T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1404.1 | Mini-seminars | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Sat Mar 16 1991 09:38 | 6 |
| A lot of the more effective training is very topical. Just getting
a small group of people togeather who are working on the same kind of
thing so they can discuss and share problems and solutions is very
effective training - it's known as a seminar or mini-seminar now that
seminars have grown to the point where the often don't fill their original
function.
|
1404.2 | A little more challenge, please... | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Sat Mar 16 1991 09:56 | 31 |
| re: .0
Thank you for caring enough to start this topic. The fact that you
started it rather than someone else will hopefully make people view
this as something other than another 'whining' topic.
I don't know if has just been my misfortune, or what, but in the last two
classes I've taken, the course material was for the previous version of
the product. In one, we received a printed list of what was different
between the 2 versions. In the other, it was photocopies of the
instructors hand-written notes on the differences he had been able to
find between the 2 versions. The latest version I'm referring to, was
SSB, not FT. To make matters worse, this was in a customer training
class, not an employee-only class. It seems that the product teams
need to get people like you involved earlier in the process, so that
updated training materials can be ready when SSB starts shipping
product.
I'd like more exercises that are more challenging. I don't consider
myself a genius by any means, but I've never used all of any lab
period. I'd like to learn more, but I often don't know enough to know
what I should investigate next. The end result is that I usually end
up helping the instructor with one-on-one's with the students having
trouble. This is good for the students, good for Digital, and I enjoy
it, but I feel like I'm not getting as much out of the training as I
feel I should.
I do have a question. Do you design the internal training differently
than the customer training?
Bob
|
1404.3 | More CBI/CAI | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Sat Mar 16 1991 10:09 | 6 |
| I'd also like to see more CBI/CAI. For example, I'm attempting to
teach myself C from the K&R book. I have heard that your new VAX C
course is very good. However, due to the nature of my job, ACT system
manager, all my training usually must be done in Q1 and Q2.
Bob
|
1404.4 | seminars are great! | CSC32::S_MAUFE | No wings? | Sat Mar 16 1991 12:50 | 26 |
|
My group (VIA Support in Colorado Springs) had a dilemma
- lack of training dollars
- EDU Services not providing the courses or focus we needed,
so we are trying seminars, and if you ask me they are working really
well. A date and time is publicised, and the product to be discussed is
specified, then interested folks send in questions. Somebody gets a day
off and researches in depth the subject. Then they get an hour to
present their findings to the group.
Result?
- we don't lose much time from the phones (ie 1 hour not 1 week)
- presenter gains new knowledge and expertise
- highly focused to what we need to know
- don't lose any money to EDU
- usually get some technical articles written by presenter, so other
CSC's benefit
- especially good for interop, where for a example a DBMS needs to
know more about CDD/PLUS, but only the interface, not the whole
thing!
this is really working for our group, perhaps it can for others?
Simon
|
1404.5 | a little background... | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Sat Mar 16 1991 13:12 | 103 |
| I'll try to interject answers when I can - but please do keep in mind
that Ed Services is a big organization and that the way my organization
(ESDP, Ed Services Development and Publishing) and my sub-group
(Technical Software Course Development) does things may not be the only
way.
Other Ed Services people should feel free to contribute other points of
view...
We are indeed plagued by version skews. I think this is one of the
most important things to work on. Some of us have been lobbying hard
to get involved with new products at Phase 0 so that new courses are
ready when new products are issued. We need to become more aggressive
about the updates, too.
Let me explain a little about how people in my group are funded to
write courses. This may shed some light on the issue. There are
'training funders' from various organizations who have a certain amount
of money to work with each fiscal year. I have been funded by funders
from Ed Services Corporate Marketing (customer courses) and by internal
funders from (formerly) SWS. I've also been funded by DIS (now DIM&T)
to do course development. If I don't have funding from someone, I
don't have a job. I have to always be billing a funder unless I'm sick
or on vacation. This keeps my supervisor quite busy making sure I'm
billable as I transition between projects ;-)
Sometimes a customer funder and an internal funder will team up and
co-fund a course that they both need. ESDP's high level managers are
working very hard to try to reduce redundant course development right
now in order to maximize return on training dollars, and maximize the
number of products we can support. Sometimes we use VAX Document to
conditionalize parts of the course materials if there is data that is
only appropriate for the internal audiences. (My first DECdesign
lecture/lab course was 3 days for customers, 5 days internal).
Unlike documentation, we do not currently assume there will be a course
for every product. Our funders have areas of specialization, and they
have to figure out how to best allocate the limited resources they have
to cover many new products in their area. They also make the decision
about whether they want to fund a self-paced course, a lecture/lab
course, or a CBI/online training type course.
. . .
(Hint: the product manager I work the most closely with also works
closely with my funder. She always tries to pass on customer and
internal training requests to the funder! Find out if the product
manager of the product you're interested in knows who funds their
software courses, and if they have a working relationship!
2nd hint: Attend a p-team meeting and get training on the agenda
if you are closely involved with a product and have training wishes.
Find out from the product manager who funds courses in that area, and
invite that person to that meeting.)
. . .
I can give funders input, but they have to manage a business and show a
return on investment, and they make all final decisions. Let me also
say that I have great respect for and excellent working relationships
with almost all of the funders with whom I've worked, and we make
decisions as a team as often as we possibly can.
Anyway, suppose funder A funded a lecture lab course 18 months ago for
a V1.0 product called "widgetX". V1.1 is going to be ready in Q4, and
the customers would really like an updated version of the training.
From the funder's point of view, s/he has 8 products all getting
upgraded, and only enough money to fund 5 updates. This person has to
do a little 'triage' at this point.
If the V1.0 course for widgetX was really good, and the changes for 1.1
can be summarized in a handout, but the changes for 1.1 for product
"gadgetY" has completely changed the user interface, guess which of the
two products is more likely to get the training dollars, assuming that
both products are of equal importance?
On the other hand, suppose product widgetX is supposed to really take
off, but product gadgetY hasn't been doing as well as expected?
These can be hard decisions, and it always comes back to limited
resources.
People often call me and ask me to explain why I haven't updated a
course for which I wrote the original training. I would love to be in
a support role for one product where I play a role like the doc writers
do. If engineering funded us the same way they do CUIP, that might be
possible. But until a funder allocates dollars for an update, my hands
are tied -- although I've been known to do a little midnight support on
the side for an instructor who is really feeling desperate for some
material on something I happen to know about.
I'm neither defending nor complaining about this funding structure,
just trying to give a picture of something that has perplexed many DEC
employees.
I see some really good trends happening in ESDP, especially in the area
of reducing and managing redundancy. There's nothing worse than
slaving for months on a course, only to find out someone in another
organization has done exactly the same thing for a different funder,
and you just didn't know it.
Hope this helps. Please keep the suggestions and input coming!
Holly
|
1404.6 | | CSC32::M_HOEPNER | Standing on the edge is not the same | Sat Mar 16 1991 13:26 | 31 |
|
We need quality courses and quality instructors.
