PRESS INFORMATION ISSUED ON BEHALF OF:
The eLearning Network
c/o Thrift Cottage, Common Road, HADLOW, TN11 0JE
tel 01732 850650; email
info@elearningnetwork.org
26th November 2008
Historic contest for eLearning Network committee places
For the first time in the 21-year history of the eLearning Network (eLN),
the UK's foremost professional association of users and developers of
all forms of e-learning, there has been competition for places on the
committee, with 19 candidates standing for the 12 available places.
According to the eLN's chairman Clive Shepherd, who announced the
results of the election, at the eLN meeting held in London at the end
of November, the voting was close, with a single vote making the
difference between being elected or not.
The eLN elected four new committee members for 2009. They are Carole
Bower, SVP Learning, Edvantage Group; Fae Longman, IT Training Manager
with CMS Cameron McKenna; Rob Hubbard, eLearning Architect at Learning
Age Solutions, and Wendy Stubbs, Learning Innovations Consultant with
British Airways.
Having announced the election results, Shepherd paid tribute to three
long-serving members of the eLN committee who were stepping down in
2009: Geoff Berridge, of Parataxis; Howard Hills, of Howard Hills
Associates, and Jan Seabrook, of Conation Technologies.
"While ours is a forward-looking organisation dealing with leading edge
technology, we mustn't forget our history and heritage," commented
Shepherd.
"Geoff Berridge joined the eLN committee in 2004 and served as the
group's treasurer for some three years," Shepherd said. "Among his many
professional accomplishments, he managed the financial marketing
function for IBM in the late 1970s and early 1980s; helped to set up
IBM Financial Services, and went on to manage the IBM Business School
in the mid-1990s.
"Howard Hills is a busy consultant with operational experience in the
Royal Navy and, later, as head of training at Lloyds TSB. Despite heavy
demands on his time, he has - since November 2006 - devoted much of his
time to the eLN where, among other things, he took the lead in refining
and improving the criteria for judging the E-Learning Awards when these
were in their infancy," Shepherd continued.
"Jan Seabrook - renowned not just as an instructional designer but as a
source of guidance to those entering the profession - has notched up
almost a quarter of a century's design experience. Since she joined the
eLN committee in 2002, she has made a substantial contribution as
co-ordinator of all the association's ‘live' events."
The eight members of the eLN committee in 2008 who will continue to
serve in 2009 are: Clive Shepherd (Fastrak Consulting); Mike Alcock
(Atlantic Link); Viv Cole (Academy Internet); Neil Lasher (Trainer1);
Claire Line (Lovells); Joe Quilter (PSP learnix); Barry Sampson (Web
Based Thinking), and Seb Schmoller (Association for Learning
Technology).
This year - 2008 - has not only seen unprecedented competition for
places on the eLN's steering committee but has also seen a remarkable
rise in eLN membership levels from around 150 to over 1,000. The eLN
enrolled its 1,000th member - Monique Head, an American from Atlanta,
Georgia, who is now living in Antibes in the South of France - in
November.
End
Notes for Editors:
About the eLearning Network
Formed - as The Association for Computer Based Training (TACT) in 1987
- the eLearning Network (eLN), which adopted this title in 2000, is the
UK's foremost professional association of users and developers of all
forms of e-learning. It is a non-profit making body that exists to
promote information and best practice among all those who are involved
in the e-learning world, as well as act as a networking medium for its
members.
For more information about the eLN and eLN events, call 01992 634244 or
visit
www.elearningnetwork.org
Further information from:
Clive Shepherd, The eLearning Network, +44 (0)1273 561714
Bob Little, Bob Little Press & PR, 01727 860405