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The design and development of learning materials. Prof. dr. Martin Valcke Workshop Innovative teaching and Learning Strategies in Higher Education Maputo July 2011. Structure. Introductory activity Instructional design: decision tree Embedded support devices - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The design and development of learning materials Prof. dr. Martin Valcke Workshop Innovative teaching and Learning Strategies in Higher Education Maputo July 2011 1
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Page 1: The design and development of learning materials

The design and development of learning materials

Prof. dr. Martin ValckeWorkshop Innovative teaching and Learning

Strategies in Higher EducationMaputo July 20111

Page 2: The design and development of learning materials

Structure

• Introductory activity• Instructional design: decision tree• Embedded support devices• Structure of DE materials: principles• Overall models in DE learning

materials

2

Page 3: The design and development of learning materials

Conclusions• Distance education inherits basic

characteristics of traditional instructional approaches.

• Distance education imposes « explicit » planning en « consistency »

• ESD and structure are key decisions• Imposition of a house style• Micro-, meso- and macro-decisions have

to be taken3

Page 4: The design and development of learning materials

Introductory Activity• Small group activity• Imagine you are responsible for writing

a manual for a Swatch watch in Vietnam.• Try to think about critical topics you will

consider when developing the little manual.

• Structure your ideas.

4

Page 5: The design and development of learning materials

5

...

...

... ...

...

...

Page 6: The design and development of learning materials

Did you think about?• What is the target audience: adults, teenagers, children?• Use of pictures, photo’s, drawings, schemes, … instead

of written language.• Reflections about ‘what’ you were about to tackle in the

users manual (objectives).• How you would structure the users manual: key words

(panel, battery, setting time and alarms), manipulation of the watch, a story, error messages, …)?

• Multiple languages if written language is used.• Use of colours, symbols, …• What if the users manual is lost?• Operational instructions: do this and do that.• How much time can you expect people to use the

manual?• … 6

Page 7: The design and development of learning materials

Wrapping up: decision tree

7

target audiencetarget audience objectives

layout of users manual

anticipating problems/question

s

activities

language used

structuring principles

timing

textual/non-textual elements

texting/evaluation usersmanual

test users ...

Page 8: The design and development of learning materials

InstructionalDesign

8

layout of users manual

anticipating problems/question

s

activities

language used

target audience

evaluation of users

structuring principles

timing

textual/non-textual elements

objectives

evaluation of users manual

Page 9: The design and development of learning materials

Instructional design• Different decisions trees• Different models• IDI-model (Northern American consortium of

universities): “Consortium for Instructional Development and Technology“.IDI ~‘Instructional Development Institute’

• Focus on subpart in model• Later full model

9

Page 10: The design and development of learning materials

Instructional design

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Step 1define the problem- state needs- state priorities- formulate the problem

Step 2analyse environment/context

- who is involved- conditions- existing sources

Step 3Organise the work- task- responsibilities- time planning

Step 4state objectives

- final objectives- intermediate objectives

Step 5specify methods

- for learning- for instructional-activities- for media

Step 7test prototypes

- test prototypes- collect evaluation data

Step 6construct prototypes

-instruction-materials- evaluation-instruments

Step 8analyse results

- related to objectives- methods- evaluation methods

Step 9revise / implement

- revise- decide- execute

definition

development

evaluation

Page 11: The design and development of learning materials

Content of learning materials

• Task: take a manual from a traditional instructional setting.

• What is the content of the package; what « types » of content can we distinguish?

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Page 12: The design and development of learning materials

Content

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Additional elements:• Exercices• Examples• Illustrations• Questions• ...

BASIC CONTENT

Page 13: The design and development of learning materials

Content +• Why do we add the extra elements?

– .– .– .– .– .– .– .

