between participants, lecturers and tutors was
English. The tutor followed progress made by each
participant in the e-learning course and maintained
direct and regular contacts with them by e-mail. A
pre-assessment quiz, an intermediate questionnaire
and a final test were prepared in order to assess
participants knowledge before, during and after the
e-learning. The tests were performed on-line by the
participants. Regular contacts between the tutor and
the users were kept in order to exchange information
related to the overall implementation of the pilot
course, to the individual access to the platform by
each participant and to the tuning of the e-learning
contents and platform. Moreover, a forum was
created for each module in order to enable
participants to interact with the tutor and the
teaching staff on specific contents. The platform
included also three additional forum: a forum café, a
technical forum and a news forum in which was
possible to publish useful information. The contents
of the platform were interactive, with full tutorial
assistance available for users, who had the
possibility to interact via a “forum café” and a
“technical forum”. As far as the functionality of the
platform is concerned, interaction modalities proved
to be quite efficient and immediate and the quick
and simple description of the resources provided
through a video tutorial was quite useful. From the
evaluation questionnaires, it emerged that the e-
learning contents, were rated, as a whole, as
efficient, exhaustive, relevant and tuned with the in-
class contents. Following the blended learning
approach, the in-class part of the course aimed at
providing a more in-depth insight of the topics
tackled in the e-learning part. A third level included
country specific parts. For these sessions,
participants were divided into 3 groups in different
classrooms. In-class training was organised into 6-
hours teaching days. Participants were asked to fill-
in evaluation questionnaires at the end of each
training day and at the end of the course in order to
receive an exhaustive feedback on the overall course
organisation and the knowledge acquired.
4 PROJECT IMPROVEMENTS
As shown by the overall active participation during
the implementation of the course, the selection
procedure proved to be valid and it would be
advisable to adopt the same methods for future.
Possible improvements in this respect may
include for instance a more complete information on
the course and selection procedures (indicating
clearly the selection criteria) through the SSPA
website. Moreover, we want to examine the
possibility to adopt the same procedure used by
SSPA. It was possible to identify some suggestions
for improving the learning methods such as:
the e-learning contents could be completed with
other material based on different media
(software or links to relevant websites
presenting statistics or economic data of
interest, slides or data to be examined during
the in-class sessions, videos presenting in-
depth analysis or practical cases) available in
streaming or download mode. The resources
needed in this respect are quite reasonable for
very good results in terms of quality,
processing and connection times;
a better way to contact the tutor for a more
immediate interaction (in the current version,
the tutor can be contacted only by e-mail);
extension of the e-learning course length to two
months. Many participants claimed in their
evaluation questionnaires to have faced
difficulties to follow thoroughly and carefully
the e-learning modules;
introduction of more immediate communication
tools in order to establish a direct line between
tutor, participants, staff and lecturers (chat,
wiki, etc.) and obtain a major involvement
(full immersion);
introduction of a scheduling function or “to do
list” in order to provide information related to
training activities or deepening;
improvement of the monitoring and reporting
features (progress report) in order to provide
participants with a detailed list of
topics/lessons and the scores obtained in tests
and exercises;
elimination of the automatic transfer of
messages from the technical forum to the
whole list of platform users (spam effect).
daily in-class training could be re-organised
laying greater stress on morning activities in
order to leave more time in the afternoon for
study and social activities;
splitting the group of participants not country-
specific sub-groups left a sense of
incompleteness to some participants, who
expressed the need to have a final plenary
session for the general review of the topics
dealt with. Many participants were in fact
interested in gaining an insight of all three
countries.
Participants appreciated the practical approach
adopted as well as the use of case studies, exercises,
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