Transcript Document

Instructional Design in a
Technological World:
Fitting Learning
Activities Into the Larger
Picture
ICALT Presentation August 6, 2001
Robin Soine
Wisconsin Technical College System Foundation, Inc.
UW Madison, PhD Student in Curriculum and Instruction
Statewide
Performance-based
Learning Model
• An approach to teaching and learning
which requires advance description of
knowledge, skills, and attitudes learners
must achieve on exit from a course or
program
Informed by theory and best practice
1990-1992 development
1992 released
In use statewide by Wisconsin and Michigan, USA
Model
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Model
• Who are the learners?
• What do they need to be able
to achieve?
• How will I know when
they’ve achieved it?
• How will they get there?
WHO
WHAT
WHEN
HOW
Who
• Who are my learners?
• Why are they here?
• What experiences do they
bring?
• What learning deficits do
they have?
• What are their expectations?
Model
WHO
What
• What knowledge, skills, and
attitudes must they achieve?
• How well must they perform
those outcomes?
Model
WHAT
Core Abilities
Competencies
Learning Objectives
Performance Standards
When
• How will my learners know
when they have “arrived?”
• How will their competence be
measured?
• What strategy will I use for
assessment?
Model
WHEN
Performance Assessment
Task
How
Model
• How can I help learners build
competence?
• What activities will I plan?
• How can I address different
learning styles, especially in online
courses?
• How can I use more learnercentered activities?
• How do I design activities around
learning cycle?
Learning Activities
HOW
Model
4 Plan strategies for
HOW they’ll learn
3 Establish how you’ll
1 Identify
learners
measure WHEN they
have achieved
2 Determine WHAT
they must achieve
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How
When
What
Who
Learner
How
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How
Learning Activities:
strategies for mastering specific
learning outcomes
(often thought of as assignments)
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Methods vs. Media
cause learning
Practice
Simulation
Discussion
Presentation
Demonstration
deliver instruction
Methods vs. Media
Methods cause learning, media deliver instruction.
computer
case study
Internet
simulation
discussion
demonstration
teacher
Which cause learning?
text
role play
video
transparencies
practice
What are we doing to the
learner’s mind?
Sensing Memory
selector
large capacity
short duration
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Working Memory
 processor
 powerful
 fragile
short duration
small capacity
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Long-Term Memory
 information storage
large capacity
requires retrieval
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When designing activities
online
• insert frequent practice
• vary the learning format
• design with a bias for learnercentered methods
• provide learning plans
• support all stages of the
learning process
Clark, Ruth.
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Fried Brain Syndrome
Too much information
Too fast
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Cognitive
Overload
Cognitive Overload
Cognitive Overload
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To avoid cognitive
overload:
•break learning
into manageable
chunks
•clear the
working memory
with meaningful
practice
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Vary the Learning
Format
People learn in different ways
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Vary the Learning
Format
Method (Discussion? Simulation?)
Media (Computer? Paper?)
Environment (Outside work group?)
Interpersonal context (F2F? Electronic?)
Feedback (Written? Verbal?)
Givens
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The Learning Cycle
Application Motivation
Practice Comprehension
Stage One: Motivation
Learners:
Focus attention
Answers: “Why do I need
or want to learn this
material?’
Example: (Competency = Critique Speeches )
_____1. Describe characteristics that make a speech or
presentation effective for you. Post your description to the
Discussion for this learning plan.
_____2. THINK about the many ways you have been critiqued by
teachers, family, and friends. How was their feedback helpful or not
helpful? Why was it so? Were strengths and weaknesses both
pointed out? Was it better to hear both or just one of them?
Application Motivation
Practice Comprehension
Stage Two: Comprehension
Learners:
access information they need to perform
target competency
process content in working memory
minimize use of teacher-centered inform
activities such as “listen to a lecture” or
“read the text”
_____3. POST two examples in the Discussion for Learning Plan 6 of
how feedback you received was helpful and not helpful. After reading
what others have written, do you see a pattern to what constitutes good
feedback?