13

Page 14: The design and development of learning materials

Content in distance education• Same manual/handbook• But now there is NO TEACHER• Student is alone sitting in front of his

handboek/manual• What is missing in his/her learning

environment• Write on a sheet of paper

14

Page 15: The design and development of learning materials

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Page 16: The design and development of learning materials

16

structure

questions

summary

test

examples

Content page

graphicsillustration

Advance organizer

feedback

exercise

tasks

keywordStudy advice

Page 17: The design and development of learning materials

Embedded support devices• Extra elements: ‘embedded support devices’ (ESD).• Lockwood (1992): ‘activities’ to refer to their basic

role as ‘catalysts’ of student involvement• The basic content is derived from the domain

specific knowledge base.• The ESD are added to support the actual learning

process in view of the objectives• ESD are a kind of in-built teacher

17

structure

questions

summary

test

examplesContent page

graphics

illustration

Advance organizer

feedback

exercise

tasks

keyword

Study advice

Page 18: The design and development of learning materials

Embedded support devices

• ESD: a wide variety of add-on, such as questions (pre- and post-), content pages, illustrations, examples, activities, tasks, tests, examples, schemes, cases, etc.

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Page 19: The design and development of learning materials

Embedded support devices• Basic functions and effects of ESD (Valcke,

Martens, Poelmans and Daal,1993):– orienting ESD: learning objectives, references to other

learning materials, references to required prior knowledge, etc.

– processing ESD: indexes, additional learning materials, advance organizers, illustrations, glossaries, introductions, study advice, summaries, tables, examples, etc.

– testing ESD: self-test items, exercise items, answers and feedback.

• ESD up to 45% of the learning materials

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Page 20: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: listAdvance organisers•Ausubel 1960•Activation of prior knowledgeExamples:In the chapter about ‘cognitive learning approaches’ in the course on instructional science students start by playing a little game. They are asked to learn by heart 10 different words. After one minute they have to take a sheet of paper and write down the words they can remember.Next, they have are given the task to write down HOW they memorised the list of words. When a lecturer puts together the approaches of 10 different students he gets a very nice overview of theoretical and empirical knowledge acquisition processes as defined by cognitive psychologists BUT now in the wording of the students themselves.20

Page 21: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: listIntroduction• Introductions orientation as to what, how and why

the materials are presented• other comparable ESD: content page, scheme,

objectives, assessment criteria, …Summary• Provide summary or let students develop

summary• Incomplete summary

21

Page 22: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: listContent pages• Give content page• Ask students to build content page, overviews,

scheme or mind-mapsTiming• How much time on average should be spent on

specific tasks, sets of learning materials• Support individual study planning (time

management)• Realistic time frames• Study load of courses.

22

Page 23: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: listSchemes• Structure scheme, a process scheme, a classification

scheme, an incomplete scheme, a mind-map, …Recapitulation section – wrap up section• Students go backwards and forwards in the overall

structure of the contentDialogue• Talk to the student in a written way:• What would you do if you were in this position?• Could you help me here or will you leave me behind

with this problem?• Could you think about three examples for me, please. I

will need them further on in the text.23

Page 24: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: listKey words• Left column with ‘key words’• Role of key words: structure, important basic concepts,

index to the text• Statements about prior knowledge• Be explicit about assumptions about prior knowledge• Especially when we introduce complex problem settings

(real life cases, problems, …). Developers can no longer control the overall situation.

24

Page 25: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: listObjectives• Objectives at the start • To orient their further reading activities, the way

they process the activities, • Students are pragmaticActivities• Questions, tasks, problems• Feedback (structural feedback or solution?)

25

Page 26: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: listFeedback• Questions, tasks, activities, assessment

provisions, … bring forward the idea about giving students adequate feedback.

• Immediate or delayed feedback.• Learners should learn to judge themselves• Gradual development of self-reflection skill

26

Page 27: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: listQuestions• Continuous active involvement of the students• Pre- and post-questionsSelf-assessment• Students are invited to check mastery objectives• Examples of final assessment• Students study in a assessment-driven way• The test as a relevant ‘learning’ experience• Examples of a final test ~ representative for real

final test• Feedback: redirect to relevant learning section

27

Page 28: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: list

Enrichment (facultative activities)• Resources for learning.• Beyond the body of knowledge needed

to attain the objectives

28

Page 29: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: listExamples• Examples translate abstract concepts,

features, relations, structures in real world terms and experiences

• Link new abstract knowledge to student experiences

• Role examples: learn by heart?

29

Page 30: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: listStudy advice• How to deal with your learning

package?• Examples of how to go ahead, to plan

their work, to check their progress, to involve colleagues, contact staff, support people, ..