1. First, for ANY technical training, the course needs to be WRITTEN
by someone who knows and understands the material! We had an unfortunate
experience in CS lately where a course was presented that had less
information in that the basic documentation! And much of the
information was DEAD wrong. I was told the course was written by someone
who was not knowledgeable in the subject.
Students in the course asked for their money back. (Of course, it is
impossible to get refund for wasted days and travel expenses.)
2. Second. The technical courses need to be TAUGHT by someone who
knows the subject in depth. Not just someone who happens to be
available that week and can only read from the teaching materials in
front of them!
There have been many times I have talked to a customer right after they
came back from a DEC Training class. They will call in and ask some
downright frightening questions! I have started asking for the names
of the instructors so maybe we can start seeing a pattern to how some
of the misinformation gets disseminated.
An example of how courses SHOULD be done is the new Rdb Internals
Course. It was written by someone knowledgeable who took the time to
make sure the material was accurate. Plus that person also taught it
many times. A wonderful combination.
|
1404.7 | team work --> future success! | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Sat Mar 16 1991 13:28 | 57 |
| Re .4
Seminars sound like an excellent way to meet a specific need for a
specific audience. The training I write has to be addressed to a more
general audience, and isn't going to be geared as well to specific
interests.
Now if we can figure out a way to work together and be resources for
one another...!
Seriously, I did a very satisfying project with some people at the CSC
last year, thanks to a funder who was thinking long-term.
This is kind of a tangent from the seminars, but represents a way that
we can partner productively with you.
I spent 4 days at the CSC last spring with people who were going to be
supporting DECdesign. They installed the online training I wrote that
is bundled with DECdesign, but instead of trying to do it at their
desks, they brought their workstations to a conference room and worked
with me as a resource.
BENEFITS:
--------
There was lots of lively conversation among all of us and feedback
that I tried to capture for the product engineers back in NH.
The support specialists identified some support and training issues we
hadn't thought about -- *before* V1.0 shipped.
I collected data from the support specialists about what we need when we
write a support course from the product.
The support specialists got to evaluate the online training format, and
tell me ways that it would be more or less useful when working with
customers on the phone.
The support people learned DECdesign.
The support people and their manager were delighted that someone from
'central engineering' came out to CO to collect data from them about
*their* needs and perspectives.
I was delighted to work with such knowledgeable experts. I think I
learned more than they did.
I liked working with them directly even more than having them mixed
with customers in a pilot because we could focus on support issues
without feeling like we were boring the rest of the class or talking
inappropriately about internal issues.
-------------------------
Unfortunately, these kinds of pilot projects are more the exception
than the rule. It's my hope that we will see more of this kind of team
work in the future between all the people who play support roles,
including ed services.
Holly
|
1404.8 | the feedback I hear the most... | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Sat Mar 16 1991 13:41 | 32 |
| Re .6
I think you summarized the complaint I hear most often.
You'll be glad to know that in the past 3 years, at least in my group,
we have been encouraged to become specialists in an area much as you do
at the CSC. (I have been working in the CASE area for almost 4 years,
and I've come a long way.)
In the old days, we used to get moved from a language to a tool to an
operating system course depending on who needed what when. I think we
were seen as interchangeable resources. Some of us begged to focus on
one area and claimed that it would directly impact QA if we did.
I think we are seeing good results from that.
Another good trend is that more engineers are coming to work for ed
services, at least in my group (software course development). For my
last project I (master's in education and lots of OJT at DEC as well as
some university computer courses) worked closely with an engineer with
an extensive background in analysis and design of real-time systems.
She completely rewrote some of the technical examples where I had
reached my limit. I helped her think about instructional design
issues. I loved it.
In my current group, I get a lot of support for telling my manager what
my limits are. I'm not encouraged to pretend I know about something
when I don't. I think this is a really good trend towards integrity in
the courses.
And I agree with you, we have a LONG way to go in this area.
Holly
|
1404.10 | Comments on my (and customer's) experiences | HOBBLE::WILEY | Marshall Wiley - PSS | Sat Mar 16 1991 22:53 | 64 |
|
First: Thanks for starting this topic Holly. Not long ago I was
still a customer, and I still live on customer sites. I've had
my own ups and downs with our courses and hear more comments
from my current customer associates. This is a nice opportunity
to provide a little feedback.
Too much course documentation is very superficial. I attended a
course in DECwindows a couple months ago *DECW II* and found the
student guide to be not much more than a list of topics and syntax.
In some cases where there is additional hardcopy material provided
that is acceptable (i.e. VMS Internals) but it was only marginally
useful in this case. Now that I am trying to use what I learned
I find very little of use in my student book.
In addition, many instructors do not seem to be current on the material
they are teaching. Too many times recently my customers have told
me that "This can't be done in <product x>" or something of similar
ilk, and someone in the class has to straighten out the confusion.
If this happened once or twice in a class on some esoteric point
then I could understand it. Unfortunately, it happened several
times a day on fundamental capabilities of the product being discussed.
This problem appears to be worst at the fundamental skills level
(Languages, Intro to VMS, etc.)
Most of the courses I've been to are paced too slowly. With a couple
notable exceptions (VMS Internals 3 years ago, DECdesign last fall
(which we compressed to 4 days), and an occasional seminar) I've felt
that we should have covered more material or taken less time for the
course. When I took DECwindows II we took the whole 4.5 day course
in 3.5 days and it didn't feel rushed. As matter of fact we still had
plenty of time to sit around and shoot the breeze during lab. I haven't
taken any introductory-type courses, but my customers have. They report
the same problems.
In this time of restricted travel budgets and the shortage of people
for important (or billable) tasks can we afford to have students waste
many hours in a class ? Could we not take many of these 4.5 day classes
and compress them to 4 days by reducing the unused lab time slightly ?
We did this with DECdesign and I was able to get home in time to bill
$450 to the customer for 4 hours work instead of wasting the whole day.
If I'd known earlier I would have changed my hotel and plane reserva-
tions so that I could get back and bill the customer for a whole day's
work.
In summary I think that maybe half of the problems with our courses
could be addressed by increased attention and thought by our course
writers. However, the most severe problems are usually the result of
poor instructors. Even if the course material is lacking the instructor
should be experienced enough with the material to be able to carry
the course over the rough spots. The instructor should also be able
to answer reasonably specific questions on the topic without completely
misleading and/or confusing the class.
Once again, thanks for giving me the opportunity to get some of this
out. I have attended courses ranging from the suberb to the mediocre
and, more often than I would like, hear horror stories from customers.
I'm glad that someone has expressed an interest in getting some of
these issues out in the open.
Marshall Wiley - PSS
Washington, D.C.
|
1404.11 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Sun Mar 17 1991 01:36 | 66 |
| These responses are great! Much better than if I tried to do a
formal survey... (Don't stop here, keep 'em coming!)
Several of you have mentioned pace and depth. The problem with doing
anything with a group of people is that there is no such thing as a
pace that works for everyone. (I'm usually either bored in class
or hanging on by my fingernails; rarely in the middle.)
