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52 eLearning Experts Share their Best Tip for Creating Engaging eLearning
52 eLearning Experts Share their Best Tip for Creating Engaging eLearning
My tip plus 51 others on creating engaging eLearning
Instead of only typical multiple choice questions, try mini-scenarios. Write a few sentences to set a scenario with a problem. A customer voices an objection, software displays an error message, or an employee asks a manager for help. Next, ask learners which action or response they would choose. Now you have a one-question decision-making scenario rather than just an abstract comprehension question. You can do this with any tool, and it creates a more interesting practice or assessment to engage learners.
·elearningart.com·
52 eLearning Experts Share their Best Tip for Creating Engaging eLearning
Research says there are ways to reduce racial bias. Calling people racist isn’t one of them. - Vox
Research says there are ways to reduce racial bias. Calling people racist isn’t one of them. - Vox
Evidence on how to combat racism and bias (and how not to do it)
“Telling people they’re racist, sexist, and xenophobic is going to get you exactly nowhere,” said Alana Conner, executive director of Stanford University’s Social Psychological Answers to Real-World Questions Center. “It’s such a threatening message. One of the things we know from social psychology is when people feel threatened, they can’t change, they can’t listen.”
In <a href="https://perception.org/publications/science-of-equality-vol-1/"><em>The Science of Equality</em></a>, Godsil and her co-authors proposed several tactics that seem, based on the research, promising: presenting people with examples that break stereotypes, asking them to think about people of color as individuals rather than as a group, tasking them with taking on first-person perspectives of people of color, and increasing contact between people of different races. All of these interventions appear to reduce subconscious racial biases, while interracial contact appears most promising for reducing racial anxiety more broadly.
Godsil and her team also put forward tactics that can help people limit actions based on racial biases, such as getting people to slow down in their decision-making and teaching them about how subconscious processes can influence their impulses — even on issues unrelated to race — in order to push them to question their own objectivity. The research suggests these ideas have potential, but they generally seem to require that people are genuinely willing to reduce their biased behavior and actions.
·vox.com·
Research says there are ways to reduce racial bias. Calling people racist isn’t one of them. - Vox
A Learning Science Alternative to Bloom's Taxonomy by Brenda Sugrue : Learning Solutions Magazine
A Learning Science Alternative to Bloom's Taxonomy by Brenda Sugrue : Learning Solutions Magazine
Bloom's taxonomy sometimes creates unclear verb categorization and connection to assessments. This framework is focused on performance objectives and ties the type of knowledge to verbs, instructional strategies, and types of practice or assessment. This is partially drawn from Merrill's work. Procedural knowledge and declarative knowledge are handled differently.
·learningsolutionsmag.com·
A Learning Science Alternative to Bloom's Taxonomy by Brenda Sugrue : Learning Solutions Magazine
The Benefits of Scenario Based Training
The Benefits of Scenario Based Training
Scenario-based training better reflects real-life decision making
<p>There is no linear path into what they are subjected. The situations are complex. They often fail and they learn by reflection, becoming much better at the judgements they make next time, even though next time the environment and the scenarios presented are different.</p> <p>After completing a few exercises, they build their own view of the patterns that are evident and are able to move into a new scenario with confidence even if the environment and scenario is radically different.</p>
<p>Learning on reflection before plunging into the next scenario helps to build the patterns in the participants’ minds that are the evidence that they have learnt.</p> <p>Quizzes based on scenarios with a, “What would you do next?”, question builds quick and fun repetition into the training programme, helping transfer from short term memory to long term memory.</p>
·superperformance.com·
The Benefits of Scenario Based Training
Accelerating Expertise with Scenario-Based e-Learning - The Watercooler Newsletter : The Watercooler Newsletter
Accelerating Expertise with Scenario-Based e-Learning - The Watercooler Newsletter : The Watercooler Newsletter
Ruth Clark on how scenario-based elearning accelerates expertise and when to use it
What is Scenario-Based e-Learning?
