The business of education

Published: 26 November 2000 y., Sunday
According to Training magazine, nearly two-thirds of all corporate-training expenses involve accommodations and travel in getting to and from a training site. Traditional corporate-training firms still fill classrooms across the country and will likely continue to do so for many years to come. In fact, traditional classroom learning still commands almost 90 percent of the corporate-training market. However, recent trends show this changing throughout various industries in the near future. According to GartnerGroup, in the health industry, e-learning was zero percent of the market in 1999, vs. 10 percent in 2000, and is projected to be 15 percent in 2001. Within the education industry, e-learning was 10 percent in 1999 and 13 percent in 2000, and is projected to be 30 percent in 2001. In training programs at distribution companies, it was 7 percent in 1999, moving toward 30 percent in 2001. According to the International Data Corp., the total corporate-training market is $66 billion, and this will continue increasing at an unspectacular but steady rate of roughly 5 percent per year for the foreseeable future. The market for Web-based corporate training will increase from $2 billion today to $11.5 billion in 2003.
Šaltinis: upside.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

On the establishment of a new Tallinn-based university

Three Tallinn higher educational institutions considering merger more »

Teachers to get raise in September

The Cabinet of Ministers today directed the Ministry for Finance to allocate LVL 2.88 million from the national budget to increase teacher salaries as of Sept. 1. more »

Saudis to replace 2,000 expat teachers this year

The Ministry of Education has decided to terminate the services of 2,000 expatriate teachers at the beginning of the new school year and replace them with Saudi nationals. more »

Ask MyRichUncle to Pay for School

The rising cost of college tuition has many parents wondering how they will pay more »

Britain supports Latvian language training program

A cooperation agreement was signed with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) at the British Embassy in Riga today for a donation of GBP 50,000 to the National Latvian Language Training Program. more »

College Knowledge Via the World Wide Web

Student-oriented Web sites are making the grade. more »

UNICEF report

Latvian youth, according to a report by UNICEF's Innocenti Research Centre in Italy, are increasingly viewing education as a key to a better future. more »

Hugher pensions every year

Estonian Parliament on Dec. 13 passed a state pension insurance bill that foresees indexation of pensions more »

Latvian students on par with Americans in math, science

Eighth-grade students in Latvia's native-language schools performed about as well as American students in a recent study of mathematics and science achievement. more »

The business of education

Training choices and e-learning more »