learning framework could be accessed all over the
world.
Besides the technological solutions for
knowledge management described above, there are
several scientific and research efforts that have been
made in order to help society and its institutions to
deal with information and knowledge management,
following some of the most relevant that have some
connection with authors’ proposal are briefly
described.
elearningeuropa.info (European Commission
2009): It is an initiative of the European
Commission’s Directorate-General for Education
and Culture, aiming to promote the use of IT for
lifelong learning; it is focused to promote the use of
multimedia technologies and Internet at the service
of education and training. It offers an open platform
where its users can obtain information, share
experiences, and discuss ideas.
InCaS - Intellectual Capital Statement for
Europe (InCaS Consortium 2009): It is a
collaborative business project between leading
academic institutes, such as London School of
Economics and Political Science, Fraunhofer
Institute and Polytechnic University of Catalonia
(UPC), and a number of SME associations in five
countries working with SME companies. InCaS aims
to develop a way of being able to understand, value
and represent Intellectual Capital for the benefit of
companies internally but also to outside groups such
as the financial community for further and better
exploitation.
e-Learning Research Group at UCM (E-UCM
2009): This research group is part of the Department
of Software Engineering and Artificial Intelligence
at the Complutense University of Madrid. Its
research is focused on developing methods,
techniques and tools to simplify the production and
maintenance of standards-compliant educational
applications and e-learning systems. In this line, the
<e-UCM> group is involved in several projects in
the e-learning arena, where the key aspects are web-
based systems applied to education.
As can be seen, most prominent companies in
the IT area have focused their efforts to transfer
knowledge mainly using e-learning solutions, they
are not addressing at all the necessity of manage the
intellectual capital of organization in a very effective
manner and promote the development of transactive
memory systems. From the technological point of
view, despite the evolution of information
technologies, there are some issues that must be
addressed in order to improve the learning
experience, to encourage knowledge sharing and to
foster intellectual capital management towards the
development of transactive memory systems.
Following is a list of some aspects that could be
improved in the existing technological solutions and
that want to be covered by authors’ proposal:
(1) They lack of learning contents based on
standards, like SCORM (Advanced Distributed
Learning 2009), to make easier their incorporation in
existent e-learning and training environments. (2)
Most of the content is incompatible with the
accessibility rules and policies defined by the World
Wide Web Consortium (2009). (3) The knowledge
units or training contents are static, their knowledge
does not evolve as the organisation does, so that,
feedback from knowledge users is not always taken
into account to improve the learning experience. (4)
Multiplatform or multi-device access is not ensured.
(5) Knowledge presented by the existing
technological solutions is not connected with the
strategic objectives and business goals of the
organization, so that it is not possible to measure the
return of investment on training. This fact could
discourage organizations to invest on knowledge
management initiatives. (6) There are no
connections between the knowledge that people
acquire through training courses and the know-how
of the organizations. This leads to squander the skills
and knowledge that are learned in training or
learning courses when they want to be used at work.
From the scientific point of view, some of the
unsolved issues encountered in the existing solutions
are the following: (1) There is a gap between the
training and learning resources that are used to
transfer knowledge and the know-how of
organizations, despite both are an essential part of
the intellectual capital of institutions. (2) Most of the
organizational knowledge remains as tacit
knowledge; this is another gap that must be covered
in order to allow the creation of an effective strategy
to represent organizational knowledge in order to
transform that knowledge into intellectual capital
and to create a transactive memory system. A
mechanism to encapsulate, store, share and find the
explicit and tacit knowledge of institutions in a
formal and structured is needed. (3) Nowadays most
of the know-how of organizations is inaccessible and
unusable, regardless it is represented in some way.
(4) The investment to provide to institutions a new
culture that promotes the identification of learning
and knowledge assets with the appropriate
technological focus on human assets and their social
relationship is a investment which return of
investment is nowadays intangible.
It can be conclude that current technologies are
so powerful, nevertheless they are still unable to
TRANSACTIVE MEMORY SYSTEM PROPOSAL TO FOSTER COLLABORATIVE LEARNING AND
KNOWLEDGE SHARING INTO ORGANIZATIONS
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