All Aboard E-Learning At Air, Rail Companies
American Airlines and Union Pacific see cost efficiencies in online trainingAirlines and railroads have something in common beyond the fact that they're all about moving people and things from one place to another. Some of the biggest players in these heavily regulated industries are finding that E-learning and learning-management systems provide a cost-effective way to keep employees up-to-date on new regulations or industry certifications and to maintain records of when they've completed training.
American Airlines last week began offering annual flight-safety certification classes to 24,000 flight attendants using IBM's Lotus LearningSpace product. The airline also will use the software's learning-management capabilities to monitor course completion in a centralized database. American says the deployment will help it save on training costs and gain efficiencies. For example, attendants now can log on to a Web site during a layover anywhere in the world for four short-segment classes to attain the federally mandated certification.
More Insights
White Papers
- Mobile BI: Actionable Intelligence for the Agile Enterprise
- How To Regain IT Control In An Increasingly Mobile World - by BlackBerry
Reports
More >>Webcasts
- Maximize ROI with Database Consolidation onto Private Clouds
- Server Virtualization Gets Relief From Tivoli Storage Manager for Virtual Environments
Starting Jan. 1, Union Pacific Railroad is going to begin certifying that 18,000 train-service employees across 23 states are compliant with federal regulations via a new E-learning system. This month, it replaced a learning-management system from Pathlore Inc. with one from Plateau Systems Ltd. and will integrate that with its PeopleSoft 7.5 human-resources system, eliminating the need to manually update HR records once a course is completed.
That opens another door, says Kevin Naylor, Union Pacific's assistant VP of HR planning and development, for the railroad to integrate its payroll and learning systems to automatically compensate employees for passing certain skills tests.
Related Reading
| To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy. | |
|
|
T-Shirt Giveaway: Each week we're selecting one great comment from our readers. The author of the comment will receive an InformaitonWeek Community t-shirt. So get posting! |
Subscribe to RSSResource Links
This Week's Issue
Technology Whitepapers
- Mobile BI: Actionable Intelligence for the Agile Enterprise
- Creating the Enterprise-Class Tablet Environment - by Yankee Group
- How To Regain IT Control In An Increasingly Mobile World - by BlackBerry
- Red Alert: Why Tablet Security Matters - by BlackBerry
- New Visual and Wizard-Driven Paradigms for Exploring Data and Developing Analytic Workflows












