This article defines the business metrics like proficiency, speed to proficiency, time to proficiency, time to competence, accelerating time to proficiency, accelerating speed to proficiency and accelerated proficiency in a well-rounded description based on research.
This article shares the research findings in one study and describes 3 powerful workplace learning strategies which have proven to shorten time to proficiency of employees and explains a model to shorten time to proficiency leveraging these strategies.
This research study revealed 5 powerful classroom-based instructional strategies to accelerate speed to proficiency of employees in complex job skills. Segmentation of tasks, self-guided pre-work, scenario-based contextualization, emotional loading/involvement and time-spaced chunked sessions.
This article analyzes typical proficiency curve and suggests 4 potential approaches that can accelerate proficiency in workplace skills. Accelerate proficiency-based training, accelerate on-the-job experience, accelerate proficiency with restructured training and combining multiple approaches.
In this research-based article, an instructional design model and 9 most promising e-learning methods are described which can be used to design a curriculum to accelerate proficiency at the workplace.
M-Lab provides the largest collection of open Internet performance data on the planet. As a consortium of research, industry, and public-interest partners, M-Lab is dedicated to providing an ecosystem for the open, verifiable measurement of global network performance. Real science requires verifiable processes, and M-Lab welcomes scientific collaboration and scrutiny. This is why all of the data collected by M-Lab’s global measurement platform are made openly available, and all of the measurement tools hosted by M-Lab are open source. Anyone with time and skill can review and improve the underlying methodologies and assumptions on which M-Lab’s platform, tools, and data rely. Transparency and review are key to good science, and good science is key to good measurement.
On October 5, 1644 (or according to the old julian calendar September 25), Danish astronomer Ole Christensen Rømer was born. He is best known for making the first quantitative measurements of the speed of light.
S. Mahadev Patil K. Journal of Scholastic Engineering Science and Management, 1 (1):
14-22(Januar 2021)@articlemahadev2021influence, title=Influence of Hardening Process Over Modified Heat-Treated Carbon Steel Cutting Tool Materials, author=Mahadev Patil K, Suresh Kumar, journal=Journal of Scholastic Engineering Science and Management, volume=1, number=1, pages=14--22, year=2021, publisher=Jsesm.