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It’s the Principle of the Thing:

Predicting, Explaining, and Applying the Rules

Part of a Series: Here’s Why I Love Content Types: And You Should, Too If It’s Late Afternoon, Then the Light Will Be Lovely Principles. Rules that help us to predict, explain, or control things. Principles can be natural laws or rules that people define. Why Learning Principles Matters We love to explain, predict, and control… Continue Reading

Keep Your Learners Awake | Mix Things Up | Make It Relevant

In addition to learning new skills, adults often expect to (or at least prefer to) enjoy the time they spend in training. Climb the fence, but watch the barbed wire. Having fun, laughing at jokes, playing games, solving puzzles, watching videos, enjoying beautiful slides, even taking breaks… all of these can act as vehicles to… Continue Reading

Walking a Mile in Your Learners’ Shoes

Good instructional designers learn to put themselves in their learners’ shoes. Try them on. Walk a ways. See what happens. This helps us to figure out what they need so they’ll be able to learn something well. When we do an audience analysis we may conduct interviews and focus groups, use pretests, talk with coworkers,… Continue Reading

Easy Does It—Step-by-Step

Part of a Series: Here’s Why I Love Content Types: And You Should, Too Procedures. A series of steps we take to complete a task. Something we do “step-by-step. Make coffee. Assemble a widget. File a report. For this post we’ll look at well-defined procedures: those where the steps are well known. For more ambiguous… Continue Reading

Seriously, It Is Not Always Training—Good Designers Get This

In some circles, the term instructional design elicits this kind of statement: “Oh, well, instructional design assumes that training is always the right answer. And of course we know that’s not true.” Not a Problem That Training Will Solve I ran into a version of this statement just the other day.  So I started to… Continue Reading

Learning Without the Fire Hose: Can We?

Let’s say that you want your team members to learn and remember something important. Let’s say they have a lot of… New rules and regulations to remember. For compliance, say. Or you want to enhance and reinforce safety practices. Or there’s a whole new product line for sales folks to learn. Or the customer service… Continue Reading

It’s a Concept—Got It?

Part of a Series: Here’s Why I Love Content Types: And You Should, Too Concepts. Sets of objects, ideas, or events that have characteristics in common and share a common name. They can be concrete (discernable by our senses—car, truck, motorcycle) or abstract (defined by somebody—holiday, conference, leadership). Clear Example of a Kitten Why Concepts Are… Continue Reading

3 Ways to Read Together: The Professional Book Club

Sometimes there’s a great book, article, or website that just begs to be read. Maybe your learners, your team, or your professional organization can benefit from reading it together. Reflecting Pool in Campbell Here are three ways to get more from what you and your team or organization are reading. Training Program. Let’s say you’re… Continue Reading

Learning to Spout Stuff—Necessary, But Seldom Sufficient

Declarative Knowledge is about knowing what: facts, lists, names, or organized information (for example, the History of X). For fans of Bloom, this is similar to recognize or recall information. We also call it “verbal information.” It’s stuff you can memorize and repeat (or “declare”). If you can talk about it or write it down, you’ve learned… Continue Reading

Here’s Why I Love Content Types: And You Should, Too

Let’s say that you’ve been asked (for some good reason) to design or deliver training…. What if you had an instant way to turn that request from a Big Scary Cauldron of Swirling Content into a step-by-step plan for helping people to learn? Glass Beach, Ft. Bragg, CA Want to make this easier? Learn your… Continue Reading