This is one of the reasons we started experimenting with the concept of
Bookreader based online training for DECdesign and DECplan. The kinds
of users I was meeting in my DECdesign classes tended to have a great
deal of expertise, but often they had very different needs and goals
from one another. Whatever I do in a lecture lab class is sure to
please some and annoy the rest!
I started feeling that we needed a training approach where you can take
what you want and leave the rest; go at your own pace; and that
supports an *expert* user as the 'typical user'. Someone recently
called it cafeteria style training - I don't know if that was a
compliment or not ;-)
I got a user who had recently come to DEC to work with me on developing
a case study from a customer point of view. It has its limitations,
but it works.
The basic goal of the online training is to create a complete
systems analysis and design model based on this case study through
creating 14 individual components. The good part is you can start
anywhere and go in any order and do only the parts that interest you
because we provide data files that allow you to do that.
Expert users can fly through the training while less experienced users
have to pop open extra windows giving them hints, solutions, what it
should look like, how to manage your windows, and so forth.
Novices get enough handholding to make it through, but it takes a lot
more time. Several people claimed to have developed proficiency in
DECwindows as a side benefit.
My point is, I can do this sort of thing pretty well in online courses.
I can create a simulated hypertext environment that gives the user a
sense of various paths through the material. But a class is a totally
different story! And some learners claim not to be able to learn from
self paced materials - they either have too many interruptions, can't
stay focused, or just want a person in front of them talking about the
subject.
I'd be really interested in your thoughts on how we could meet more
*differing* sets of needs simultaneously in a class.
I made my DECdesign lecture lab class about 80% lab and 20% lecture.
When I teach, I annoy all the training center managers by *insisting*
that each student have his/her own workstation for the duration of the
class. If a student is really struggling, I can divert them to the
online training. Other students can go through the labs pretty much at
their own pace. I see myself more as a resource than a lecturer.
My philosophy is that you'll remember what you *do* far longer than
you'll remember anything I *say* unless I'm making a point you're very
motivated to know more about.
This works reasonably well when training students on a tool. But it's
not as easily applied to operating systems; tuning; or other vaguer
subject areas.
Comments?
Holly
|
1404.12 | I like the ideas in .11 | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Sun Mar 17 1991 13:05 | 19 |
| re: .11
I think your idea is great. For example, I know how to program, how to
compile and link programs, how to use the debugger, but I don't know
how to program in VAX C. It would allow me to skip the part of the
course that describes the difference between call-by-value,
call-by-reference, and call-by-descriptor and simply to be told that
in VAX C, arguments are passed to functions by value, with the
execption of character arrays which are passed by reference. In 30
seconds, I've covered what the instructor in a lecture/lab course may
have to spend 15 minutes covering, depending upon the level of the
class.
On the other hand, I have a very good understanding of VMS, but I don't
know anything about Ultrix. I probably need a good lecture/lab with
conversations with the instructor who hopefully can tell me how various
Ultrix concepts relate to VMS concepts.
Bob
|
1404.13 | A recent experience analyzed | MAGOS::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Mon Mar 18 1991 08:49 | 69 |
| I took a Rdb/SQL course last week with adiverse group of people who
ranged from novices to senior people. I am an ex-professor so I have
some strong opinions on instruction and instructional style.
OBSERVATIONS:
1) The course was selected based on subject matter without
consideration of what was needed. Problem belongs to the person who
chose this course. I don't know whether a different level of course is
available or not.
2) Some students had already taken more Rdb/SQL but had not applied
what they studied. These were mixed with people with extensive
ancillary background and others who didn't even know what a relational
database was. Problem belongs to the person who grouped all of these
diverse people into a single course. I doubt that the budget would
have supported two offerings.
3) A number of the students were interested in implementation and
operating efficiency issues. These were not part of the course agenda
and it was made clear up front that the course would probably not help
them much. Problem belongs to the students. When one finds oneself
not getting the benefit from a course, it doesn't seem to make much
sense to continue. On the other hand, they can help the less
experienced if so motivated.
4) The instructor was a substitute, hastily prepared. The planned
instructor was out consulting with a customer on an urgent problem.
5) I did not return after the second day, since I found that I could
learn the material on my own without tying up specific hours. By
leaving early, I lost the opportunity to support less experienced
colleagues. I took the selfish route consciously.
CONCLUSIONS:
1) Seminars in which advanced students bring the least experienced
colleagues up to speed using the same materials could have been more
effective. We could economize the time of a formal instructor and
oblige the students to be more active.
2) We often don't set support for colleagues as a goal in our
organizations. That lets people like me off the hook when they act in
accordance with their own needs only.
3) We often don't read or interpret correctly the information about
intended audience when we select courses for others. This means a lot
of mismatching goes on that can be avoided by more self-paced
materials.
4) I noted the lack of basic reference material in this (admittedly
elementary) student guide. I felt that this was an unfortunate course
design decision. My preference is to provide the student with more
information in the written materials than one wishes to cover in the
class.
PERSONAL ASIDE:
Although I was not very happy with this experience, I know there are
many players in the process, all of whose contributions are critical to
successful training. It was obvious that the poor matching of course
to students in this case was the root cause of my dissatisfaction.
Compromises must be made. Nobody has a right to expect a tailor-made
fit. But I think we could have done better.
regards,
Dick
|
1404.14 | Another experience analyzed | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Mon Mar 18 1991 12:59 | 85 |
| I have been to quite a bit of lecture/lab training over my eleven years
with Digital, some of it excellent, most mediocre, and some extremely
bad.
The best courses came as a result of a clear match of course objectives
to my expectations and personal needs. The worst came when the course
definitely did not deliver what was advertised and the instructor was
not knowledgable in the material being taught. In that experience, a
DEC-10 Batch Language course, I had checked to make sure that it was
not an entry level course and that the instructor would be knowledge-
able about some esoteric details since I had just completed writing
a batch command stream generator and was interested in some esotoric
issues. Like Mr. Beldin, the instructor was changed at the last minute
and the new person knew almost nothing about the subject matter, the
course immediately reverted to less than elementary level as the course
examples dealt with no exception conditions or optional command para-
meters. Without adequate training exercises and written support ma-
terial, the instructor was unable to deliver even rudimentary knowledge
about the subject. I too left the class, but on the second day after
it became clear the instructor would not/could not get me access to
someone who knew more about the subject.
I think the pace and content of a lecture can be varied slightly if
the instructor is knowledgeable and skillful. The diversity of the
receiving group complicates attempts to add details and/or alter the
pace of delivery. A knowledgeable and skillful instructor can teach
with poor materials but noone can handle a group which spans from no-
vice user to internationally recognized expert. We need to pay at-
ention to detail and offer courses which focus on the needs of segments
of the audience.
The internal community tends to require greater detail, after all, our
customers expect us to be the experts when we get on site. This does
not mean the standard lecture portion of a course needs to change. It
does mean the exercises and examples need to deal with more of the op-
tional features and exception conditions which can occur. It also
means the instructor must be able to answer questions outside of the
standard course material. The lenght of the course need not change,
if it can become more interactive and allow knowledgeable people to
expand on relevant points. If the instructor does not have the know-
ledge and someone else can not be made available to expand the detail
to the level required by the internal or experienced audience, then
the course should be shortened and advertised as an entry level course.
