Jim Goodell is the editor of the new book The Learning Engineering Toolkit. He joined us to talk about the growing number of practitioners adapting to this more complete understanding of the work we do, and services Learning Engineering provides for the enterprise.

 

 

Learning Engineer may sound like a fancy new title for instructional designers, but it's so much more than that. The current state of our "industry" is spread quite thin across many domains. There is art, science, technology, humanity, politics, business, and so much more all part of the work we do as corporate training professionals of one form or another. Learning Engineering finally brings it all together under one banner.

Jim Goodell is the editor of the new book The Learning Engineering Toolkit. He joined us to talk about the growing number of practitioners adapting to this more complete understanding of the work we do, and services Learning Engineering provides for the enterprise.

This conversation will appeal to everyone in the L&D, and corporate training industry. And whether you're new to Instructional design or a seasoned professional you'll benefit from understanding the future of Learning Engineering. The Learning Engineering Toolkit is everything you need to get started.

But remember, Learning Engineering is a defined process that, ideally, includes a team of professionals. However, the training army of one can also benefit from knowing the Learning Engineering process.  

Links Shared in the chat:

Learning Engineering Tookit Book on Amazon

IEEE Industry Consortium on Learning Engineering: CICLE

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