Principles for reducing extraneous processing edlt 520

Post on 20-Dec-2014

1,070 views 0 download

Tags:

description

 

transcript

PRINCIPLES FOR REDUCING EXTRANEOUS PROCESSING IN MULTIMEDIA LEARNING:

Garadan Al-Amir Hector SegarraApril 8, 2010

EDLT-520Dr. Jesús H. Trespalacios

New Mexico State University

A major challenge for Instructional Designers

Is to create instructional messages that are sensitive to the caracteristics of the human information- processing system, so that the amount of processing required in each channel of working memory does not exceed the learner’s cognitive capacity.

The five multimedia design methods intended to minimize extraneous overload are:

Coherence Signaling Redundancy Spatial Contiguity Temporal Contiguity Principles

The Coherence Principle

States that: People learn more deeply from a mutimedia

message when extraneous material is excluded rather than included.

Coherence Techniques

To eliminate words, pictures, and sounds that are not relevant to the instructional goal.

The Signaling Principle

States that People learn more deeply from multimedia

messages when cues are added that higlight the organization of the essential material.

Signaling Techniques

Insert cues that direct the learner attention toward the essential material.

The Redundancy Principle

States that: People learn more deeply from graphics and

narration than from graphics, narration, and on screen text.

According to the redundancy principle, students will learn more deeply from the nonredundant presentation than the redundant presentation because the redundant presentation requiere more extraneous processing.

With the Coherence and Redundancy principle, the extraneous material is eliminated.

With the signaling and spatial contiguity principle ,typographic and linguistic cues draw learners’ attention to the essential material.

With temporal contiguity, the need for holding material in working memory for extended periods is eliminated.

The Spatial Contuguity Principle

States that: People learn more deeply from a multimedia

message when corresponding words and picture are presented near rather than far from each other on the page screen.

The Temporal Contiguity Principle

States that: People learn more deeply from a multimedia

message when corresponding animation and narration are presented simultaneously rather than successively.

The Split-Attention Principle

States that: Refers to “avoiding formats that require

learners to split their attention between, and mentally integrate, multiple sources of information”

The Split- Attention Principle (Cont.)

Refers to the need to integrate material from disparate sources, which is a broader concept than temporal contiguity.

Questions

1) Name and describe the five multimedia design methods to minimize extraneous overload.

2) What is the major challenge for an instructional designer?

3) There is strong and consistent evidence of the coherence principle that states: “People learn more deeply from a multimedia message when extraneous material is excluded rather than included”. Why you think this is the case? (Mayer, 2009, Multimedia Learning 2nd Ed.)

4) What does split- attention refers to?

5) What was the research reviewed in this chapter?   

Reference

Mayer, (2009). Multimedia Learning 2nd Ed.