In the lab portion of these courses, adding complex examples which
demonstrate conditional and optional features would assists even the
novice at a later date once they have mastered the routine subject
matter. These should be designated as optional exercises and might
be left out of novice courses.
The biggest mistake we make is trying to be all thing to all people
in our lecture / lab courses. We must insists that the person being
trained meets a minimal level of knowledge. Otherwise, every course
becomes a training session on how to use a VAXstation, terminal, DCL,
etc... in addition to trying to teach the subject matter of the course.
The course outline and assumptions should be available to everyone
seeking to register. The prerequisites should be clearly identified
so that students and registars can limit the diversity of the group
being taught. The course objectives and any specific non-objectives
should be clearly stated so that students and registrars can assists
in screening the classes they plan to attend before they discover they
are in the wrong place on the first day of class.
This is basic stuff, but my experience is that we do not have access
to it when we are looking for a course. This results in a lot of
frustration and loss opportunity. When my expectations are not met
than my evaluation of the course is not positive. As Mr Beldin said
above, sometimes that is my fault for not determining if the course
will deliver what I am looking for and/or if I am not prepared to
learn it because I did not have a prerequisite. Sometimes that is
the deliverers fault for not making it clear what was being offered.
I expects our instructor/trainers to be as knowledgeable and flexible
as possible. I do not expect them to be miracle workers, so they
need help with the diversity and adequate training materials.
I'll keep taking training, because I need to grow. I hope our custo-
mers will keep taking training after bad experiences, because Digital
need to sell services. I hope training continues to improve, because
the more we and our customers know about how to use our technology,
the greater will be the demand for our solutions.
|
1404.15 | slight tangent | MRCSSE::COLMAN | | Mon Mar 18 1991 13:01 | 41 |
| Holly,
Please forward this (slight tangent) to the people who handle
distribution list updates. I received one in the regular mail last
week. It said:
"You are on a distribution list to receive Self-Paced Instruction
and Digital Press product information. In an effort to update our
distribution list, we are offereing you an opportunity to continue to
receive this informationm in one of two ways,... or be removed from the
distribution list.
CONTINUE If you want to continue to receive this information, do
nothing...and you will remain on the distribution list.
ELECTRONIC If you would like to receive this same information
electronically, send your name, badge and node address to:
SPIDP@BUO or ESMAIL::SPIDP. Please state that you would
like to be on an electronic distribution.
REMOVAL If you would like to be removed from this distribution list
altogether, send your anme and badge number to:
SPIDP@BUO or ESMAIL::SPIDP. Please state that you would
like to be removed from the distribution, and please use
"Removal" as the memo subject.
As a concerned employee AND STOCKHOLDER, I thought that removal should
be associated with doing nothing, so I called the office of VP of
Educational Service and was passed off to someone else who hasn't yet
returned my call. I also sent a MAIL message to ESMAIL::SPIDP to
please call me and have not received a call.
Those who want to stay on distribution should have to ASK for
electronic distribution (or paper) by sending MAIL. The do-nothing
default is in the wrong place.
george
Secondarily, perhaps everyone who
wanted to continue to stay informed
|
1404.16 | thanks for asking...and since you ask | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Mon Mar 18 1991 15:49 | 29 |
|
Here's what I want from DEC's educational services:
- Access to all materials for non-hardware technical courses. I'm
not asking for expensive printed documents but simply files
available on the network -- something I can view or print and read
at leisure.
- Window-based interactive instruction for suitable software
products. By this I mean interactive teaching software that: 1)
shows you application windows, 2) describes how you might manipulate
things in order to accomplish a task, 3) lets you attempt to do
those things, and 4) pats you on the back and/or corrects you,
depending.
- A "cold-line" service where you could either get questions answered
or referred. It doesn't have to be a hotline in the sense that a
caller would expect an answer immediately. An answer or a referral
within a week would probably be sufficient.
The "suitable software" mentioned above is somewhat subjective -- my
take on it would include things like all of the DECwindows
out-of-the-box applications, any word processing application
including DECwrite, etc. The more open-ended a software product,
the less suitable this approach becomes. E.g., I don't think this
sort of instruction would be a great help in learning a compiler or
a database management system.
JP
|
1404.17 | Back to the Future (lecture/lab) | TOOK::DMCLURE | Les Jeux Sont Fait | Mon Mar 18 1991 18:53 | 74 |
| Seeing as how it was my comment which intially spawned this note,
I suppose I should offer my two cents as well. I might begin by stating
that I have an interesting perspective in this discussion, as during my
7-year career with DEC, I have had the priviledge of bouncing back and
forth between working in both Ed. Services, as well as Engineering.
First of all, when discussing the subject of internal training,
there are a couple of subtle issues involved which typically go either
undetected, or at least unspoken:
1. A successful internal training program provides its own
undoing as employees eventually learn everything they need
to know causing the internal training program to become redundant.
2. Successful internal training programs train lower paid professionals
to do jobs which were previously limited to the domain of very
highly paid professionals causing the corporation to reassess
the need for the highly paid professionals.
...as such, one constantly needs to address the question of
"Do we really want a successful internal training program?" Assuming
the answer is yes (thinking for the corporate good, as opposed to the
good of certain individuals or empires), then we can proceed to define
what a successful internal training program for a High Tech company
such as DEC consists of. In a word: the answer is CBI.
When I first joined DEC, it seemed like a really "High Tech" place
to work. Why? Because it seemed like I was able to learn almost
anything I needed to know *instantly* via the various CBI and IVIS
courses that were available from my VAX/VMS user account. I can't
tell you how much time these courses saved me: for example, the VMS
Utilties and Commands CBI course which, brought me from that of VMS
novice, to being quite up to speed in a matter of days. There were
many other courses as well (just last year, for example, I took the
Data Communications IVIS course in which I was able to learn a good
deal about DECnet internals and now I have a job working in Telecomm
& Networks - and what's amazing is that this course was written and
produced 8 years ago!). The fact that these courses are/were on-line
and ready to use when I needed them (24 hours a day, 7 days a week),
as well as allowing me to train on the job and between interruptions
was what helped me the most.
My first job at DEC was that of a programmer of IVIS courses.
Few people utilize these courses much anymore since they are anchored
to the Professional Series computer (Pro-350 & Pro-380), but there
are still to this day over a hundred such courses out there in use
at Field Training Centers worldwide. Has anyone ever stopped to
wonder why it is that the Customer Services organization seems to
have survived so well over the years? Could it be because they are
perhaps the only organization which continues to invest in IVIS and/or
CBI types of training? Given there are now problems associated with
the IVIS technology due to its shrinking [almost extinct] hardware
platform causing students to have to travel to take an IVIS course
(I was able to take IVIS courses at my desk since I had a Pro/IVIS
system), but it used to be that you could take an IVIS or CBI course
from most any location at most any time. As such, the results would
undoubtedly prove to be even more dramatic if the hardware platform
for the IVIS technology had ever evolved beyond the Pro, but that is
now history.