• Based on real life student comments about experiences with this package30

Page 31: The design and development of learning materials

ESD: listSelf-reflection• Self reflection as a pro-active activity:

how will we proceed?• Or as a retro-active process: how did I

deal with this task, content.• Development of meta-cognitive

knowledge skills.

31

Page 32: The design and development of learning materials

Design of a « house style »

• Choice for a set of ESD ~house style• Students prefer consistent materials• Internal consistency• Quality!!

32

Page 33: The design and development of learning materials

Develop your own house style

• Take your learning materials• Redevelop 2-3 pages• Make an outline of how you would

enrich the materials with ESD• Make a difference between local ESD

and ESD at chapter/unit level

33

Page 34: The design and development of learning materials

Basic content• Structure?• How can we structure the basic

content?How is it structured in your handbooks?

• Can you think of alternative approaches?

34

Page 35: The design and development of learning materials

Basic content: structure

• Scientific content• Procedure (e.g. Law, Scientific

research, chemical process,, ...)• Cases• Problems• Time line

35

Page 36: The design and development of learning materials

Basic content: structure• Book: chapters• Learning book: learning units,

themes, ...• What is best structure?• What is the structure in your manuals

and handbooks? What is the basis of this structure?

36

Page 37: The design and development of learning materials

Basic content: structure

37

Page 38: The design and development of learning materials

Structure: Problems• Problems• Problem-based learning: starting point is a real-life

problem:• “A bee-keeper of 65 strolls on a nice morning in May

through his garden. In front of his hives, he suddenly stumbles and falls against one hive that tumbles upside down. The bees are furious and attack. The man is able to get away, but heavily bitten, he falls in the kitchen after closing the kitchen door. His wife alarms the doctor who arrives within 5 minutes and sees how the man is getting unconscious.”

38

Page 39: The design and development of learning materials

Structure: problems• The student read this text and follow a 6-step procedure.

This procedure is mostly supported by a group– Analyse the situation– Define the problem– Apply the knowledge readily available– Define learning objectives– Look for additional knowledge to apply in view of the learning

objectives– Report about the results

• Study process supported with in-built tutor• Assessment based on problem resolution (feedback) +

tests that assesses mastery declarative knowledge

39

Page 40: The design and development of learning materials

Structure: Cases• Case-based Harvard University• Originally economics and business sciences• Now in wide variety of domains (medicine,

psychology, ..).• Gradual build-up• Three dimensions:

– Conceptual dimension– Procedural dimension– Information dimension

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Page 41: The design and development of learning materials

Structure: cases• All learning starts with a well-prepared

case:• These cases can be small or very

elaborated.• Students get a resource package that can

be very detailed or rather empty as it is expected that they look up the resources themselves.

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Page 42: The design and development of learning materials

Structure: cases• The conceptual base can be considered ‘acquired’ or be

made available in a structured way.• Case resolution can be an individual and/or a group

learning activity.• Case resolution can be done in reality or away from

reality.• Cases build upon real life.• All data, examples, ‘living’ information is taken from

reality.• There is no separate assessment/testing set up, next to

the final report that describes that case solution by the student(s).

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Page 43: The design and development of learning materials

Structure: Procedure• In professional life, people build upon a variety

of procedures, methods, ways to practice their profession. For instance: lawyers follow a strict procedure when preparing a case; business scientists follow specific procedure when they screen a company, doctors follow diagnosing procedures, psychologists apply listening skills, teachers know how to ask questions, …

• Starting point: basic declarative knowledge• Clear development of a task list, step-by-step

guide, plan43

Page 44: The design and development of learning materials

Overall models in DE learning materials

• Learning unit model• Textbook – working book model• Case study model• Procedural model• Virtual companies• Thesis model

44

Page 45: The design and development of learning materials

Examples

• See package

45

Page 46: The design and development of learning materials

Conclusions• Distance education inherits basic

characteristics of traditional instructional approaches.

• Distance education imposes « explicit » planning en « consistency »

• ESD and structure are key decisions• Imposition of a house style• Micro-, meso- and macro-decisions have to

be taken46

Page 47: The design and development of learning materials

The design and development of learning materials

Prof. dr. Martin ValckeWorkshop Innovative teaching and Learning

Strategies in Higher EducationMaputo July 201147


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