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Process of developing e-Learning courses Research Seminar 26 th June 09
36

e-Learning Presentation

Oct 19, 2014

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This presentation gives an introduction of what e-learning is, what the levels of e-learning exist these days, types of e-learning and some tips and tricks of e-learning development.
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Page 1: e-Learning Presentation

Process of developing e-Learning courses

Research Seminar

26th June 09

Page 2: e-Learning Presentation

Aim

• e-learning and its forms

• e-Learning models and its processes

• e-learning design principles/ techniques

Page 3: e-Learning Presentation

e-Learning

As all educational or instructional content that is

distributed using web-based technologies to

achieve any of a variety of learning objectives

including (but not limited to):– employee, business partner training

– academic education of students

– Marketing communications

– Customer support

Source -The eLearning Guild

Page 4: e-Learning Presentation

Really, any situation you can imagine where the

goal is to impart information that will enable the

user to learn something.

Page 5: e-Learning Presentation

Knowledge databases

Levels of e-Learning

Page 6: e-Learning Presentation

Online support

Page 7: e-Learning Presentation

Asynchronous training

Page 8: e-Learning Presentation

Synchronous training

Page 9: e-Learning Presentation

e-Learning types

Rapid e-learningLess development time

•Less budget

•Cost effective•Any subject that can be explained in words

•Short shelf life

• Quick time for delivery•Re-purpose existing content

•Just in time information – hot topic

Traditional e-learningLong lead time

•More budget•Subjects that need simulations or 3D models

•Long shelf life•Original content

Page 10: e-Learning Presentation

“78% of organisations want faster

development”

e-Learning guild Survey

Page 11: e-Learning Presentation

STAGES

Source: Khan, B. H. (2004, September-October). People, process and product continuum in e-learning: The e-learning P3 model. Educational Technology. Vol.44, No. 5. pp. 33-40.

Page 12: e-Learning Presentation
Page 13: e-Learning Presentation

Traditional Process

Stages People Product

Planning Detailed Project PlanProject

ManagerDirector

Research and design coordinator

Business Developer

Page 14: e-Learning Presentation

Traditional Process

Stages People Product

Planning Detailed Project Plan

Design Storyboards

Project Manager

DirectorResearch and

design coordinatorBusiness Developer

Research and design coordinator

Instructional designers

Subject Matter Expert

Evaluation Specialist

Copyright Coordinator

Page 15: e-Learning Presentation

Traditional Process

Stages People Product

Planning Detailed Project Plan

Design Storyboards

Production Course Materials

Project Manager

DirectorBusiness Developer

Production coordinator

• course integrator• programmer• graphic artist• multimedia developer• photographer/videographer• editor • learning objects specialist, • quality assurance person• Pilot Subjects

Research and design coordinator

Research and design coordinator

Instructional designers

Subject Matter Expert

Evaluation Specialist

Copyright Coordinator

Page 16: e-Learning Presentation

Traditional Process

Stages People Product

Planning Detailed Project Plan

Design Storyboards

Production Course Materials

Evaluation Revised Course materials

Project Manager

DirectorBusiness Developer

Research and design coordinator

Production coordinator

Production Team

Interface Designer

Instructional designers

Evaluation Specialist

Research and design coordinator

Instructional designers

Subject Matter Expert

Evaluation Specialist

Copyright Coordinator

Page 17: e-Learning Presentation

STAGES

Source: Khan, B. H. (2004, September-October). People, process and product continuum in e-learning: The e-learning P3 model. Educational Technology. Vol.44, No. 5. pp. 33-40.

Page 18: e-Learning Presentation

Well-maintained learning materials

Delivery and Maintenance Stage

Systems administrator

server/database programmer

Webmaster

Page 19: e-Learning Presentation

instructional and support services staff or ISS

• course coordinator, instructor, • tutor, • course facilitator, • discussion moderator, • technical support, • librarian, • counselor,• customer service, • registration and administrative staff,

Instructional Stage

Source: Khan, B. H. (2004, September-October). People, process and product continuum in e-learning: The e-learning P3 model. Educational Technology. Vol.44, No. 5. pp. 33-40.

Page 20: e-Learning Presentation

• Return on investment in e-learning

• Market researchers and recruiters (or salespersons) involved

• To make accurate and updated information about their e-learning offerings known to as many potential learners as possible.

