e-Learning Industry Group Announces Aims
Seeks to turn words into action to make Europe the
most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy
in the world
Demonstrating
commitment to learning in Europe and a commitment
to public-private partnership, fifteen companies have
come together to help Europe become the most competitive
and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world through
the use of e-learning in schools, universities, the
workplace and homes.
The eLearning Industry Group, born of the May 2001
'eLearning Summit', will work with the European Commission,
national governments - who recently established e-learning
as a priority in forthcoming plans for eEurope 2005
- and academia to undertake innovative projects to
promote e-learning deployment in Europe.
The
industry group will provide advice to the European
Commission and other national governments across Europe
in essential areas such as information technology
and telecommunications infrastructure, open standards
that facilitate the exchange of e-learning content,
development of a sustainable market for e-learning
content and development of crucial professional and
personal skills.
The
founding members of the industry consulting group
- 3Com, Accenture, Apple, BT, Cisco, Digitalbrain,
IBM, Intel, Line Communications, NIIT, Nokia, Online
Courseware Factory, Sanoma WSOY, Sun Microsystems
and Vivendi Universal Publishing - will work closely
in partnership with public institutions such as governments,
schools and training organisations to implement the
four key initiatives, as follows:
1.
Connecting everyone and everything from everywhere
- removing the barriers that prevent people of all
ages and from all sectors of society from having access
to interactive eLearning environments.
2. Adopt and participate in the development of open
standards of eLearning - so that international open
standards, together with technological innovation
and free market competition will deliver solutions
that encourage broad participation in eLearning.
3.
Create the conditions to sustain a commercial market
for eLearning content and development - so that education
and training institutions can buy digital content
and use it as an essential part of delivering eLearning.
4. Increase investment in continuous professional
development of teachers and trainers, enhancing their
status, and helping them develop and understand the
principles for eLearning - ensuring that educators
in all areas of life are recognised and rewarded as
crucial in the successful development of the information
society and a knowledge economy.
Newly
elected chairman of the eLearning Industry Group,
Richard Straub said: "The aim of the industry group
is to turn talk into action. We have developed four
concrete initiatives that will make a positive, fundamental
change in overcoming the hurdles faced by Europe when
it comes to lifelong eLearning. Over the next six
to 24 months, working groups will take charge of each
of these initiatives to make eLearning a reality -
in schools, the corporate environment and at home.
The
aim is for all European citizens - of all ages and
in all walks of life - to benefit and, as a result,
for Europe to build on its traditions of strong educational
institutions to become a world leader in learning
in the digital age."
The
eLearning Industry Group is an open group and welcomes
involvement from other industry players. The composition
of the group will reflect the diversity of industry
representation in the field of eLearning. It will
also be used as a forum to develop industry-wide public
policy recommendations that will be presented to the
national governments of Europe.
May
10th, 2002
 
|