Most new instructional designers tend to jump directly into the “development” process. It’s a universal eagerness because as we all can imagine the fun is in the building. However, much like architecture, the blueprints are vital to making it all come together.
Can you imagine an architect designing a building without planning it on paper first? It sounds like someone is going to lose their client!
The organizational structure for any eLearning project is key to its success. Despite your knowledge of any subject, instructional design requires a bit more. Instructional designers need to consider time constraints, data, knowledge gaps, and most importantly, THE AUDIENCE! The best way to deliver information to the learners is something that doesn’t come naturally to us; it's an exercise that needs to be thought through and planned.
Below is a list of steps that can help you achieve a solid foundation for your course. Skipping any of these five steps would be a disservice to your students as they ensure quality. Read on for more on how to draw out the blueprint for your eLearning masterpiece.
Great eLearning courses don’t happen by accident. The deliverables that surface from this initial analytical stage are the building blocks for great design, relevant content, and purposeful activities that come to enhance the learning experience.
We know it can seem overwhelming, but below we’ve pointed out the most critical points to focus on at this stage.
The analysis can be broken down into these four key bullets:
Read more: Using Concept-Mapping Techniques for eLearning Content Analysis
Learning objectives ARE NECESSARY, no objections for this!
Writing brief, well-defined learning objectives is important not only to provide direction to your students, but they provide your team a clear focus on their efforts. It is a statement of what the learner will be able to do or know when they have completed the eLearning course. As you select the content, create activities and formulate instructional strategies, the learning objectives will keep everything aligned.
Without all these elements syncing, there will be roadbumps; the learner will question the purpose of activities. If students doubt how elements are related to the tasks they wish to learn, they will be less invested.
Grab These Tips To Help You Master The Art of Writing Learning Objectives
Creating an eLearning course without defining learning objectives, is like walking in the woods without a compass. Sooner or later, you'll get lost!
What order do things go in? What topics need to come before or after others? Are there any units or modules that fit together more naturally than others? Create a quick list or overview of the key points to cover for each module/section/screen. And be very specific that each module/section/screen is connected or responds to a learning objective. When your instructional content, and learning activities align with the objectives, students learn and are happy with what they had signed up for.
Defining an optimal sequence is essential to generate maximum impact. This is one of the essential steps in creating an eLearning course because students are able to learn best when information is presented in one of several clear and effective instructional design choices. In fact, research has proved that the order and organization of learning content affect the way information is processed and retained (Glynn & DiVesta, 1977; Lorch & Lorch, 1985; Van Patten, Chao, & Reigeluth, 1986).
Some suggestions for ordering the topics or concepts include:
Read more here: Organize Content Effectively to Maximize Learning Opportunities
What knowledge, skills, attitudes, confidence or commitment were acquired by learners after taking the course? Do learners use their newly acquired skills on the job? The answers to this question can tell you if your eLearning course has been successful.
Here's how you should design effective assessments:
Assessments and learning objectives are aligned. You should design the assessment so that it maps with the objectives and lets you figure out if the learners have understood what they had set out to learn.
Read more: Designing eLearning Courses Backwards
The benefit of content should be apparent almost immediately. The world we leave in today requires that we make this point clearly and quickly. Learners need to connect the practicality and functionality of the content for incentive.
Providing the right material is not enough. The learner must want to learn. Investing in the interest of the learner is paramount. Not investing in building a rapport with your audience is counteractive to your primary goal as an educational provider.
Read more: Factors that Affect the Transfer of Training
Given its importance, how can we ensure it?
The reason we mention this is because you want to keep application exercises similar to the context in which they are being learned so that the transfer of information isn’t lost. Some people don’t always seem the similarities between duties even if they are quite similar. Focusing on directly applicable examples and scenarios are essential, so nothing is lost along the way.
Read more tips here:
Before, During, and After Training: Improving Knowledge Transfer in Your Organization in 3 Stages
The course will add value, but the use of this structure can prevent that portions of this value are not lost along the way to confusion, frustration, and disinterest. The structure provided below can give your team the power to create more engaging and effective eLearning experiences for your audience. Organizing and assessing each element (audience, objective, knowledge gap) can help you to accomplish success without wasting valuable resources.