An interview
with Bob Dignen by Ian McMaster [excerpt]
"Learning
to Collaborate," in Business Spotlight, 1/2013 (January-February), pp.
40-43.
[Ian McMaster]"Another paradox is on the training side, between the increasingly complex needs of learners and the pressures from purchasing departments for standardized training."
[Ian McMaster]"Another paradox is on the training side, between the increasingly complex needs of learners and the pressures from purchasing departments for standardized training."
[Bob Dignen] "Exactly.
Companies want standardized, low-cost, webbased global solutions.
"They are buying
simpler versions of business English training at a time when a more complex, more
sophisticated variant is needed. And I’m also not convinced about the idea of just-in-time
training.
When you’re talking about
deeper
behavioural change, I don’t think you achieve it by looking at your
mobile on the train, or visiting a website or getting a word per day. These are
complementary at best, but certainly no substitute for the more sophisticated training
that I think is required.
"Technology has
got a real place in keeping up motivation in language and communication learning.
But
the problem is it’s being seen as a substitute, and that’s the major
error that companies are making.
"But maybe as
technological costs fall, we will see an ability to deliver sophisticated
content in an engaging way, rather than simple content in a rather unimaginative
way, which is where I feel we are at the moment with a lot of the products."