Stuck For eLearning Ideas? Learn How To Think Differently About Your eLearning

Stuck For eLearning Ideas? Learn How To Think Differently About Your eLearning

Stuck For eLearning Ideas? Learn How To Think Differently About Your eLearning

9 eLearning Ideas To Think Differently About Your eLearning

When I started out in eLearning, someone passed me Gagné's book, which outlines nine principles for designing instruction. Through the course of my career, I’ve regularly revisited these nine steps to double-check my course designs. I find it a great place to start to think differently about my eLearning and get new eLearning ideas. In this article, I’ll break down the nine steps and look at how you can apply them to your eLearning course.

1. Grab attention.

First impressions are lasting. Catching your learners’ attention is crucial for keeping them engaged. Think about how movies, stories, and books often begin with something really compelling. You can apply this principle to the design of your eLearning course in a number of ways. Here are some techniques to get you started:

Stuck for ideas? Draw inspiration from these examples:

2. Set objective(s).

Frame the objectives within a context that your learners can understand and identify with.

There are two ways you can do this:

Explain objectives in terms of what the learner can get out of the course. Always make it about what’s in it for them.

Here is a couple of great examples of eLearning with clear objectives:

3. Stimulate prior knowledge. 

Encourage learners to apply knowledge and skills they already have by designing activities within their frame of reference. If you build on what they already know, they are in a better position to retain new information or skills presented.

For example, imagine you are developing a course on information security compliance. If your learners are sales people, you should make the scenario about the consequences of losing customer data. This makes the information relevant to them. Or, let’s say the eLearning course is for your contact center staff; make the scenario about the consequences for them if their personal data were to be stolen.

Here are some ideas to help you implement this design principle:

Stuck for ideas? Draw inspiration from these examples:

4. Present information.

eLearning isn’t the same as learning from a hardcover book. People find reading lots of text on a screen difficult, so it’s important to get creative.

Here are some innovative ways to get creative with your eLearning:

5. Guide learners. 

Include support for your learners. Try some of these techniques:

Draw inspiration from this example:

6. Elicit performance.

Encourage your learners to apply their skills and knowledge quickly. Don’t rely on an overwhelming end-of-course test.

Draw inspiration from this example:

7. Provide feedback.

At regular intervals, break up your content with activities that offer feedback on how your learners are doing. Try some of the following techniques:

Here is a great example of eLearning that provides feedback to learners:

8. Assess performance.

Provide an offline activity or an online assessment to measure the learners’ performance against the objectives of the course. But, be sure that you don’t include any new information or skills that were not covered in the course.

Related: Codecademy does a great job of assessing performances via online assessments.

9. Enhance retention and transfer.

You will need to think outside of the eLearning course for techniques to enhance retention. Consider the following techniques:

Draw inspiration from this example:

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