My main point is that I am blown away by the apparent lack of
high tech vision in developing newer replacement technologies for
IVIS (or even simply CBI) courseware by Ed. Services. The IVIS
technology peaked way back in 1985, and almost to the day that Del
Lippert left as VP of Ed. Services, internal courseware began its
long slow slide back into the low tech world of lecture/lab alone
(we used to call this the "Back to the Future" approach to training).
Why is it that DEC has no on-line internal training strategies?
Furthermore, why is it that a perfectly good software platform
which was designed years ago with portability in mind (VAX Producer)
has been allowed to die such a cruel death (along with the many
people who were once trained in this product)?
-davo
|
1404.18 | | VMSNET::WOODBURY | | Mon Mar 18 1991 19:26 | 11 |
| The better courses I have been to, inside and outside of DEC, all
provided more material in the writen part of the course than was covered
by the course itself.
It might also be useful if we included our Ed Services people as a
formal part of the phase review process. There is suposed to be a training
plan in place before a product goes out the door, but we really need much
more than that.
Would it make sense to REQUIRE that one of the internal field test
sites for any product be the Ed Services group that will be responsible
for writing/updating the course(s) about the product?
|
1404.19 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Mon Mar 18 1991 22:59 | 32 |
| re .17
Doug, it's not a 'program' yet, but have you seen the online training I
put together for DECdesign? I would really welcome your feedback on
what you think the potential of this format is compared to the CBIs you
thought so highly of. (We can take this off line if you prefer.)
re .18
>> It might also be useful if we included our Ed Services people as a
>> formal part of the phase review process. There is suposed to be a training
>> plan in place before a product goes out the door, but we really need much
>> more than that.
YES! I agree. We should participate in the phase review process, and
be accountable to it as well.
In terms of training plans...CSSE usually puts those together, at least
in my experience. They come to me, and come to p-team, and talk to the
funder if they can. What gets written usually does not resemble
reality much after about 6 months because engineering changes their
plans, something changes in the funding, marketing decisions get made,
etc.
Sometimes, it all seems like everything comes down to
-managing complexity
-funding
Holly
|
1404.20 | An instructor's viewpoint | NITTY::DIERCKS | The gay 90's are back!! | Tue Mar 19 1991 10:54 | 71 |
|
Great topic, Holly!
As an instructor (mostly customer), let me add my $0.03 worth.
I've now been in Educational Services almost 5 years. During that time
I, honestly, have seen the quality of the course materials take a
serious slide and, only recently, begin the uphill climb to level of
quality I expect (and the customers expect).
In my opinion, their are three problems which seem to pop their ugly
little heads up all too frequently.
1. Course developers that don't know the product. (Another instructor
in the Chicago training center and I once had the "opportunity" to
spend a couple days at Spitbrook, about 3 years ago, talking with the
developers of the U&C I and System Manager I classes. The developer of
the U&C I course as a new-hire to the department and didn't know VMS.
The developer of the System Manager II class was a contract employee
who didn't really understand the goals behind the class. Most
instructors who taught from materials which were developed by these
people will tell you of the nightmarish quality of said materials. It
didn't seem to matter that these two courses are the bread-and-butter
of most Ed. Servs. customer training centers.)
2. There is the ever present problem of keeping up with the ongoing
(and ever increasing rate of) change of VMS. For no reason that is
obvious to me the course materials, except in their finished form, are
NOT available on line. Were they available on line, changes could be
done on an as-needed-basis and the corrected/updated pages/modules
would be immediately available. As it is now, it is sometimes weeks or
months before corrections are made or changes in the product are
reflected in the course materials. (A worst case scenario: the
current version of the VMS System Security Course really reflects V4 of
VMS, with only a few "patches" thrown in to make it appear that it's a
V5 course.)
3. The course developers often do not get the chance (or are not
forced to) teach from their own materials. I've said many, many times
that even the most technically knowledgeable person does not
necessarily have the ability to write materials from which other
persons will be able to teach. Course developers need to be
instructors, also. I grow increasingly tired of course materials which
contain little more than pages from the documentation or, worse yet,
pages and pages of prose. The instructor's job is to fill in the
details. The "job" of the course materials is to be provide an outline
of the topics, references to appropriate documentation, and room for
note-taking. (I'm amazed from the number of customers, and employees
that take customer classes, that have no note-taking skills or that
even REFUSE to take notes. People evidently aren't aware of the fact
that one of the best ways to learn something and REMEMBER it is to
write it down.)
Finally, I'm also amazed by the number of customers that come into a
class not meeting the pre-requisites and expect to be brought up to
speed on the materials they should have "gotten" in other classes.
For example, one of the other instructors in our training center taught
the "Utilizing VMS Features from C" course last week at a customer
site. Several people in the course didn't know C. In such a situation
the instructor has to punt. Our job often is that of giving our warm
fuzzies to everybody in an attempt to achieve customer satisfaction
from all parties. Unfortunately, I don't ever see this problem (of
pre-requisites) being resolved. Let's face it, when a customer hands
"us" a check for a training class, we're going to take that check. The
problem is compounded even more by the Unlimited Training (or, as the
instructors call them, the "all you can eat") packages. More and more
people are being sent to training who are not prepared for that
training.
Greg
|
1404.21 | My suggestions | KOBAL::DICKSON | I watched it all on my radio | Tue Mar 19 1991 11:33 | 45 |
| I am in favor of the training being even more involved than being in
the Phase Review process. I think it should involved in the product
design process, along with the documentation writers.
If engineers are allowed to push back on requirements by saying "that
is too time consuming to implement well", then writers and course designers
should be able to push back on engineers and say "that is too time
consuming to document well" or "that is too confusing". The QFD
process provides a clean way to integrate these concerns during design.
I also see a great deal of similarity in what the Ed Svc organization
does and what CUIP (the technical doc people) do. Perhaps these
organizations should be merged rather than having turf battles.
They should at least have similar accounting practices for how the
writing is paid for. My project's doc writer sits right here among the
engineers. Our course designer sits a 20-minute drive away. At least
Holly is in the same facility as her customer. As the duration of
product development shortens (and our VP tells us that it *will*
shorten) the time it takes to develop the course will be more in line
with the time it takes to develop the product.
The vast majority of desktops that have access to our products are not
equipped with workstations. Many with PCs can not run X servers or
do not choose to. (An X-server requires more resources on the PC than
most complete PC applications do!) We need to look at ways of
delivering CBIs that are not tied to a single display technology.
We could make non-DECwindows versions of Bookreader. Or we could
import the software that can run more complicated kinds of CBIs than
we now have.
There are also self-paced technologies that do not use computers at
all. (The ultimate in platform independence.) Some (not all) courses
could be handled with a book and an audio tape. Some (even fewer)
might just need the audio tape, though this is probably not so
applicable to hard-core technical courses.
How about if it was easier to attend the "seminars" discussed in
previous replies? Perhaps a way to listen in from your desk if you
can't afford the time to go to the lecture hall, or drive to where
it is being held, yet still be able to ask questions?
