Sloan National Agenda for Industry-University
Online Learning Relationships
A. Frank Mayadas, Program Director, Sloan Foundation
Elaine Cacciarelli, Project Officer, Sloan Greater NYC Online Learning Center
It is widely acknowledged that corporations and universities have had many years of experience with online learning. The different paths that each have traveled in online development, however, confirm that no single delivery method has emerged for both. For the most part, online at corporations is principally self-paced learning, while universities have adopted asynchronous, instructor-led online delivery to student cohorts, known as asynchronous learning networks (ALN) in the Sloan-C community.
Quite clearly, better collaboration between these two separate worlds is a desirable goal. In relationships in which universities providing online delivery that meets corporate training goals, there is a need for corporate and academic groups to collaborate on identifying achievable, measurable learning outcomes that are acceptable to both.
Sloan Initiates Collaboration. On January 25, 2005, the Sloan Center at Stevens Institute of Technology conducted a Sloan-sponsored all-day national workshop in New York City as an initial step in bringing together corporate online learning executives and academic ALN experts.
The meeting considered what role academic ALN might play within the five primary corporate learning categories: (1) generic education programs, (2) industry-specific education and training, (3) generic training programs, (4) tool-specific programs, and (5) firm-specific training. Since universities and corporations have already established a successful record of collaboration in category 1 (generic education), we believe the other four categories also offer promise for newly formed partnerships.
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