"We want to make the Graham Norton of video games," says Kirsty Rigden, the chief executive of Brighton-based FuturLab, which makes PowerWash Simulator. Aspiring to emulate a talkshow host who has a reputation for being affable rather than for setting pulses racing is perhaps an unusual ambition for a gaming studio.
When we rolled out a custom-built company GPT to our 14,000 teammates several years ago, we saw three clear groups emerge. First, there was the 'jump-in-with-both-feet' crowd. These are the early adopters who treat anything new like a shiny toy. Next were the skeptics who wondered how much of an impact AI would have on their daily work lives. And finally, there was a big group that genuinely wanted to learn but didn't know where to start.
A recent study on students' intentions to take online courses highlights that performance expectancy, hedonic motivation, and flexibility are the main reasons why students adopt online learning programs. This finding is like what I have seen in the study of student enrollment trends in higher education. If we want to discover the secret of turning student curiosity into a commitment to completing an academic program, we need to understand the motivations for student course enrollment.
Learning time awareness plays a quiet role in how people think, act, and learn. It shapes how long someone stays focused, when they respond, and how they pace tasks. Many learners use this skill daily without naming it. Skill based arcade gameplay offers a clear way to observe this behavior. Players rely on timing, not chance. Each action depends on when it happens. Over repeated play, players develop a better sense of time perception in games and beyond.
Gathering training feedback is crucial because it shows whether your L&D initiatives are actually making a difference. While attendance metrics and completion rates give you surface-level insights, authentic feedback reveals how learners felt, what they understood, and which areas they struggled with. Feedback also identifies gaps between desired outcomes and real-world results.
In today's digital learning environment, creating engaging and effective e-learning content requires more than just visually appealing graphics. It demands thoughtful structure, purposeful interactive design, and a deep understanding of how learners process information. Interactive experiences are not merely add-ons; they are powerful tools that can transform passive consumption into active learning. This article explores evidence-based strategies for designing interactive e-learning that delivers real learning impact.
Think about the last app you opened today. Netflix probably greeted you with a show that felt uncannily right for your mood. Spotify may have lined up a playlist that matched your energy without you lifting a finger. Duolingo likely nudged you to practice just enough to keep the habit alive, without making learning feel overwhelming. Now compare that to the experience most employees have when they log into a corporate learning platform. The contrast is hard to ignore.