Perhaps Ed Svcs can offer a "service" of helping to facilitate such
seminars, or there could be a self-paced course on how to run them.
[Remember, if you don't make yourself obsolete somebody else will
do it for you.]
|
1404.22 | Course descriptions on line | STRAD::MATTHEWS | | Tue Mar 19 1991 13:20 | 11 |
| .14 > The course outline and assumptions should be available to everyone
> seeking to register. The prerequisites should be clearly identified
> so that students and registars can limit the diversity of the group
> being taught. The course objectives and any specific non-objectives
> should be clearly stated...
In VTX ESCOURSES this information is available for most courses
(admittedly some are missing). Is this the kind of thing you're looking
for?
Val
|
1404.23 | More reflections/suggestions | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Tue Mar 19 1991 13:31 | 54 |
| Re. The last few
The instructors comments reminded me about something that made a recent
presentation much more deliverable.
We sometimes forget what we are supposed to use each medium
for. Overheads which try to tell it all!!! Course manuals
that are really refabrications of the Technical Guides!!!
Exercises which simply duplicate the examples in the Reference
Manuals!!!
I had the fortunate advantage of getting slides and crib notes.
An instructor's guide of sorts which explained the purpose of
each slide and gave hints about what to discuss but not a script.
It also noted where additional material existed in the Technical
Document Set so I could look it up or refer the students to it.
Then .21 raised the issue of access, push back, and coherence of the
material developed for training. My wife was a trainer at Digital
who was taught "Criterion Referenced Instruction" ?sp techniques.
These techniques force you to develop goals and objectives to decide
what needs to be taught and to focus on the best means to achieve
these objective. When you can document what a course is supposed
to deliver and can measure the results of delivering the material,
you have a much better chance of satisfying the customer. You also
have the material which helps the customer screen courses for content
and satisfaction of perceived needs.
Finally the issue of funding. I expect Ed Services to be in the
business of developing custom solution. Naturally if a customer
is willing to pay we will take his money. Lets just make sure that
we are also recovering our costs and making our planned margins when
we do so. We have a habit of under estimating the cost and over
estimating the reusability of training solutions, thereby pricing
the service at a loss. With the advent of account focused teams
and business units, we run a greater risk that funding will not
be available for traditional product training. It is very impor-
tant that we learn how to share development of training and in-
crease the reusability of material developed for training and for
presentations. The closer we can put training development to the
product development, the higher the likelyhood it will be reused.
Unfortunately, we also need to assure that customer feedback and
suggestions get incorporated quickly to training materials. We
have OPAL as a means to share presentations, I wonder if their
is not a similar solution potential for training materials, especially
instructor guides and crib sheets.
It occurs to me that having a training topic in each products' Note
File with wide spread knowledge of its existence among the training
community might provide a support mechanism for new instructors.
Good luck, we need more training and higher quality training if
we are to succed in the solutions business.
|
1404.24 | Good Pointer | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Tue Mar 19 1991 14:01 | 18 |
| re .22
Val,
Yes that was a good pointer and it has the potential to contain
everything I was looking for. Since I only checked a few entries
I can't speak to how effectively it meets my need, but the entries
on CASE seemed relatively complete.
Now how do we use it with customers and development of custom
training. If the entry had a means to pointing you to more
detail, e.g. getting you to electronic copies of course material
or contact people who knew course details!
VTX is a powerful tool. We need to learn how to implement its
power as an integrating technology. We need to spread the message
about how to look for information we have developed and stored
on the network. We will succeed together.
|
1404.25 | instructors/developers should also work in the CSC a while... | CSC32::C_HOE | what's Nashua, daddy? | Tue Mar 19 1991 14:27 | 17 |
| Greg
You mentioned that Course dEvelopers should teach their courses:
I agree 1000%! I just left ESDP, the heavy duty course
development arm of Ed Services. I developed courses, using
various mediums over the last 7 years. I sure miss the teaching
of the courses and also am concerned about the quality of the
delivery of my course.
I might add that instructors or course developers should do some
time in the customer support space; to give them some credibility
in the technical space.
My new job will take me to the students and the customers after I
develop the course.
calvin
|
1404.26 | | NITTY::DIERCKS | The gay 90's are back!! | Tue Mar 19 1991 14:58 | 9 |
|
>> -< instructors/developers should also work in the CSC a while... >-
Absolutely, and I don't see it happening. It all has to do with the
fact that Ed. Serv. and CSC are seen, accounting-wise, as separate
parts of the company. Both could benefit from the sharing of
personnel, ideas, and expertise. What a concept!!??!!
Greg
|
1404.27 | CBI is better (Computer-Based *Instruction*) | TOOK::DMCLURE | Les Jeux Sont Fait | Tue Mar 19 1991 18:54 | 28 |
| re: .19,
I can't say that I have seen your DECdesign course in bookreader
but I do recall that a few people had begun to use this approach in
their courses before I left ESDP.
The only problem I can see with a bookreader-based course is
that while bookreader provides a good means of referencing a document
quickly, the burden is still always going to be on the student to
read the material from a "book". If making books more accessible
to students were the only trick to teaching, then we could solve
the nation's education dilemma by simply locking students in libraries!
Here's another analogy: imagine a person is dying of thirst.
Obviously, they need water quickly in order to survive. One thing
you could do to achieve this goal is to toss them in a lake. The
better approach however would be to pour them a glass of water and
help them drink it.
Without actually seeing your DECdesign course, it's hard to guess
whether bookreader is an optimum medium for course instruction or not
(certainly it will help). I get the feeling however, that merely
providing massive amounts of information to a student (whether through
bookreader, or by locking them in a library, or whatever) is a little
like getting thrown in a lake of knowledge. Either they'll sink or
swim (but at least they won't be thirsty any longer).
-davo
|
1404.28 | | HARDY::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Mar 19 1991 22:19 | 9 |
| I think the interesting thing about it is that it *is* instructional, and
is based on skillbuilding, not reading. It's more like hypertext
than it is like reading a book - it doesn't really have many
paragraphs.
If you're ever up at ZKO, come have a look. I'd be interested in your
feedback.
Holly
|
1404.29 | Video works | SELL3::FERRIGNO | | Wed Mar 20 1991 12:48 | 14 |
| We find, here in one of the Corporate Libraries, that our clients
prefer the videocassette format (1/2") for instruction, learning,
information, etc. We have a series of tapes on C programming, another
on UNIX. Each has a long waiting list for borrowing. Another video
that comes to mind is one on Open Systems (OSI) -- it delineates what
open systems are, how they are used, etc.
Some of the videos have floppy disks and instruction books. Feedback has
been nothing but positive. Many people take the videos home and can
learn at their own pace on their own schedule.
For those who prefer seminars, the seminars could be videotaped and
duplicated for wide distribution.
|
1404.30 | See ESRAD::AUTHORING for the latest and <whatever> | TOOK::DMCLURE | Les Jeux Sont Fait | Wed Mar 20 1991 13:53 | 25 |
| re: .28,
> If you're ever up at ZKO, come have a look. I'd be interested in your
> feedback.
