Creating a good learning experience requires a collaborative effort to combine the knowledge of different stakeholders involved in the process.
Instructional Designers have to keep in mind the business goals, the learner’s objectives, gather information and know-how from the subject matter experts, and use that information to create engaging content.
Here are some tips that can help achieve better collaboration at each stage of the instructional design process:
The very first step in the process of creating valuable content is to understand what learners expect and require. While developing an eLearning course, we need to consider varying perspectives of different stakeholders (Subject matter experts, Managers, Department Supervisors, and even the learners themselves) to define the right execution direction. Understanding the learner goals from the different perspectives will enable you to create an eLearning course that includes all the necessary content, tools, assessments and activities.
It will also help you sort out your starting point and focus on:
“In my world interactivity has everything to do with context. Can someone relate to the learning challenge? Do they find the learning worthwhile? Have I helped them imagine themselves in the situations where they can apply these strategies or thinking? If this component, the context part, is fully satisfied… interactivity takes care of itself. All of the rest (visual design, colors, sounds, multimedia etc) is icing on the cake.” - by Anna Sabramowicz
You and your team have already gathered all the necessary information and carefully analyzed it to set up the foundation course development plan. But, before you proceed you need to validate: are you going in the right direction? Providing the clients and other stakeholders with rough sketches/storyboards for your ground plan can help you to avoid major changes later on. This gives an idea to your clients/stakeholders about: what you have understood of their requirements and how you are planning to visually portray it.
Thus, giving them the opportunity to mend it right away, if required. The concept validation at this stage helps you fix issues when they are still cheaper to address. Thus, save you a lot of time and rework.
Even after your storyboard is approved, it is crucial for SMEs/clients/stakeholders to be in the feedback loop. As the basic design process says: create, let stakeholders experience it, get their feedback, improve on it and repeat the cycle.
Basic eLearning design process
When it comes to creating learning experiences, it’s even more important as:
In this day and age of remote teams and clients, it is not possible to arrange a face to face meeting to share the relevant feedback, now and then. Then, what’s the way out?
Possible solutions:
But, neither of the above approaches provide a complete solution. They are generally time-consuming. Or miss the most essential element of an eLearning course - ‘Design.’ Or make it difficult to manage feedback. Thus, it takes a lot of efforts from clients to share their feedback as well as from Instructional designers to manage feedback.
So let’s first discuss what type of resource is required for gathering and managing client feedback during eLearning development:
To speed up the feedback process and to share realistic feedback, resources like zipBoard, review my elearning are available, that you can use. In any case, whatever mode you may choose, what is essential is to make sure that you get feedback regularly and at the right time. Not when you have developed the whole course. Keep your stakeholders in the loop right from the first iteration.
Also read: The Ins and Outs of Rapid Prototyping for eLearning
‘Collaborate better to create great experiences.’
No individual can create a great learning experience. It requires a good team effort, combining the skills of different experts to develop effective learning at every stage. Thus, collaboration of the internal team and the external SMEs is essential. And a good feedback system sets everything in place. You have all the inputs stacked at one place, in an orderly manner. Which keeps you going and considerably reduces the chances of missing out something important in your next iteration.