_____4. READ the six criteria to giving effective feedback on pages 6869 in your text. Are any of these already second-nature to you? Are
any of these new to you?
Application Motivation
Practice Comprehension
Stage Three: Practice
(Encode to long-term memory)
Learners:
engage in guided practice
have the opportunity to DO what they
are learning
receive continuing improvement
assessment and feedback
_____5. REVIEW the Speech Evaluation Form while you read a speech
at the website http//:www.schoolforchampions.com/speeches.htm,
www.artofspeaking.com, or another site. If possible, find an online
video of the speech.
Application Motivation
Practice Comprehension
Stage Four: Application
Learners:
apply what they have learned to real
world problems
show that they have learned
set the stage for next learning task
_____6. ATTEND a community/campus speaker (i.e., sermon, lawyer's
arguments, local speaker, etc.). FILL OUT the Speech Evaluation
Form. If it is not appropriate to fill it out during the speech, please do
so as soon as possible.
_____7. WATCH the videotape of your Special Occasion speech.
COMPLETE the Speech Evaluation Form while you view yourself.
Support All
Stages of the
Learning
Process
So, what’s the
teacher’s role?
Inspire
Mentor
Application
Practice
Coach
(guide on the side)
Motivation
Comprehension
Inform
(sage on the stage)
Learner Advantages
of PBL Online
• What is learned is skill based;
not outlines of information
• Expectations are set in advance;
learners plan how to invest time
and energy
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Learner Advantages
of PBL Online
• Grades are based on how well
learners perform skill; not on
how well others perform
• Learners are actively involved
• Learners have documentation
showing skill
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Learning Plan 12
Instructional Materials
Introduction:
Why?
Instructional materials contain the actual instructional content. You us them to communicate
information to learners. . .
Competency
Performance Standards
Develop instructional materials
that support specific learning
activities
Criteria:
•instructional materials are consistent with the core
abilities competencies and learning objectives
•instructional materials support the learning activities
•instructional materials are accurate, complete . . .
What?
Learning Objectives:
a. Explain the effect of learning materials on the instructional experience.
b. Identify the benefits of instructional materials. . .
Learning Activities:
How?
When?
__1. PREVIEW the learning objectives and performance standards.
__ 2. BRAINSTORM a list of characteristics that learners do and do not like about
instructional materials (use the worksheet). . .
__3. VIEW Video Lesson #12 “Instructional Materials.”. . .
Performance Assessment:
__1. SUBMIT the instructional materials you developed in Assignment 12 to your
facilitator for review.
Theory/Practice
Learning Taxonomy
Theorists
Benjamin Bloom, D. Krathwohl, B. Masia, Robert Gagne
Cognitive Processing
Ruth Colvin Clark, Renate and Geoffrey Caine, Sue Berryman,
Patricia Cross, Robert Sylvester
Multiple Intelligence
Howard Gardner
Accelerated Learning
Performance-Based
Learning
Dimensions of Learning
Learning Styles
Learning Cycle
Performance Assessment
Paul Scheele, David Meier
Robert Mager, Michael Schmoker, Ruth Colvin Clark, Ralph Tyler
Robert Marzano
David Kolb, Bernice McCarthy
R. Gagne, Bernice McCarthy
Grant Wiggins, Robert Mager, Michael, Robert Marzano, Donald
Kirkpatrick
Component Display
Theory (classification of
David Merrill
Workplace Skills
A. Carnevale,
content and knowledge)
Instructional Materials
Performance Expectations
Classroom Assessment
Instructional/Learning
Design
Adult Learning
Learning Transfer
F. Kiewra and G.M. Frank,
Robert Mager, Norman Gronlund, Robert Marzano, Robert Gagne
Thomas Angelo, Patricia Cross
Ruth Colvin Clark, William Rothwell and H.C. Kazanas, Walter Dick
and Lou Carey, Curtis Finch and John Crunkilton, Jerrold Kemp,
David Pucel
Jerald Apps, Alan Knox, Malcolm Knowles, Alan Tough
Ruth Colvin Clark
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