SCORM was written in 2001. It was designed to answer one question: did the learner complete the module? For the infrastructure of that era, that was a reasonable ambition.
Twenty-five years later, we have the ability to capture dwell time per slide, return visits, struggle patterns, real-time quiz responses, and behavioral signals that actually predict performance. SCORM can’t see any of it — not because the data doesn’t exist, but because the standard was never designed to carry it.
This is the case for why the learning standard matters, what organizations are leaving on the table, and what decision-grade data actually looks like when the infrastructure is built to capture it.
Transcript coming soon. Watch the video above for the full content.