Marketing Stage

Page 21: e-Learning Presentation

Rapid e-Learning Model

Source: http://www.atlantic-link.co.uk/index.php?q=e-learning/e-learning-today

Page 22: e-Learning Presentation

Reality

Source: http://www.atlantic-link.co.uk/index.php?q=e-learning/e-learning-today

Page 23: e-Learning Presentation

Rapid Process

Source: http://www.kineo.com/demos/Ufi_Demo/resources/Rapid_Elearning_Reviewed_final.pdf

Page 24: e-Learning Presentation

1. Scoping of Content

• Organize, organize, organize

Source: http://www.kineo.com/demos/Ufi_Demo/resources/Rapid_Elearning_Reviewed_final.pdf

Page 25: e-Learning Presentation

In Practice

Source: http://www.kineo.com/demos/Ufi_Demo/resources/Rapid_Elearning_Reviewed_final.pdf

Page 26: e-Learning Presentation

SMART Learning Objectives

• Specific – stimulating, simple, strategic and sensible• Measurable – meaningful, maintainable, mapped to

goals and motivating• Achievable – appropriate, ambitious, acceptable and

accountable• Realistic – rewarding, robust, relevant and result

oriented• Timely – tangible, trackable and towards what you

want

http://www.viddler.com/explore/atlanticlink/videos/3/

Page 27: e-Learning Presentation

2.

Page 28: e-Learning Presentation

Techniques

• What must the learner do differently?

• Thinking like a learner

• 20 minutes modules

• Pareto principle (80/20 rule)

• Categorising content

• Refresh material

• Incremental learning path

Page 29: e-Learning Presentation

Gagne's events of instruction (Traditional)

1. Gaining attention

2. Informing the learner of the objective

3. Stimulating recall of prerequisite learning

4. Presenting new material

5. Providing learning guidance

6. Eliciting performance

7. Providing feedback about correctness

8. Assessing performance

9. Enhancing retention and recall

Learning Models

Get attention

Set Direction

Present

information

Examples

and practices

Summarise

Assess

and Support

Rapid

http://www.viddler.com/explore/atlanticlink/videos/3/

Page 30: e-Learning Presentation

Script Writing

• Rapid e-Learners are impatient

• Short lines, short sentences and one idea per paragraph

• Use the active voice, with actions at the start of the sentences

• Consistent use of terminology and instructions

• Tell stories to aid retention

• Reduce text with pictures, audio, graphs and flow charts

http://www.viddler.com/explore/atlanticlink/videos/3/

Page 31: e-Learning Presentation

3. Creating your Course

• Use the outline and the interactive elements as the basis of the course. – Subject areas are converted to chapters. – Topics are converted to bullet pages. – Interactive elements, quizzes, links, and graphics,

animation, audio, video make your course interesting.

Page 32: e-Learning Presentation

Graphic Design

• Consistent colour• Consistent layout• Consistent behaviour• White space is fine

• A simple acronym

– Contrast

– Repetition

– Alignment

– Positioning

http://www.viddler.com/explore/atlanticlink/videos/3/

Page 33: e-Learning Presentation

Template creationReusable

RobustRelevant

Intuitive

http://www.viddler.com/explore/atlanticlink/videos/3/

Page 34: e-Learning Presentation

4. Implementing and Evaluating the Course

• Quality Assure

• Beta test

• Release

Create Issue

Assign IssueSign off Issue

Fix issue Accept Issue

http://www.viddler.com/explore/atlanticlink/videos/3/

Page 35: e-Learning Presentation

Good e-Learning

• Uses best of breed web design

• Content is designed to be:

– Clear and easy to understand

– Provides easy access to additional information

– Includes repetition provides the same information in several formats

– Includes course tracking

– Can enable tests and surveys

Page 36: e-Learning Presentation

ReferencesHow to develop effective courses for the web: http://www.readygo.com/isd/

For SMEs: How to design of rapid e-learning materials http://www.learning15.net/wiki/index.php?title=The_60-minute_masters

Free report on Rapid E-learning Design here: http://www.kineo.com/rapid-elearning/how-to-design-rapid-e-learning.html

IDEAS: Instructional Design for Elearning ApproacheS: http://ideas.blogs.com/

eLearning Technology: http://elearningtech.blogspot.com/

http://www.kineo.com/demos/Ufi_Demo/resources/Rapid_Elearning_Reviewed_final.pdf

Community & Resources for e-Learning Professionals : http://www.elearningguild.com/

Centre for Learning & Performance Technologies: http://www.c4lpt.co.uk/jane.html

http://www.viddler.com/explore/atlanticlink/videos/3/