ADDIE: Design & Development

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ADDIE: Design & Development Nancy H. Dewald Pennsylvania State University Berks Campus June 24, 2005

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ADDIE: Design & Development. Nancy H. Dewald Pennsylvania State University Berks Campus June 24, 2005. Characteristics of Instructional Design . Is learner-centered Is goal-oriented Focuses on real-world performance Focuses on outcomes that can be measured in a reliable and valid way - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of ADDIE: Design & Development

Page 1: ADDIE:  Design & Development

ADDIE: Design & Development

Nancy H. DewaldPennsylvania State University

Berks CampusJune 24, 2005

Page 2: ADDIE:  Design & Development

Characteristics of Instructional Design

• Is learner-centered• Is goal-oriented• Focuses on real-world performance• Focuses on outcomes that can be

measured in a reliable and valid way• Is empirical• Typically is a team effort

– Gustafson, K.L. & Branch, R.M. (2002) What is instructional design? In Trends and Issues in Instructional Design and Technology, R.A. Reiser and J.V. Dempsey, eds.

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ADDIE

• Analysis• Design• Development• Implementation• Evaluation

• Iterative, not linear

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Design

1. Write instructional objectives2. Identify type of content to be learned3. Select instructional strategies

according to the content type4. Select media

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Writing Instructional Objectives• Objectives indicate what learner is expected

to know or do after instruction• Objective Domains:

Cognitive – Affective -- Psychomotor• Objectives:

– Preferably are observable or measurable – Have action verb & content– May include performance standard and/or

conditions

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Classify Learning as to TypeBloom et al. (1956)• Cognitive domain

– Knowledge– Comprehension– Application– Analysis– Synthesis– Evaluation

• Affective domain -- attitudes• Psychomotor domain – motor skills

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Web Evaluation Example for Bloom’s Cognitive Domain

• Knowledge: can define “url”, “domain”, “home page”, etc.

• Comprehension: can describe the evaluation criteria

• Application: looks for author information where taught to find it (e.g., About Us)

• Analysis: determines the web site’s purpose and audience

• Synthesis: creates own web evaluation rules after studying others’ criteria

• Evaluation: evaluates web site according to given criteria

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Classify Content as to Type

• Fact• Concept• Principles and rules• Procedure• Interpersonal skills• Attitude

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Sample objectives• Student will correctly define (verb) the term “url”

(fact)• Students will classify (verb) sources in their

discipline as primary or secondary sources (concept)

• Student will correctly write (verb) search statements following the rule for nesting with AND and OR (rule)

• Student will correctly cite (verb) journal articles in APA format (procedure)

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Content Sequencing

• Teach prerequisite skills first• Move from familiar to unfamiliar• Teach less difficult before more difficult• Begin with tasks that create most learner

interest • Ensure learner has reached appropriate

developmental level (or ability level)- Morrison et al.

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Instructional StrategiesGenerative strategies: 1. Recall (for learning facts

and lists)

2. Integration strategies

3. Organizational strategies

4. Elaboration Strategies

-- Morrison et al.

Examples:1. Repetition, rehearsal,

review, mnemonics2. Paraphrasing,

generating questions or examples

3. Analyzing key ideas, outlining, categorizing

4. Generating mental images, physical diagrams, sentence elaborations

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How to Teach Concepts

• Example: Primary vs. secondary sources• Initial presentation: Definitions and examples.• Integration strategy: ask students to generate

more examples (small groups) OR• Organizational strategy: show sources and

ask students to identify whether primary or secondary

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How to Teach Principles or Rules

• Example: Boolean AND/OR• Initial presentation: EG-Rule or Rule-EG

– EG-Rule example: Human database shows effect of rule

– Rule-EG example: Nesting AND/OR• Integration, OR• Organization, OR• Elaboration

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How to Teach Procedures

1. Demonstration2. Organization or Elaboration3. Practice

• Example: Citing a journal article in APA format

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Instructional StrategiesGenerative strategies: 1. Recall (for learning facts

and lists)

2. Integration strategies

3. Organizational strategies

4. Elaboration Strategies

-- Morrison et al.

Examples:1. Repetition, rehearsal,

review, mnemonics2. Paraphrasing,

generating questions or examples

3. Analyzing key ideas, outlining, categorizing

4. Generating mental images, physical diagrams, sentence elaborations

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How to Design Instructional Strategies

1. Review each objective and determine type of content: fact, concept, principle/rule, or procedure

2. Select an initial presentation strategy3. Select a generative strategy: recall,

integration, organization, or elaboration

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Designing Instructional Strategies

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Specify Media

• Instructor speaking• Chalk board• Printed text (textbooks, worksheets,

visuals, etc.)• Audio/video/multimedia• Computer presentation and/or simulation• Web-based instruction• etc.

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Development

• Prepare student & instructor materials, both print & non-print, as specified during design

• Delivery Methods:– Group presentation– Self-paced learning– Small-group interaction activities– Combination

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Designing Instructional Strategies

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Design & DevelopmentDesign:1. Write instructional

objectives2. Identify type of

content to be learned

3. Select instructional strategies according to the content type

4. Select media

Development:• Prepare student &

instructor materials, both print & non-print, as specified during design