E-learning: Which Effects on Socialization
in a Work Team?
Ewan Oiry
Labour Economics and Industrial Sociology (LEST), 35 Avenue Jules Ferry - 13626
Aix en Provence cedex, France
Abstract. E-learning tools appear to be an attractive way to help HR become a
real business partner. The argument the most often developed to support this
linkage derives from the fact that E-learning might propose a new way of
dispensing training which would be more effective than the classic one. With
several case studies carried out in a number of large French Banks, this paper
attempts to demonstrate that to be effective this tool requires a strong reflection
on the socialization process of learners.
1 Introduction
Over the past fifteen years or so, work on the factors of corporate competitiveness has
established that Human Resource Management (HRM) is a strategic lever for the
improvement of the performance [3], [17]. So as to respond to this challenge, HRM is
making the effort to develop new tools. In this domain, the Information and
Communication Technologies (ICT) would seem to be the most promising. Indeed,
the HR intranets, cooperation tools or E-learning enable HRM to propose to its
customers – internal or external – individualized contents, adapted to their individual
needs. But the effectiveness of those tools is globally uncertain. Some researchers
attribute their effectiveness to the fact that they propose a new way of organizing,
others link it to their capacities of costs savings, etc.
From the example of E-learning, a literature review and several case studies
1
realized
in some French Bank will enable us to show that the socialization of learners must be
taken into account to develop a bit further the reflection on E-learning tools
effectiveness.
2 Literature Review
After a brief definition of e-learning, we will show that the supposed superior
effectiveness of e-learning is usually justified by the fact that it propose a new kind of
1
Data used in this paper have been collected with F.Delay (CM International), C D’Esterno
(CM International), Gérard Godefroy (Alpha-Secafi) and Alain Petitjean (Alpha-Secafi).
Oiry E. (2007).
E-learning: Which Effects on Socialization in a Work Team?.
In Proceedings of the 1st International Workshop on Human Resource Information Systems, pages 75-84
DOI: 10.5220/0002413500750084
Copyright
c
SciTePress
“training model”. By underlying that this new “training model” has effects on
socialization of learners process, we will propose the idea that this fact must be taken
into account if we want to propose a global evaluation of e-learning effectiveness.
2.1 Definition and Potentialities of E-learning
The American Society for Training and Development’s E-learning glossary defines E-
learning as “a wide set of applications and processes, such as web-based learning,
computer-based learning, virtual classrooms, and digital collaboration” [16]. E-
learning hence covers all the tools which enable an individual to train learners at a
distance [12]. But this definition shows that behind this term, different tools are to be
found [11] which give rise to uses which do not have the same effect on the individual
learning process. Nevertheless, beyond this diversity, certain common features may
be identified. E-learning enables the learner to avoid the stumbling block of the unit
of time, place and action which is an extremely limiting feature of the classic mode of
training: a training course takes place at a precise moment in time, in a single place
and with an identical content for all the learners.
E-learning, in fact, enables each learner to train himself when he wants to, where he
wants to, when his own professional and/or personal constraints allow him to do so,
with the greatest degree of effectiveness. E-learning is also typically referred to as an
asynchronous learning environment [27]. E-learning also allows learners to train
themselves without necessarily being restricted to the same place [19]. It is thus very
interesting to train a small number of people dispersed throughout a country or even
at the scale of a continent or the world (experts, for example) or on the other hand to
train a large number of people spread out in a network (the counter clerks in a
banking network, for example). Finally, E-learning above all enables learners to be
offered an individualized training content [23], [29]. Placed partly under the control
of the learners [9], these tool enable them to decide upon the knowledge that they
wish to develop and what they consider they already master. E-learning offers the
possibility of a large degree of autonomy for the trainee in the construction of his own
training course. E-learning, in this way, enables the trainer to determine, fulfil and
even predict the needs of the learner [21]. He thus avoids a major pitfall of classic
training: the alignment of the trainer on an «average» learner who, in most cases, does
not correspond with any of the learners really present in the group he has in front of
him [23].
More fundamentally, E-learning would appear to be the solution which enables the
elimination of barriers imposed by the traditional classroom and overcome problems
associated with traditional learning. Traditional education has always been very
heavily criticized [6], [22] because the model of the classroom is fundamentally
considered as dysfunctional [1], [24]. It is in fact characterized by teacher-directed
learning where the teacher assumes a dominant role in the learning environment and
thus controls the information that is to be “transmitted” to the students [14], [15].
Therefore, it largely ignores the requirements of learners. On the other hand, E-
learning offers a learner-centered model where learners develop their capacity to find
the knowledge they want to grasp by themselves and thus acquire problem-solving
76
competences which will be directly useful in their professional life [25]. In this work,
it would therefore appear to be clear that the main interest in E-learning is its capacity
to act as an impulse for a new conception of training which enables the trainee to go
beyond the limits inherent in the classic training model.
