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Book review

Blended learning: how to integrate online and traditional learning

Kogan Page, March 2003
Author: Kay Thorne

Review by Matt Fox, Director of Design, Epic Group plc

In the introduction to her new book, Kay Thorne says that it is written for trainers and development HR professionals, line managers, training consultants, lecturers, learning designers and senior executives. A diverse audience. Maybe it is in trying to address such a diversity of needs that the book falls down, because to my mind it meets the needs of none of these people.

At the outset, in the section on definitions, 'developing an employer brand' is given strong prominence. This seems odd. Branding is a highly relevant issue for implementation, but surely starting with needs and benefits would be more logical?

As the book progresses, my worries multiply. No space at all is given to cost or organisational benefits, factors which surely any reader, whatever their role, would need to consider in designing a blend. In the chapter headed 'How to Support Blended Learning', the author embarks on a whistle stop tour of theories on learning styles, multiple intelligences and Kolb's learning cycle, a selection that feels at best arbitrary and at worst irrelevant. Learning theory is pertinent to all learning but attempting to cover it with integrity and meaningfulness in a matter of paragraphs is, frankly, over-ambitious.

The change management steps outlined are practical - strategy, sponsorship, champion, discussion paper, internal cross-function teams, along with an audit of current provision, identification of suppliers and tendering. However, they represent a well-trodden path for change management and do not address the specifics of organisational and cultural change when related to a shift in the learning culture.

Where you expect to get to the real meat - in the section on designing blended learning - the book again disappoints. The piece on creativity seems bizarre and completely misplaced in such a book. Where there should be practical advice on how performance needs are understood, audiences and content are analysed, media selected, developed and tested, Kaye Thorne explores concepts of inspiration and stages of creativity. In my experience, defining blends does need an element of creativity, but analytical skills play a far more important role. The section on Training Needs Analysis (TNA), when it does come, is cursory. And much store is put on reflection and evaluation - important for sure, but later in the order of priorities.

When Thorne does eventually get into design principles the guidance is superficial and overly e-learning focused. There is no sense of integration and building learning through the blend.

So does this volume have any redeeming features? Well yes. The case studies are excellent. Ranging from Rolls Royce, via Ashridge Consulting to Thinq, they give practical insights into blend implementations from key stakeholders themselves. Indeed Epic's work with Diageo is well documented here.

However, taken as a whole, the book manages not to engage with the main issues relating to blended learning in any coherent or detailed way. It encompasses an eclectic set of topics, but few of these sit comfortably in a relevant discussion about blended learning. And the omission of any discussion of cost benefit analysis and return on investment seems, to my mind, extraordinary.

Okay, I'll stop sitting on the fence… I didn't like it.

See also:
Blended Learning
Consultancy

White papers:
Blended Learning
Blended Learning in Practice
Knowledge Management

Case studies:
Barclays: take the lead...

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Downloads

Corporate brochure: E-Learning at Epic
Data sheets: Epic Consulting, Accessibility Lab, Arena, Blended Learning ROI Calculator (‘The Blender’), Epic P2P, Hosting, Thought Leadership Programme, Testing (x4)
White papers: Blended Learning, Blended Learning in Practice
Survey report: The Future of E-Learning

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