
Earlier, delegates heard the views of thought leaders in learning from
the USA and Europe, including Rob Abel, CEO of the IMS Global Learning
Consortium; Pascal Debordes, e-learning Director of Cegos; Michael
King, Vice President of Global Education Industry for IBM, and David
Worlock, Chief Research Fellow at Outsell, Inc.
Worlock revealed that, according to Outsell statistics, the information
industry grew by 6.6 per cent in 2007 to reach $390bn globally.
Within this sector, the greatest degree of growth is in search
aggregation and syndication - which is growing annually at 26 per cent.
The next fastest growing sector is HR information (15.4 per cent).
"The current market is full of discontinuities," he observed. "What
will change this is the growth of parental and individual purchasing
power for learning materials; custom publishing, and the current
recession putting pressure on organisatons to determine the true return
on investment of both learning and assessment."
Debordes outlined the findings of Cegos's research into the corporate
learning markets in EU countries. He revealed: "We found that the
biggest budgets for corporate training occur in France but much of this
money is spent on administration rather than on training.
"The UK spends about a third of French budgets on training but provides
its workers with broader access to training materials - and appears to
be better at evaluating the return on investment (ROI) from these.
Forty seven per cent of surveyed companies in the UK are assessing ROI
compared with only 26 per cent in France.
"Nonetheless, learners across Europe have the same expectations of
e-learning materials - notably that they are user-friendly; have high
quality content, design, graphics and interactivity, and contain
'concrete' examples and exercises," he said.
King observed: "Open platform education is the engine of innovation in
the 21st century - especially since, between 2010 and 2020, the USA,
Europe, Japan, China and India are predicted to face a shortfall of
some 32m well-educated, technically specialised professionals.
Consequently, education should enable open access for all; encourage
open data and business processes; promote open communities of learning
and open technologies to deliver the learning."
Abel discussed three areas within learning where standards are being
set: content; applications, and student administration. Among the key
issues, he said, were how you measure the return on investment in
learning technology and how educational institutions are developing
technology strategy for supporting improvements in access,
affordability and quality of educational experiences.
The ELIG AGM concluded with three breakout sessions, facilitated by
Richard Straub, Elmar Husmann and Matty Smith, of Henley Business
School and a Senior Advisor to ELIG.
End
About ELIG
The European Learning Industry Group (ELIG) emerged from the eLearning
Industry Group (eLIG) in 2007. The original organisation had been
inaugurated, in 2002, by the European Union in order to provide input
to the EU's strategy on e-learning.
ELIG is an open industry group which explores, researches and
determines 'innovation in learning' in Europe. It aims to offer thought
leadership in this sector; a communication channel to the learning
market, and a network within which members collaborate rather than
compete - which it terms 'co-petition'.
ELIG's membership encompasses those operating in the fields of
technology infrastructure; media; learning content; publishing;
learning platforms; software; services providers; research;
associations, and user organisations.
About Giunti Labs
Giunti is unique in the international publishing industry.
In 1497, Giunti publishers and typographers in Florence, together with
others in Venice, began modern book manufacturing. Over the years
Giunti has built a 'historical catalogue' of huge dimensions, through a
gradual process of 'fusion' of different publishers, but also through
the creation of new brands, including Giunti Labs. Giunti Editore now
includes 20 companies in the publishing sector.
Giunti Labs, which has its global headquarters in Italy and offices in
London (UK), Frankfurt (Germany), Lund (Sweden) and in Boston (US),
provides a wide range of services, in response to any content, learning
and knowledge management need, covering:
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Content production
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Research and
development
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Technological
solutions for content, learning & knowledge management
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Architectural and
technological solutions for mobile & wireless
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Training and
consulting
Giunti Labs provides
the learn eXact® suite, Europe's leading e-learning and mobile learning
content management technology. This suite is interoperable with all
major vendor-driven and open source LMS and VLE solutions in the market
including Plateau, Oracle, SumTotal, Saba, WebCT, Blackboard, Sakai,
LRN and Moodle.
Moreover, Giunti Labs does not just adhere to the international
standards relating to the LMS/LCMS world, it is one of the
organisations that helps to determine and drive these standards:
co-writing and developing them. Giunti Labs plays a key role in most of
the international institutions for the definition of eLearning
specifications (IEEE LTSC, ISO/IEC JTC1/SC36, CEN/ISSS WSLT, AICC, IMS,
ADL-SCORM and OKI).
Further information from:
Minna Leikas, Giunti Labs, +39 3489 399127
Bob Little, Bob Little Press & PR, +44 (0)1727 860405