2.2 Socialization of Learners and E-learning Effectiveness
Socialization is usually considered as a resource in a learning process. With e-
learning, we do not have this resource anymore. In our point of view, the disappearing
of this resource must be integrated in the reflection about e-learning effectiveness. To
investigate more precisely this situation, we propose to use Dubar’s conceptualization
[10]. This author showed that training was a succession of extremely singular
moments for employees, singular moments in their professional career. Indeed,
training is not only a moment when they acquire new knowledge, they are also
moments when they “socialize” themselves, that is to say when they develop their
social and professional identity. At the end of a training session, they know a little
more about a given subject, but they also know a little more about themselves and the
others. They are therefore different, they are other people. For this transformation of
social and professional identity is not produced simply through an individual
reflection about oneself, it is essentially produced through an interaction with others,
these others being as much colleagues in the working team that have been left behind,
when the individual to “goes off to training”, the work colleagues – the same or others
– who will be there after the training session as well as the trained group itself.
Claude Dubar [10] thus describes training as a process of socialization which breaks
down into a double transaction:
- a transaction with oneself, referred to as biographical, where the individual
reflects about himself and makes the effort to build a coherence in his career
between his past (before the training), his present (what he acquires during the
training) and his future (what he will be or wants to be after his training) and
- a transaction with third parties, called relational, where the individual compares
the vision he has of himself with the representations that the others send back to
him of himself. The articulation is often delicate because the third parties (in
particular work colleagues, as well as the family) often have a deformed image of
what we consider ourselves to be. The training itself reinforces this difference
since it helps the individual to develop in his knowledge, in his representations
and in his identity (the biographical transaction contributing to make him
envisage other futures) while the third parties (work colleagues, the family,
friends) do not themselves evolve. As in most cases, they do not follow this
training or any training, they do not themselves develop their own identity. It is
also fairly unlikely that they may make the representation that they have of AN
Other or AN Other, evolve.
In this relational transaction, the only really effective support for each individual who
is living it is the community of learners themselves. Even if they are not all on the
same socialisation trajectory, the learner most often finds within the group of learners,
one or several persons who are living the same type of identity evolution and the same
77
type of shift – often painful– between what they consider they have become and the
way in which third parties consider them [8]. This cohesion between the trained
constitutes a resource to enable them to pass this finally difficult obstacle which is the
training process.
3 Research Objective, Approach and Methodology
Neville K., Heavin C. and Walsh E. affirm that “E-learning is regarded as the “silver
bullet” solution to training issues faced by organizations, despite little quantitative
evidence to support claims of its effectiveness” (p.119) [21]. Sometimes e-learning is
not simply considered as a new training medium among others, it is considered as the
tool which will make the traditional model disappear for it is considered as more
effective for the teaching of learners. From our point of view, this over-rated
expectation, as far as E-learning is concerned, harms the objective evaluation of its
effectiveness.
This research study has analyzed the E-learning tools developed by four large French
banks. Those banks are quite similar. One of them is mutualistic, the three other ones
are strictly private. We studied only retail banking and distribution activities. They all
regroup few thousand of employees (from 14 000 employees for the smallest and
92 000 employees for the biggest). This sector have always had particularly ambitious
HR policies, especially in the training domain [4]. Thus they have for long time
recruited candidates with a limited level of education, proposing them a wide range of
internal training which would enable them to acquire product knowledge as well as
integrate the culture specific to each of these firms and finally proposing them
important career progression. Over the past twenty years, these French banks have
gradually raised the level of diplomas required (recruitment of tellers is thus today at
the BAC + 2 stage (2 years out of high school) but they retain a policy of meaningful
training [4]. One of this bank (Bank B) is clearly in the position of leader in the use of
e-learning tools. For example, they initiate a “E-learning project” since 1995 but we
find comparable practices in all of them and they adopt the same kind of
argumentation about e-learning : they develop it because they are convinced that it is
a more efficient way of organizing training policies.
Banking sector is probably a bit in advance in use of e-learning tools. It is therefore
probable that the use of “virtual classes” or “interactive television” that we about to
mention below would have been impossible to analyze in all sectors of industry or
services. This multi-case study therefore enables the analysis of the most advanced
effects of E-learning and thus the anticipation of the effects which there may be in
future in other sectors of the economy.
In order to provide the data necessary to achieve the objective of the study, formal
interviews were conducted with Heads of the Training Department and main
78
facilitators of the system
2
. The findings that emerged from interviews (16 different
people) conducted are presented in the following sections. A number of advantages
have been identified in the use of elite interviews for qualitative research, “valuable
information can be gained from these respondents because of the position they hold in
social, political, financial or administrative realms” [18]. Semi-structured interviews
were used in this study facilitating the context and flow of the interview process [2],
[28], enabling the researchers to deeply explore the key issues that emerged during
the course of the interviews [5].
