Forum Discussion
eLearning, E-learning, E-Learning or e-Learning?
Anyone know which is correct?
Rutwin Geuverink said:
- Google gives about 12,200,000 results for "elearning", and about 17,300,000 results for "e-learning". This would indicate that "e-learning" is more common than "eLearning" - unless the extra 5 million references were all coming from online discussions about the frequent misuse of "E-learning"
LOL That could very well be the case, Rutwin.- VasilyIngoglyCommunity Member
It's e-learning in Horton's "E-Learning by Design" and Clark's and Mayer's "e-Learning and the Science of Instruction" (and E-Learning in headlines/section titles in each). That's the convention I use when I mention it.
- RutwinGeuverinkCommunity Member
Happy eXmas Everyone!
- KimberlyVallierCommunity MemberUntil they decide to drop the dash like I believe what happened with email finally.
Christophe Breemersch said:
I guess Oxford dictionary is the one to follow?
http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/e-learning?q=elearning
So: e-learning.
Kind regards,
Christophe
- LeahHemeonCommunity Member
Another vote for eLearning. We dropped the hyphen internally when we started developing content for our LMS about 4 years ago. We needed consistency so landed on eLearning and have stuck with it ever since. I agree with everyone else that it shouldn't matter what you call it as long as you're consistent. I also remember when we all used a hyphen for email I suspect, as others have suggested, that we'll drop the hyphen but I imagine eventually also the capital 'L'. I wonder how long it'll take?
Just my 2 cents.
PS... hmm... should probably stop using "cents" since the penny's been eliminated in my currency... soon no one will know what that means! Ahhh... evolution.
- leorakleinCommunity Member
i think elearning is right
- NicknaCommunity Member
Bruce Graham said:
I suspect that the term e/E/E-/e- learning might become redundant over time.
I know some people still talk about "email", (or is it e-Mail, or e-mail....anyway), a lot of people now just say "mail".
After all we "text" and "message", (not an "e" in sight). I suspect we will just start to talk about training..."...oh, and here's the url".
I think the delivery mechanism will become redundant eventually, but not sure how or when this one will play out.
HappE Christmas
Just 'learning' or 'training stuff' is easier to say for your average person.A point to remember is this 'The iphone is not the last phone to made.'
Eventually there will be another form of learning coming along and we'll be saying 'Do you remember elearning?...Oh yeah..)
Nicholas
- PedroFernandezCommunity Member
Wow, there are a lot of posts on this subject!
I tend to follow the organizational stance on the word with one exception: if we use the hyphenated version (e-learning) in a title (of any kind), then we should go with all capitals or captilize the L (example: E-LEARNING or e-Learning).
Personal preferance? e-learning
- Alison-LCommunity Member
Okay, so a lot of this discussion seems to be focused around the use (or not) of the hypen between "e" and "learning."
However, given the number of job titles that now BEGIN with ... it. Is there now a generally accepted way to call oneself , for example, which would it now be considered...
E-learning Developer ?
E-Learning Developer ?
eLearning Developer ?
e-Learning Developer ?( I recently got busted for calling myself an eLearning Instructional Designer, but then, two jobs later.... Elearning Developer... in my resume, and I/m trying to correct it)
THANKS!
Alison
- JohnCurranCommunity Member
Tried REALLY hard to resist joining in on this thread but as it's a term I have to use every day the inconsistency of use is annoying to say the least. Clearly like all languages English is constantly developing but making stuff up just so you can be consistent in your own organisation is not a brilliant way to go.
Hyphenation is an accepted solution in English for creating new hybrid words. E-mail and e-learning are examples where the hyphen has a role to play. See below:
"As ‘e’ represents ‘electronic’, e-mail is formed from two words, so this suggests that we should not then run one into the other to form ‘email’. It is a compound noun, where the first adjectival element is reduced to a single letter, just like T-bone steak and not Tbone!" Source: http://www.future-perfect.co.uk/grammar-tip/is-it-e-mail-email-e-mail-or-email/
Most dictionaries seem to use e-learning as the main entry but list other spellings too. Eventually these words might lose their hyphens - email for example is listed in the OED as email with e-mail listed as an alternative usage so clearly in that case the tipping point has been reached.
I personally prefer to keep the hyphen, for now at least, but what I really don't like (and Tom Kuhlmann agrees) is 'eLearning' or indeed 'e-Learning'. There is no precedent in the English language (wherever you are on planet Earth) for inserting a capital letter into a noun. This is something only marketing people do when dreaming up trendy new product names!
- NancyWoinoskiSuper Hero
:)