Ok, fair enough. I'll refrain from further comments regarding
the substitution of bookreader for CBIs until I see it myself. At
least bookreader is a DEC product - that's a win if nothing else is!
re: .29,
Yeah, too bad we are no longer in the video business (rumor
has it that the media services group has or is being cut drastically).
I suppose this is yet one more example of how we tend to use what
we don't sell (symptomatic of U.S. consumerism?).
re: general,
Likewise, DEC is also no longer in the CBI business (at least
not the CBI tools development business). See the ESRAD::AUTHORING
notesfile for more information on how far we have come (and/or where
we ended up) with regards to our current CBI strategies (IconAuthor,
EASYAUTHOR, etc.).
-davo
|
1404.31 | | KOBAL::DICKSON | I watched it all on my radio | Wed Mar 20 1991 14:02 | 6 |
| You don't need Media Services any more. With the new desktop video
technology any course developer can do their own productions. (You
still need someone to do the graphics.)
Doing it yourself is a lot, lot, cheaper. Apple does a lot of their
training this way, with delivery on CDROM, videotape, or both.
|
1404.32 | We should also look ahead to the future. | SKIVT::INGRAM | | Wed Mar 20 1991 15:59 | 9 |
| I believe it would be beneficial, not only to look at current
carricular, but also future products. When I heard about the Vax 9000
two years ago, my introduction to product was taking a 8800 level 2
course. Ofcourse, there are similarities, however I wish we had
seminars on the 9000 earlier. Now, with alpha and some of the other
products, is there any kind of training taking place? Reading specs can
be most iritating.
-Harvey
|
1404.33 | with respect to training videotapes etc | MU::PORTER | phase-daze | Thu Mar 21 1991 00:41 | 8 |
|
Well, I must be the only person who thinks you can't beat
a book, printed on paper. It has the highest information-
delivery bandwidth I've seen, has remarkably low access
time, pretty reasonable capacity, is non-fatiguing
in use, and is readily portable. Self-paced, too, and
integrates text and graphics.
|
1404.34 | Same arguments | LENO::GRIER | mjg's holistic computing agency | Thu Mar 21 1991 01:49 | 13 |
| Re: .32:
If it's any comfort, you're not alone. I find the bookreader an
interesting novelty at best. At worst, when cost-cutters don't allow for
printed documentation, I'd rather see it just go away...
Get me a workstation I can take into my bedroom at leaf through
at night, and with as much screen space as all the horizontal surfaces
within arm's reach of my chair, then we might be talking. Maybe, because
at least with printed manuals/documentation you can still do something
useful if the power goes out...
-mjg
|
1404.35 | can you tell what I used to be? | MEMIT::HAMER | what you mean is laissez nous faire | Thu Mar 21 1991 09:14 | 24 |
| An obvious conclusion to much of this discussion is that there are
remarkably many effective ways of learning and many remarkably
effective ways of teaching. Any plan that ignores that misses the boat.
What a person learns is the next thing they are ready to learn-- that
which they have all the necessary preparation and understanding to
assimilate into their mental order. To hang up a coat, you have to have
a hook; to "get" a new concept, you have to have a framework for it.
Unfortunately, no one yet, at any level of instruction to my knowledge,
has determined precisely what the prerequisites are for a given bit of
knowledge, because those prerequisites have an uncanny way of varying
from person to person. That means teaching and learning are inherently
somewhat messy businesses.
That's why the best courses are never separate from the best
instructors and why the best instructors are distinguished by an
ability to make the same point eleventy-seven different ways.
No one asked, but I don't think CBI, self-paced, video, just getting
the book and reading it are any complete answers. I don't think it is
possible to beat for cost or quality a well-delivered course by a
**teacher** who knows his/her material, audience, and craft.
John H.
|
1404.36 | yes! | HARDY::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Thu Mar 21 1991 13:45 | 41 |
| The last few points are VERY important.
People vary greatly in their needs and learning styles. The point of
this note is decidedly not to pick THE best format for training, but
to discuss and describe and define all the things the work well...and
to identify the ones that aren't working so well and why.
I hope we don't abandon paper documentation in the near future. When I
want to immerse myself in something conceptual, I need a book and a
highlighter.
On the other hand, when I'm actually working on line and want an
*answer*, I like Bookreader manuals just fine.
When I can go to class ($$ and time permit) AND the instructor is
excellent AND the pace is appropriate for me AND the materials are well
written - it's a great experience.
When any one of those factors is substandard, I'd much rather work at
my own pace on a workstation with a well designed CBI based on a case
study / demo. I don't want to struggle with the online material, I
want to be led through it in a way that allows me to make choices about
my needs within that framework. I want it to be strong and thorough
technically, and care somewhat less about pretty graphics and other
bells and whistles - although anything that truly enhances learning
may be very useful.
People have very different learning styles. Some understand well how
they learn best, yet others don't seem to have a clue.
I like the phrase that has been going around about 'delighting' the
customers. If training that I develop delights the customer, then I
feel successful. Usually when a customer is delighted by training,
they are very involved and caught up in the flow of it. They are not
spending an undue amount of time being frustrated or bored, and they have a
clear structure for getting help and answers. It should emphasize
active involvement with clear correct information, whatever the form.
Holly
|
1404.37 | Absolutely! | LENO::GRIER | mjg's holistic computing agency | Thu Mar 21 1991 15:33 | 6 |
| Re: .36:
Right on the nose. What I was commenting on was the apparent trend
to look for one (and only one!) way to convey information.
-mjg (an ersatz educator myself)
|
1404.38 | Days of the Future's Past | SUPER::MOSTEIKA | | Fri Mar 22 1991 12:22 | 36 |
| Harvey,
I don't know your particular situation, but around Sept. 89 we had developed
enough hardware information on the VAX 9000 to hold seminars in MRO. In Jan. 90
until present, there are 3 different levels of courses being presented in BTO.
I'm not sure of what the training curriculum is like in the Ireland plant.
There are various notes conferences set up regarding the VAX 9000; from
performance, to training, to EIS/Sales Support. Some of which are monitored
by the instructors.
VAX 9000 BTOVT::VAX_9000
VAX 9000 Performance GWYNED::VAX9000_PERFORMANCE
VAX Vector Processing GWYNED::VAX_VECTORS
VAXclusters ELKTRA::CLUSTER
VAXcluster Console System GALLO::VCS
VAX 9000 EIS/PSS Issues CARTUN::9000_PSS_FORUM
Customer Configuration Document BTTOVT::VAX9000_CCD
VAX 9000 Troubleshooting LEGUP::VAX9000_TROUBLESHOOTING
VAX Performance Advisor VINO::VPA
8800 Lev. II training does not take the place of VAX 9000 training in any way
shape or form. The only similarities are, they're both a VAX. Management is
the planner (along with you), of your trainning. But when I was in the field,
I know that "the plan" was sometimes formulated in a matter of moments, (if any
at all).
This doesn't solve your problem, but it may help others from falling into the
same trap in the future. That is, sharing information. Knowing that there is a
course catalog, an Education Services Registrar representative and a number you
can call who can find the information you're seeking regarding a training need.
