Jane Hart, founder of the Centre for Learning & Performance Technologies (C4PT) site is compiling this year’s list of Top 10 Tools for Learning. I think that it’s a worthwhile exercise to contribute your list if you feel strongly, as I do, that the more exposure learning professionals have to the range of tools at our disposal, the more effectively we can develop effective learning solutions for our customers.
C4PT is a fantastic resource for those new to e-learning, as well as seasoned professionals looking to expand their content development toolkit. I recommend you drop over and have a look at what you can find there.
Michael’s Top 10 Tools (in no particular order. Well, alphabetical.)
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Audacity - I recommend this open source tools to subject matter experts who wish to create podcasts and / or software demos when using a Rapid E-Learning approach. It’s easy to install and use and enables SMEs and training professionals to create high quality audio quickly and efficiently.
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Adobe Acrobat Connect Enterprise - I could have picked any from the range of Adobe Flash-based content development tools, but I chose this application because of it’s multifunctionality, and because it manifests what Flash, Presenter, Dreamweaver etc can do. Enables collaboration, content storage, management, distribution, and (a certain degree of) tracking. A powerful platform to enable learning professionals and organisations to distribute informational and training content effectively.
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Adobe Captivate - A SERIOUS authoring tool for demos, simulations, evaluation, and scenarios-based learning
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Blogs - The platform doesn’t matter, but the concept of providing a means to create, share, and deliver content is the basis for a new way of learning.
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Del.icio.us - Personal bookmarking at its best. If, like me you work on a number of machines in a number of locations, it is useful to access stored links and documents from a browser regardless of where you happen to be, once you have an internet connection.
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MindJet Mind Manager Pro - I built the framework for my Master’s thesis in Mind Manager. A powerful intermediary in developing ideas, concepts, and course design.
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Moodle - Already an institution in institutions! Martin Dougimas’s erstwhile thesis project continues to meet the learning management requirements of a range of organisations. I just love the idea of framing Social Constructivism in such an useful environment.
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PageRank - A technology that has its critics, but provides us with the ability to carry out a search in Google, MSN, Yahoo! etc safe in the knowledge that the returned results are not just an undifferentiated list of keyword hits, thus enhancing the relevance of the search.
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Sony Vegas Video - Easier to use than Premiere, more powerful than MovieMaker; Vegas is my post-production “weapon of choice” for 90% of the video elements that appears in courseware developed in my organisation. Whether you’re just “topping and tailing” a piece of video or creating the elements for a sophisticated soft skills course, Vegas is a must.
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TextPad - I would have chosen pen and paper, but decided to keep this list digital; TextPad is an advanced text editor that enables users to create and edit text documents, XML, JavaScript and other interpreted content without the extraneous “bloat” of word-processing applications. I find it useful to develop content in this stripped-down environment before transferring to Word, PowerPoint, Blogger or some other application for final enhancement and publishing (this list was created in TextPad, for example).
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1 response so far ↓
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Rina Tripathi
// Apr 1, 2008 at 7:27 am
Nice list, very relevant but I have yet to use most of these.
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