With regard to this study, we have benefited by the use of coding techniques and
derived 13 code labels from the interview tapes and have spread the data between
these different themes (see Appendix A). Throughout the coding analysis stage, the
author made a number of changes to the list of codes; the coding stage was a
interactive process through which patterns from the interviews emerged [20]. Initially,
first-level coding was carried out as a data reduction technique summarizing large
segments of data, and finally pattern coding was employed as a way of identifying
core themes across the interviews [20]. The following sections provide a description
of how the effectiveness of E-learning is envisaged and evaluated by the different
players in these large French banks.
4 Empirical Findings on Socialization and E-learning
Effectiveness
After logistical costs savings and technical difficulties, the third difficulty mentioned
by our respondents has not already be investigated by the classic literature on e-
learning. In the four banks studied, it was mentioned that the FLSs had difficulty in
supporting the fact that their employees were being trained in their place of work,
most often on the computer with which they worked every day. A member of the E-
learning project at Bank C confirmed this to us:
… We have received feedback that the FLSs are often on the backs of the employees
when they are being trained on their computer within the agency itself. They often
insist that the employees receive customers, that is that they work rather than get
involved in E-learning.
2
In each bank, we met the “Head of E-learning project” (4 peoples) and members of this
project that this “head of the e-learning project” designate as members who know the best the
content of e-learning tool and uses that are really done of it (6 people). In each Bank, we met
“HR Managers” (4 Peoples) and when it was necessary to complete our informations, we met
“head of the Training Department” (2 people).
All those people were principally asked about HR policies, especially training policies and
tools used to develop those policies. A comparison between new tools of e-learning and
classic training tools was systematically asked. As far as possible, interviewers try to collect
informations based one real uses of tools and not only declarations of intentions, wishes, etc.
79
Considering that training is not directly productive work, the FLSs often consider this
training time as time lost, at least from their point of view as head of a team
responsible for meeting objectives. The mid-term benefits that this training may
produce (including in terms of appointments with customers) would appear to be
negligible compared with the immediate benefits of directly productive work of the
customer advisers.
The paradox is even more dramatic than that. As is underlined by the same Head of E-
learning project in Bank C:
…we often repeat to the FLSs that if the training were to take place “presentially” and
not by E-learning, that would have been worse. The employee would have been
absent from his/her place of work for a whole day or even more given the distances
that he/she most often has to cover to reach the place where the training is given. But
they reply that, at the limit, they prefer that. At least when the person is not there,
he/she is not there. Here, what is difficult for them, is to say to themselves “AN Other
is at the branch but he he/she is not working…”, it is harder for them to accept to say
“AN Other is not there, he is on training”.
5 Discussion
This study is undoubtedly limited because empirical findings lay on only four cases of
firms from only the banking sector. Nevertheless, this difficulty that the FLSs have in
allowing an employee to be trained at the work place is a phenomenon which is:
- Recurrent. We have found it more or less clearly in all the organizations polled.
They all make efforts to find solutions to overcome this difficulty,
- Paradoxical. While E-learning enables employees to be less absent from their place
of work for they save the traveling time and may be trained by respecting the rhythm
of their professional activity, the FLSs would often enough seem to prefer training in
classroom form, that is to say which obliges the employees to travel and therefore be
absent for a longer time
- Badly understood. The literature developed above would not yet seem to have
analyzed this problem. To our knowledge, it has not even been envisaged as such and
even less considered as one of the major limits to the effectiveness of E-learning.
It seems to us sufficiently important to attempt to better understand it. To do that, we
compare it with two new elements: the observation shared by all those we spoke to
that “full E-learning” is not an effective solution and the conceptual point of view of
Dubar on training [10].
By affirming that E-learning proposes a more effective training model, the literature
mentioned above would have us believe that it was intended to completely replace the
classic training model in classroom form. In time, so as to be more effective, the
organizations seemed then to centre themselves on “full E-learning”, that is to say the
use of the E-learning tools to publish the set of their training modules. Whereas all
80
our interviewees converge towards the idea that “full E-learning” is not an effective
solution, the head of the E-learning project at Bank D affirms as follows:
…distance learning is only a complement to traditional training. It is in no way
intended to be the complete substitute for traditional training.
As a matter of interest, these people nevertheless reject “full E-learning” often for
different and at times contradictory reasons. For example, The head of the project at
Bank B rejects “full E-leaning” for he considers that:
…certain training such as behavioral training cannot be envisaged by E-learning. It
can only be done by classroom training…
while Bank A would seem to be satisfied with the planning of management training
(which includes some behavioral training) by E-learning for its SLSs and its FLSs.