Sit down with your manager and plan your future training (between fires). If you
don't, no one else will. It will be O.J.T. as usual.
Paul
|
1404.39 | More Emphasis on Education | DLO10::TARLING | | Fri Mar 22 1991 13:23 | 29 |
| All;
As I enter my fifth year in customer education at Digital I would like
to see all instructors, course developers, and managers come to
understand what it is that prevents a student from learning. The
assumption is being made that we can know the common barriers to
study that affect "all" students in "any" learning environment.
I believe that I do know and understand that there are three principal
barriers to study:
1. The misunderstood word or symbol -
You say that "The children became quieter as the crepescule
approached".
2. A lack of mass -
The mass of what you are studying, describe an elephant to one
who has never seen one. Now try it with a picture.
3. To steep a gradient -
The student needs System Manager 0, and we are trying System Manager
I
Arnold Tarling, DTN 4834325, DLO10::TARLING, Arnold Tarling @SCA
|
1404.40 | say more? | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Fri Mar 22 1991 22:07 | 29 |
| Arnold,
Can you say more about this?
I infer that you want the course developers to do a better job of
defining terms.
I also infer that you prefer visuals to text (or in addition to text)
wherever possible. I do too.
Every one in my cost center is being trained in Information Mapping.
At first I thought rather cynically, "the latest gimmick to keep us
from doing our work, grumble, grumble". As it turns out, I am
delighted with Information Mapping. It helps a course developer
analyze and organize their information very systematically.
Each piece of information is analyzed by information type according to
the standards of Information Mapping.
Each 'chunk' of information is analyzed in turn to see if it
could best be presented as a graphic, a table, text, or a combination
of the above. Nothing is 'text by default'. There are no endless
run on paragraphs if it is done correctly.
I have seen lots of supposed panaceas come and go, and I believe that
Information Mapping truly has the potential to make our courses
clearer, cleaner, more teachable, and more accessible to the user.
Holly
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1404.41 | instructors also would benefit from I.M. trg. | MELKOR::HENSLEY | nil illegitimi carborundum | Sat Mar 23 1991 14:12 | 16 |
| As an instructor, it would be beneficial to also be trained in
information mapping. I know that the courses where I was involved in
review and development and knew the intention of a particular course
design were better taught, more effective and more successful. While
not all instructors in a given course string may have the time or
opportunity to be involved with said course design and review, the
training staff across the country if not worldwide would benefit from
some enhanced skills in understanding how our students learn and how
the materials are directed.
Secondly, most instructors become involved in customization and course
development (usually as an after-hours fix) to some degree, all of
which reaches the customer/student. Thus updating course design skills
is not just a developers need.
Irene
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1404.42 | | RBW::WICKERT | MAA USIS Consultant | Sun Mar 24 1991 17:06 | 11 |
|
Someone mentioned having instructors and course developers stand a
stint in the CSC... What about EIS and Sales Support? As I understand
it aren't Edu part of EIS now? If that's the case it shouldn't be very
difficult to develop a lend-lease program of bi-directional activity.
Nothing helps an instructor more than being able to stand up in front
of a class and say "I've done it!".
-Ray
|
1404.43 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Sun Mar 24 1991 18:14 | 16 |
| What kinds of things are you thinking of specifically?
I do demos and presentations for customers pretty regularly on
the product I've worked on for 3+ years. I wish more course
developers had the opportunity to be involved with direct product
support outside the classroom.
I don't know if I could fill in for someone at the CSC...I suspect I
have more depth in one product than most of them, while many of them
have a very wide but not quite as deep knowledge of a group of
products. I know I learned a lot working directly with them when I had
the opportunity, and from sitting with them and listening in on some of
the calls that came in.
Holly
|
1404.44 | Glossaries, Drawings, and Gradients | DLO10::TARLING | | Mon Mar 25 1991 09:06 | 15 |
| Holly et all;
Yes, better definitions. Ideally each Instructor Guide/Student Guide
would contain a glossary of all pertinent terms, acronynms, and
symbols. This would make the students job much easier. It is simply
not possible to comprehend without definitions! The terms etc could
also be defined in footnotes.
And yes do include drawings whenever possible. Some student guides do
an excellent job of this currently.
The gradient approach is also important.
Arnold Tarling, DTN 483-4325, DLO10::TARLING
|
1404.45 | IVIS had everything (if you count the course administrator) | TOOK::DMCLURE | Les Jeux Sont Fait | Mon Mar 25 1991 14:04 | 21 |
| re: alternative learning methods (a few back),
Back in my former life when I was programming IVIS courses for
Digital Sales Training, we had developed a means of conveying the
same material in four different ways, and then we would allow the
student to chose which approach they felt most comfortable with.
The Digital Difference IVIS course (for example) allowed you
to chose to view the material in:
a) Motion Video format (straight video-disc play).
b) Audio/graphics (audio track synched with Draw graphics).
c) Text (pure text graphics on screen which are read at any speed).
d) Workbook (simply read the hardcopy provided).
These four approaches were combined with all the latest in
technology (touch screen menus, etc.). Unfortunately, that was the
last course we ever released for Sales Training before our group was
disolved.
-davo
|
1404.46 | Integration/Convience/No Commericals
| STRAIT::WETTY | Give PEACE a Chance! | Mon Mar 25 1991 15:19 | 30 |
| I have attended many internal training courses over the four plus years at
Digital. I have yet to find one internal training course contain something of
any real added value, at most, these courses are abbreviated versions of the
customer's course.
I would like to see more courses on Relational DB Design or data base design
from a data modeling viewpoint. Sometimes theory is more important than
mechanics. A class on relational data base design and modeling would have
prevented many customer problems I am currently involved in trying to resolve.
A Relational Design course for Customers would be a great course to sell too!
In addition, I would like to see us do a better job of integrating our
programming tools and the software development environment. Some of the
classes being offered by the TP ACES (old SWS/E - new CIS-EIS/E) on the TP
Toolkit are excellent examples of the integration methods that we need to
compete effectively. I've found many Digits that know alot about one layered
product or another but most can not entertain questions like how do you get
DECform data declarations entered into the CDD.
I'd like to endorse Video Tape as an effective training mechanism for the
front line people who can't afford the luxury of a 5-day lecture lab or
even the time to play with CBI courses. However, the last video that I saw
on DECForms was horrible! It cost over $100 and was more of a commercial on
DECForms and FIMS than it was an instructional aide. It spent too much time
explaining the differences between FMS/TDMS and DECForms that it told you how
to program in the complex IFDL language and interface the forms to a 3GL program
PS. VTX ESCOURSES has been a great help, graphic training plans added would be
a great addition to this useful tool.
|
1404.50 | Notes .47 thru .49 hidden | EXIT26::STRATTON | Reason, Purpose, Self-Esteem | Tue Apr 30 1991 23:01 | 7 |
| I've set notes .47 through .49 hidden, as requested by a
reader. The author of .47 and .49 is out of town, and this
will be pursued when the author returns.
Jim Stratton,
co-moderator, DIGITAL conference
|