Remove AICC Remove Expertise Remove IM
article thumbnail

The Ultimate Glossary of eLearning Terms

LearnUpon

The first official eLearning content standard, AICC was developed by the Aviation Industry CBT Committee in 1993 as a CD-ROM based standard. A predecessor to SCORM, AICC was difficult to work with and many steps were required to get content in the format running in a learning management system (LMS). Interoperability. JavaScript.

article thumbnail

Four Industry Announcements

Kapp Notes

Koreen will be joining Ayogo’s executive team and continuing her work in immersive learning design with organizations interested in leveraging technologies to create engaging learning experiences, now with even more expertise and experience in game design as part of Ayogo. eLearning Atlas- a New Way to Navigate the Industry.

Industry 157
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

3 reasons your LMS should be LTI-compliant

Rustici Software

See all of the IMS-certified LTI tools here. Since our beginning, we’ve been at the helm as the experts in SCORM, xAPI, AICC, cmi5, and now, LTI. Simply, put, our eLearning standards expertise saves you valuable development time, allowing you to really focus on what makes your product unique. . What is LTI? Great news!

LMS 59
article thumbnail

Learning and Development Glossary

Petra Mayer

The system also tends to need less in-house technical expertise. Several eLearning standards, including SCORM, xAPI (Tin Can) and AICC, help enhance the interoperability of online learning content and technologies. LTI is a standard created by the IMS Global Learning Consortium. CMI5 (Computer Managed Instruction).

article thumbnail

Five Myths of Social Learning

Xyleme

Leading social media vendors like Jive Software are integrating with the top ECM platforms to provide unified search, workflow, and storage of enterprise and social content, proving a cohesive environment where formal content is supported by an ecosystem of users that contribute expertise and relevant information. The answer is probably no.