As e-learning platforms and content evolve toward open standards, the capability to surface learning seamlessly within the
context of enterprise applications and business processes is almost within reach.
This idea of just-in-time, contextual learning is driven by pure-play e-learning technology vendors, such as
Saba, Docent, and Plateau Systems, as well as platform vendors IBM and Oracle.
IBM last month unveiled a new LMS (learning management system) consisting of e-learning components designed to connect to
other applications and learning products.
The J2EE-based IBM Lotus Learning Management System runs on WebSphere and DB2 and supports Web services standards SOAP and
XML. The intent is to leverage Web services to embed e-learning functionality into business applications such as CRM and ERP,
according to Andy Sadler, director of e-learning at IBM Lotus Software in
Cambridge,
Mass.
Integration flexibility is gathering steam as most e-learning technology vendors move away from proprietary systems toward open standards, either by architecting new systems from scratch or adding support
for J2EE or Microsoft .Net.
Plateau Systems last year rolled out Version 4.1 of Plateau 4 LMS built on a J2EE/EJB architecture. Other e-learning leaders including
Saba, Docent, and Oracle also have standards-based platforms.
With the foundation of an open architecture in place, the door is opening to Web services — and the related capability to
surface e-learning as events within other applications.
Oracle recently introduced a Web services version of its Oracle iLearning platform. Version 4.2 leverages Web services for
integration and bolsters analytics capabilities between systems. A forthcoming update to the product due mid-year will increase
linkages between the LMS and the Oracle E-Business Suite, specifically weaving learning management into customer service and
project management applications, according to Bill Dwight, vice president of learning management applications at Oracle, in
Redwood Shores, Calif.
Saba, which added support for Web services last year in Version 3.4, sees open standards as a tool to quantify e-learning ROI.
"Web service support means that we can interact with apps, process, and information across the enterprise," said David Andrews,
senior director of product marketing at
Saba, also in
Redwood
Shores
. "When you can look at the data across all those different systems and see the ROI of learning, it becomes a lot more powerful."
Although many vendors' systems are capable of Web services-based integration, the nirvana of just-in-time e-learning in the
context of different applications is still sought, according to Jennifer Vollmer, research analyst at Meta Group, in
Stamford,
Conn.
"Certainly Web services will make [integration] easier and will encourage LMS [users] to do more data feeds and look at real-time
integration with business applications," Vollmer said, adding that, eventually, "e-learning will be invisible middleware.
It will be taken for granted and surfaced at a portal or application [via] Web services. [But] this is a vision not a reality
yet."
In addition to platform standards, e-learning content standards are also being hashed out. SCORM (Sharable Content Object
Reference Model), first developed by the Department of Defense, is a set of specifications that aim to enable interoperability
and reusability of Web-based e-learning content. A draft of SCORM Version 1.3 is under development.
Oracle is spearheading an effort to standardize Web services for e-learning. The IMS Global Learning Consortium aims to provide
standard Web service APIs to learning management functions, according to Oracle's Dwight. The charter for this new standards
effort will be up for ratification vote later this month.