Samaritans Adopts eLearning
Stirling (UK), January 2009 - The national emotional support charity, the Samaritans, is introducing eLearning to its volunteers across the UK and Ireland. The delivery of cost-effective, face-to-face training is essential for Samaritans, with 17,000 volunteers throughout UK, the Channel Islands, the Isle of Man, and Republic of Ireland.
Nigel Ross, Training and Development Officer for Samaritans, explains: "We extensively researched the industry standard and chose the open source learning-management system Moodle because we were impressed by the robust and continually evolving platform it offers as well as its large user base, including the Open University, NHS, and Cisco."
Moodle allows users to build and administer courses themselves and offers cost savings on license fees, which would have been payable for a proprietary software solution. Nigel attended a two-day Course Creator workshop from specialist consultants HowToMoodle that equipped him with the skills to initiate courses, upload existing content, and design quizzes and wikis.
Nigel explains: "My technical skills are limited, but HowToMoodle made the software very easy to use. Now I'm confident that I can design and administer the courses myself, whilst tailoring them to Samaritans' specific needs, which will be massively time saving."
Initially the charity will be introducing Moodle eLearning to around 2,000 trainees from its 201 branches, including trustees. The Trustees Induction Course covers legal and compliance training such as risk management, and by April 2009, it will be the first course to be translated to the Moodle platform. eLearning will then be rolled out to cover specialist branch roles such as fundraising and publicity and will complement some essential face-to-face training.
Moodle will allow the charity to track users and enable the trainers to see which students are visiting the course and completing the assessments, which will help boost completion rates.
Nigel's role is to build and carry out administration for the courses online, and to promote Moodle to the charity's 17,000 volunteers. He says: "We plan to start slowly and make sure our version of Moodle is as user friendly as possible for volunteers of all IT abilities."