Monday 23 November 2020

HR Learning: 23 Nov, 2020

 1.

Randstad Skilling Academy launched by NIIT and Randstad India

 

The new learning platform will reskill candidates to ensure they remain industry relevant. National Institute of Information Technology (NIIT), a global skills and talent development company, has partnered with Randstad India, a leading HR-service platform to launch the Randstad Skilling Academy (RSA). The objective of RSA is to reskill candidates and help them cope with evolving business models by ensuring their skills remain industry-relevant. This comes at a time when industries are grappling with remote working and hiring owing to the pandemic. The Academy will further offer next-generation IT skilling and better preparedness to take on the ‘new-normal’, based on feedback received from clients across India. StackRoute, under NIIT, will collaborate with RSA to design programmes and deliver them wherever necessary. Enrolled candidates will be well trained, upskilled and cross-skilled in upcoming technologies to increase their employability.

2.

NEC Technologies India and Jaceex Ventures collaborate to improve employability of North East India’s youth

 

The partnership will expose the youth to the Japanese way of working and culture, making them more employable and ready for opportunities in Japanese organisations. NEC Technologies India (NEC India) and Jaceex Ventures LLP— which operates the Japan Centre of Excellence (JACEEX) — have collaborated to launch a joint training programme for the youth of North East India. Approximately, 1000 participants are expected to benefit from this training programme in the coming years, which will expose them to the Japanese language, culture and business practices. The partnership will see NEC working as knowledge partner through its language and intercultural training academy, NEC Japanese Language Academy (NJLA), while JACEEX will set up the Jaceex Japanese Language Academies (JJLA) centres in various cities of the North East. Currently, JACCEX operates one nodal academy in Guwahati, Assam. NEC India and JACEEX will also train students from different universities and colleges in the North East region. Working in the area of integration of IT and network technologies, Japan-based NEC is backed by over 100 years of expertise in technological innovation, to provide solutions for empowering people, businesses and society. Having begun operations in India in the 1950s, it has expanded its business in India from telecommunications to public safety, logistics, transportation, retail, finance, unified communication and IT platforms, serving across governments, businesses as well as individuals.

 

3.

Why organisations must practise immersive learning

 

Immersive learning provides learners with an engaging environment that is highly interactive, both virtually as well as physically, putting them in the middle of a learning experience. With the uptake of increased digitisation within organisations, there is a shift in skill requirements for the future workforce. Learning and Development (L&D) professionals have realised that in order to enhance the absorption and retention of skills and knowledge to the maximum, they need to help learners or employees experience things first hand. However, this is not possible at all times, and hence, it is essential to create simulated or artificial environments around learners and employees that allow them to learn as if from a real experience. This is where ‘immersive learning’ comes into play. It provides learners with an engaging environment that is highly interactive, both virtually and physically, putting them in the middle of a learning experience.

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