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

Euro Faculty Inaugurated at Kaliningrad State University

Wednesday this week, the State University of Kaliningrad got its own EuroFaculty. more »

Shortage of Russian language students

As much as 30 percent of new students of the Russian language at Finnish universities speak it as their mother tongue. more »

Review of the Educational System of Lithuania

Education is the most important factor creating a civil society. How is Lithuania creating its society? This is a short review on educational system. more »

Court’s orders

Two more former secret police in the Baltic states have been found guilty of Stalinist-era crimes against humanity and sentenced to prison. more »

Girls Turned Off By "Nerdy" Image Of IT

Girls and young women in the US are dissuaded from pursuing careers in the high-tech industry by violent electronic games, dull programming classes and the public image of the IT industry as a "nerdy", antisocial wordd. more »

The Most Ancient Courtyard.

...The children played here long before the building of the Egyptian pyramids. more »

Cyber school for Santas

A great Santa Claus isn't born - he's made. more »

Students surf the Web to find money for college

The UCLA link to free scholarship Web sites Tavia Evans hardly knew what the Internet was, let alone how to use it, until her junior year of high school. more »

'End privilege'

Chancellor attacks Oxford admissions. more »

Setting Their Site on Education

A new Web site aims to connect people with continuing education opportunities, making it easier to find the appropriate courses faster and with less hassle. more »