<em>A. The learner assumes the role of an actor responding to a job realistic situation.</em>&nbsp;
<em>B. The learning environment is preplanned</em>.&nbsp;
<em>C. Learning is inductive rather than instructive.</em>&nbsp;
<em>D. The instruction is guided</em>.&nbsp;
<em>E. Scenario lessons incorporate instructional resources.</em>&nbsp;
<em>F. The goal is to accelerate workplace expertise.</em>&nbsp;
As you consider incorporating scenario-based e-Learning into your instructional mix, consider whether the acceleration of expertise will give you a return on investment.&nbsp; For example, interviews with subject matter experts indicated that automotive technicians must complete about 100 work orders to reach a reasonable competency level in any given troubleshooting domain.&nbsp; Comparing delivery alternatives, OJT would require around 200+ hours, instructor-led training would require around 100 hours, and scenario-based e-Learning simulations require approximately 33–66 hours.
Finally, many learners find scenario-based e-Learning more motivating than traditional instructional formats.&nbsp; Solving a work-related problem makes the instruction immediately relevant.
·watercoolernewsletter.com·
Accelerating Expertise with Scenario-Based e-Learning - The Watercooler Newsletter : The Watercooler Newsletter
Scenario-based-learning.pdf
Scenario-based-learning.pdf

"Scenario-based learning is based on the principles of situated learning theory (Lave & Wenger, 1991), which argues that learning best takes place in the context in which it is going to be used, and situated cognition, the idea that knowledge is best acquired and more fully understood when situated within its context (Kindley, 2002)."

"SBL usually works best when applied to tasks requiring decision-making and critical thinking in complex situations. Tasks that are routine to the students will require little critical thinking or decision-making, and may be better assessed using other methods. "

"Checklist: Is SBL the right option? (Clark, 2009)

  • Are the outcomes based on skills development or problem-solving?
  • Is it difficult or unsafe to provide real-world experience of the skills?
  • Do your students already have some relevant knowledge to aid decision-making?
  • Do you have time and resources to design, develop, and test an SBL approach?
  • Will the content and skills remain relevant for long enough to justify the development of SBL?"
·quality4digitallearning.org·
Scenario-based-learning.pdf
Five reasons for scenario-based design
Five reasons for scenario-based design
Abstract of an article on scenario-based learning for teaching human-computer interaction. These five reasons could apply to other topics as well.
Scenario-based design of information technology addresses five technical challenges: scenarios evoke reflection in the content of design work, helping developers coordinate design action and reflection. Scenarios are at once concrete and flexible, helping developers manage the fluidity of design situations. Scenarios afford multiple views of an interaction, diverse kinds and amounts of detailing, helping developers manage the many consequences entailed by any given design move. Scenarios can also be abstracted and categorized, helping designers to recognize, capture and reuse generalizations and to address the challenge that technical knowledge often lags the needs of technical design. Finally, scenarios promote work-oriented communication among stakeholders, helping to make design activities more accessible to the great variety of expertise that can contribute to design, and addressing the challenge that external constraints designers and clients face often distract attention from the needs and concerns of the people who will use the technology.
·iwc.oxfordjournals.org·
Five reasons for scenario-based design
Should You Go With a Male or Female Voice Over?
Should You Go With a Male or Female Voice Over?
Whether male or female voices are better for elearning narration may depend on what tone you're trying to achieve, although the research results are a bit weak. Breaking tradition and stereotypes can sometimes be effective.
“Men’s voices are associated with neutrality, with authoritative, factual information,” explains <a href="http://arthur-chu.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Arthur Chu</a>, a Cleveland-based artist who’s done voice over work for brands like Safeway and Intel. “The voiceover you want for some kind of authoritative instructional video, or something asserting dry historical fact, is going to be that baritone, somewhat monotone, slightly stern voice.”
“Because females tend to be the more nurturing gender by nature, their voices are often perceived as a helper, more compassionate, understanding, and non-threatening,” says <a href="http://www.debbiegrattan.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Debbie Grattan</a>, a veteran voice over artist for brands like Apple, Samsung, and Wal-Mart. “This can be important in instructional videos, (sense of patience and compassion in teaching a new skill), corporate/web narration, as well as commercial spots (conveying a less aggressive, more persuasive approach.)”
·voicebunny.com·
Should You Go With a Male or Female Voice Over?