Despite a common rejection of “full E-learning”, our respondents do not all support
their viewpoint in the same way. We make the hypothesis (which has to be confirmed
or denied by other works) that these divergences in point of view may be explained by
the fact that those we interviewed still do not see the source of their difficulties
clearly.
The Dubar conceptualization about socialization in training [10] develop above
underlined that when an employee become a learner, he is socialized in a new group :
the group of learners. He also lives a process of socialization different from his classic
one, that means socialization in his team work. By analyzing the training process in
this way, we immediately perceive that training by E-learning deprives the learners in
large measure of this resource which the “group of trained individuals” constitutes.
Isolated individuals, being trained asynchronously and with individualized contents,
those trained by E-learning are doubtless less well supported in the process of the
construction of their identity that those trained according to the classic method of
classroom training. The importance of the “community of learners” is at times
mentioned in literature [7], [13]. It is also sometimes understood by those we spoke
to. The Head of the Training Department of Bank D said the following:
…The people who are undergoing training also have a need to rediscover themselves,
to exchange ideas on their difficulties and that cannot simply be done on a forum. We
have observed that, to be able to exchange ideas, people need to have got to know
each other previously. One does not speak about one’s doubts on a forum with
strangers, people with whom one has not had a coffee during the break.
But this importance of the “group of trained individuals” would seem to us to be
insufficiently well spelt out and taken into account. Indeed, it would seem to us that it
is indeed this diffuse feeling that training is also a moment for the construction of the
identity and creation of social bonding which causes our interviewees to reject “full
E-learning” and not only because of problems of content which will more or less
effectively disappear when faced with the constraints of this type of training. It is also
doubtless, to a certain extent, for this reason that the FLSs have a problem supporting
81
the fact that members of their team undergo training at their place of work on their
normal computer in the sight and knowledge of all their workmates. In fact, this
situation creates an ambiguity (the employee is present but escapes from their line
management control, he integrates the group of trained people while he is physically
in the group of work colleagues) which may effectively put them in difficulty.
In the transformation of the social bond which E-learning training induces, the
transformation of the pedagogical model is a type of transformation of the social bond
(the works [21] and those we interviewed thus observe that E-learning transforms the
role of the trainer) but this is perhaps not the main transformation. The evolution of
the bond with the other trained persons and that of the bond with the working team
are doubtless just as important.
6 Conclusion
E-learning is a new tool available to the HR Department to help better respond to the
demands of its internal customers and help them make HRM really strategic. It is no
more and no less than that. As with the other tools, it has to comply with the
economic demands of profitability and the technical features of the computer
networks of organizations. But, as is shown by the example of the French banks,
mentioned above, on the condition that these aspects of effectiveness of a HR policy
are envisaged serenely, E-learning reveals itself to be perfectly capable of meeting
these challenges.
E-learning may also revolutionize the training model in force in organizations, but
that is not the most current phenomenon and above all, it is not necessarily the most
important. Indeed, the specificity of the tool – E-learning enables distance training, in
asynchronous mode and on an individualized basis – should not have us forget that it
is faced with the classic obstacles of training. This particular moment in the life of
employees is not only a period when they acquire supplementary knowledge which
will enable them later to be more effective in their work, it is also a moment when
they redefine their identities, their bonds with third parties, these third parties being at
the same time the learner colleagues or their work colleagues on a daily basis. By
making the notion of “group of trained personnel” disappear in place and in time, E-
learning poses a new problem to the trained and to the organizers of this training. The
support of the group of trained people would, in fact, appear crucial for the optimal
success of a training session. This collective dimension should be taken into account
in the organization of E-learning so that its effectiveness is strengthened. An
articulation between the classic mode of training and E-learning training would
appear to be a channel of stimulating action to follow to improve the effectiveness of
these tools and make HRM a really strategic entity.
82
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Appendix A
Template used for coding interviews
(Name of Interviewee). (Name of Interview).
This section was used to collect main informations about characteristics and
evolutions of markets, technologies, etc., global strategy of the firm, HR politics.
It was also used to ascertain each interviewee’s background, including their level of
understanding and use of e-learning tools, objectives and results.
Significant points made
This section summarises the important relevant points made by the interviewees.
Interview coding
The main themes extracted from the interviews were organized based on the
following:
HRM human resources management considerations
TP training policies considerations
DDC design and development considerations
SC support and commitment in the implementation of e-learning tools
FF features and functionality of e-learning tools
L limitations in use of e-learning tools
TC Technical complexities involved in development and use of e-learning tools
E Effectiveness of e-learning tools
EE Evaluating the effectiveness of e-learning tools
F Future developments of e-learning tools
EDW Effects on dynamic of work shift
FLS First Line Supervisors reactions to use of e-learning tools
RT Roles Transformations linked to use of e-learning tools
84