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IT Training Magazine

IT Training - Winter 2009 IT Training is the only UK magazine dedicated to the IT training market. 

IT Training is a quarterly printed publication and a monthly e-newsletter. It contains a mix of news, feature articles, comment and reviews aimed primarily at buyers of IT training.

Want to contribute? Articles, comments and other contributions are always welcome for consideration. Contact the editor for more details.

PDF fileLatest Issue - Winter 2009

Latest Features

  • People looking at x-rays
    Training up staff to consistently deliver the best through e-learning is helping Agfa HealthCare lead the world of medical imaging and information technology.
  • Dave McKay
    As someone who progressed from junior programmer to CIO over a 30-year IT career, Dave McKay believes that IT training must encompass business and leadership elements from an early stage. Here he explains why, from his own experience.
  • Person using Windows 7
    A few months after the launch of Microsoft’s latest operating system, Windows 7, Gary Flood takes a look at how easy adoption is for its users.
  • Child using a computer
    In 2010, BETT, the world’s largest education in technology show, is set to showcase a range of new technologies that will help to progress students’ academic careers. Here is an insight into a few of the innovative and engaging twenty-first century learning solutions that will be presented at BETT.

Audio

Key players discuss hot topics in the UK IT training arena in the IT Training podcast.

Columnists

Live online learning is hardly a new phenomenon, with a heritage extending to some 10 years or so. While its use is widespread (as much as 10 per cent of all formal training in the US is carried out this way), it can sometimes be held back by the multitude of labels by which it is described: remote instructor-led training, synchronous e-learning, virtual classroom training, and so on.
Go on - admit it! You see the word ‘governance’ and you heave a heavy sigh. It’s one of the costs of doing business, and often we try to do as little of it as possible and concentrate on compliance instead (which is actually a sub-set of governance anyway).