This study examines whether auditory narrator gender (male or female) and presence of a visual image of a woman described in the narrated description (visual image or no visual image) affects the number of extrinsic (appearance related) words recalled
This study examines whether auditory narrator gender (male or female) and presence of a visual image of a woman described in the narrated description (visual image or no visual image) affects the number of extrinsic (appearance related) words recalled
This research found a slight benefit to recall when using male narrators, but it's a small study and the difference wasn't large
There was a marginal difference in percentage of extrinsic words recalled in female vs. male narrator. There was no difference in number of extrinsic words recalled in male-visual, male-no visual, female-visual, female-no visual.
However, when percentage of extrinsic words recalled was analyzed between male and female voice conditions, there was marginal significance, where subjects in the male voice condition recalled a greater percentage of extrinsic words than subjects in the female voice condition. This marginal significance is not enough to definitively conclude that there is a relationship between gender of narrator and recall of extrinsic words.
·mtholyoke.edu·
This study examines whether auditory narrator gender (male or female) and presence of a visual image of a woman described in the narrated description (visual image or no visual image) affects the number of extrinsic (appearance related) words recalled
Parkin's Lot: Gender of voice-over and e-learning effectiveness
Parkin's Lot: Gender of voice-over and e-learning effectiveness
Some gender stereotypes affect the perception of voice over, but gender is likely not the most important characteristic for retention. This post is older and not all the links to citations work
But most <a href="http://www.mtholyoke.edu/courses/lablouin/psych200/project_fall01/narrator.htm">studies</a> that I have seen indicate no statistically significant difference between retention by an audience of one gender of content delivered by a voice of another, or the same, gender. <br> <br>In my experience there are characteristics other than gender that play a much bigger role in engaging a learner audience. Things like dynamism, clarity, 'emotional bonding' with the content, enthusiasm, and perceived subject matter expertise are more important than whether it is a male or a female voice.
·parkinslot.blogspot.com·
Parkin's Lot: Gender of voice-over and e-learning effectiveness
Are Consumers More Responsive to Male or Female Voices in Advertisements?
Are Consumers More Responsive to Male or Female Voices in Advertisements?
This survey is about advertising, not elearning, but the results might be applicable in some situations. A male voice is viewed as more forceful, and a female voice is perceived as more soothing. Half of those surveyed said it made no difference though, and other results were mixed.
·media.theharrispoll.com·
Are Consumers More Responsive to Male or Female Voices in Advertisements?
Best Practices for Effective PowerPoint Presentations Assessment | Think Outside The Slide
Best Practices for Effective PowerPoint Presentations Assessment | Think Outside The Slide
A lengthy and thorough checklist for effective PowerPoint presentations. Although the list is set up by asking if you "not often" or "almost always" follow the best practices in general, you could easily adapt this as a checklist for reviewing a specific presentation.
·thinkoutsidetheslide.com·
Best Practices for Effective PowerPoint Presentations Assessment | Think Outside The Slide
How Relearning Old Concepts Alongside New Ones Makes It All Stick | MindShift | KQED News
How Relearning Old Concepts Alongside New Ones Makes It All Stick | MindShift | KQED News
Rather than studying and practicing a single skill in blocks, it's more effective to use "interleaved" or variable practice of multiple skills. You remember better this way. It's the opposite of cramming where you might do well on a test but forget it all soon after.
·ww2.kqed.org·
How Relearning Old Concepts Alongside New Ones Makes It All Stick | MindShift | KQED News
Dear Rich: An Intellectual Property Blog: Can I Embed YouTube Video at For-Profit Site?
Dear Rich: An Intellectual Property Blog: Can I Embed YouTube Video at For-Profit Site?
Can you embed YouTube videos in courses that are developed for profit? Probably, as long as the copyright holder has enabled embedding. YouTube's terms of service say you have to add "sufficient value" beyond the video if you make money on it. For e-learning, that shouldn't be hard to prove. It's still safer to ask if you're not sure, but it generally should be OK.
·dearrichblog.blogspot.com·
Dear Rich: An Intellectual Property Blog: Can I Embed YouTube Video at For-Profit Site?