3 Steps To Spice Up Your Storyboard

3 Steps To Spice Up Your Storyboard

3 Steps To Spice Up Your Storyboard

How To Spice Up Your Storyboard By Following These Simple 3 Steps

On your next assignment, consider spicing up the same old recipe with a few fresh ideas.

1. Use The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy To Write Objectives

Before we dive into eLearning methods, let’s back up the learning delivery truck just a bit and figure out what we want learners to do differently (or better) than they are doing now.

Like most Instructional Designers, you probably classify training goals and objectives using Bloom’s Cognitive Taxonomy, but did you know this taxonomy was updated by Anderson and Krathwohl [1]? The revision occurred back in 2001, but somehow many missed the memo.

The revised version defines knowledge across 4 dimensions—factual, conceptual, procedural, and metacognitive—and the levels are now phrased as nouns. For instance, the "knowledge" level from the 1956 version of Bloom’s is now called "remember", and the former "comprehension" level is now called "understand".

If you are not using the revised version of Bloom’s already, reference the updated levels listed below while you craft learning objectives for your next project. Then, you’ll be better able to map your objectives to the proposed eLearning treatments in this article.

2. Select eLearning Treatments That Support Your Objectives

The concept of writing objectives before selecting instructional treatments sounds basic, but sometimes our excitement to ride buzzword trains (like "rapid design" or "agile development") convolutes the process, so it’s worth restating.

The great news is, once your objectives are written, selecting the best eLearning treatment can be a rapid process. Simply, use the outline below as a quick reference tool to identify the best types of eLearning treatments for your objectives.

For instance, if your objective starts with the verb "identify" then it falls under the "remember" level of Bloom’s Taxonomy. According to this outline, an effective eLearning treatment might be a multimedia presentation, labeled graphic interaction, video, software demonstration, interactive process graphic, etc. There are many options available, so you can spice up your storyboard with new and fresh ideas for your learners.

The outline below is merely a starting point; you could add other eLearning treatments to it as you begin to develop more innovative eLearning treatment ideas.

Remember And Understand eLearning Treatments 

Sample Objective Verbs:
Identify, relate, list, define, recall, memorize, repeat, record, name, recognize, acquire, classify, describe, discuss, explain, illustrate, give examples, review, paraphrase, interpret

Apply And Analyze eLearning Treatments

Sample Objective Verbs:
Assess, chart, construct, demonstrate, develop, produce, report, select, use, show, solve, characterize, classify, compare, contrast, correlate, distinguish, differentiate, examine

Evaluate And Create eLearning Treatments

Sample Objective Verbs:
Categorize, compose, construct, design, formulate, integrate, invent, produce, rewrite, evaluate, critique, predict, form, reorganize, produce, plan, structure

3. Collaborate With Your Production Crew To Discover More Possibilities

Some Instructional Designers storyboard and produce their deliverables; however, if you work with a production crew, involve them in your design discussions. Using their knowledge of multimedia design and production software, they can offer ideas you didn’t realize were possible. Also, they can also warn against treatments that may jeopardize the project timeline before the storyboard is signed off by your primary stakeholder.

Commit To Greater Creativity

Are you ready to broaden your storyboarding horizons? If you are ready to commit to greater creativity, you can begin by:

 

References:

  1. Wilson, L. O. (n.d.). Anderson and Krathwohl - Bloom's Taxonomy Revised
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