Social learning is a fundamental, age-old method of learning. But it got somewhat lost in the broader adoption of digital learning, especially self-paced e-learning, that happened in the last 20 years, and social learning suffered again during COVID. But, done right, social learning is a highly effective and efficient way to learn.
Our guest in this episode is Nellie Wartoft, founder and CEO of Tigerhall, a social learning platform that’s trying to change how professionals learn from one another in the real world. Nellie talks with Leading Learning Podcast co-host Jeff Cobb about what’s wrong with the current approach to education and how social learning can help, five key aspects of social learning, how to tackle measuring the effectiveness of social learning, and how artificial intelligence can be used to support social learning.
Show notes and a downloadable transcript are available at https://www.leadinglearning.com/episode375.
331: Learning Engineering with Jim Goodell
330: Content Strategy with Hilary Marsh
329: Tool Talk: Social Learning Mixer
328: Identifying Ideal Customers with Pamela Slim
327: LX Strategy with Bucky Dodd
326: Tool Talk: Learning Culture and Learning Ecosystem Snapshots
325: Walking the Path to Learning with Tiffany Crosby
324: A Learner's Journey with Connie Malamed
323: Tool Talk: The Learner Engagement Loop
322: Diving into Digital Badges with Dr. Ginger Malin
321: Learning in the Social Age with Julian Stodd
320: Tool Talk: MIDDLE ME
319: The What and Why of xAPI with Megan Torrance
318: Tool Talk: The Product Value Profile
317: Value-Based Pricing with Dr. Michael Tatonetti
316: Cohort-Based Learning with Shelley Osborne
315: Tool Talk: The Value Ramp
314: Four Essential Career Books with Jerel Bonner
313: Talent Pipeline Management with Jaimie Francis
312: Tool Talk: The Market Insight Matrix
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Commercial Edge: Unleash the Power of People
The emPOWERed Half Hour
NABOR® TALKS
U.S Property Podcast
Aligned Money Show
The Ramsey Show
Planet Money