Wes Recommend online training. I work at University of Kansas. We use Struts 2 in many of our Java web applications. I think online training would be easier to get approved in this difficult economy.
A basic and advanced course would be good. I also think some 60-90 minute modules on a focused topic (eg integrate Spring and Struts 2) for a relatively low cost ($15) would be useful. I know that I'd pay $15 for a short class that is going to save me hours of learning something on my own. Often I'm put on a project where the previous development team used some technology that I wasn't familiar with and I'd have to do quite a bit of research to get myself up-to-speed. These 60-90 minute modules can be pre-recorded eLearning sessions with PDF notes and example code students can download. To help attract learners, you could also offer 30 days email support for people who take the module (though that might lead to a lot of "can you fix my Struts 2, Hibernate, Spring application...") You may want to research using Adobe's Acrobat Connect Pro and eLearning. I did some online training with an instructor who used those tools and it worked very well. Bruce -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/-friday--training-for-Struts-2-tp23887650p23892192.html Sent from the Struts - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: user-unsubscr...@struts.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: user-h...@struts.apache.org