Title: Needs Analysis: (Leshin, Pollock
1Needs Analysis (Leshin, Pollock Reigeluth,
1992).
- Analyze the problem
- Figure out the purposes for instruction, if any
- Analyse the domains
- Figure out the specifics about the kinds of
problems you have, the tasks that are involved in
the learning problem, and set performance
objectives to create instruction that will solve
the problem (close the gap)
If this all seems terribly systematic, well.. It
is a systems approach. The research is developing
in many ways, depending on the research approach
and philosophical approach used (see Jan 30
notes!).
2Needs Analysis (Leshin, Pollock Reigeluth,
1992).
- Analyze the problem
- Define the problem
- Describe the nature of the (training or
education) problem - Training find the performance gap
- Education find the knowledge gap
- Identify the source of the problem
- Is the cause of the gap organizational or
individual? - Education What is the rationale for the learner
to acq. Knowledge? - Training What might be causing the gap? What is
expected? - Data gather Focus groups, observation, surveys..
- Interpret the data to find problem elements
- Determine possible solutions
- Find a way to answer the questions asked in 1.2
(above) - From the data decide if instruction can solve
the problem (or not) - From the data Is instruction needed with other
solutions? - Analyse the risk, success est., cost, development
pragmatics and implementation pragmatics for
these solutions. - Communicate the results
- Identify problem areas, alternatives where inst.
Could help. Support your findings with your data,
descr. Of solutions, rationale for your
decisions, a comparison of benefits and costs,
give alternate solutions
3Needs Analysis (Leshin, Pollock Reigeluth,
1992).
- Analyze the Domains (job or subject areas)
- (if you have determined that instruction would
help (fill the gap), you want to identify and
precisely state what the learner should be able
to do or accomplish at the end of the instruction
or task. Here performance objectives are written
to provide the foundation for - Determining what skills and mental models need to
be used - Selecting the tasks to be taught
- Developing measures that indicate whether the
desired learning has taken place - The steps can be
- Identify the tasks comprising each domain
- Define the domain. Training Welder, artist/Educ
understands economics - Identify all tasks that comprise the domain
- Training Responsibilities, job descriptions /
Job Analysis - Education Subject area content and mental models
recommended (curriculum) - Identify the performance deficiencies associated
with each task - Training observe output deficiencies / interview
target learners - Education Interview masters, interview teachers,
administrators - Write the performance objectives for each task
- Gives you a focus for selecting content, media,
and instructional tactics - Gives you a focus for assessing knowledge / skill
acq. After the learning event. - Alerts learners to the task at hand within
instruction itself. - Develop the performance measures for each task
4Rossett/ Tessmer/ SmithRagan/ Reigeluth/ Kazanas/
Shaumbagh Magliaro/ Dick Carey/
Kazanas/Rothwell Leshin, Pollock Reigeluth/
5PERFORMING JOB, TASK AND CONTENTANALYSISOnce
the Need is Known, we figure out the processes
and tasks that may or may not allow the
sub-optimal or GAP learning / performance
situation(focus on the Task Analysis, the rest
is extra information for your resource
library)A Yellow Bar at the bottom means this
is a resource page only
- Most of the information in this section is
summarized from a collection of the following
sources - Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. - Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The Systematic
Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New York
Harper-Collins
6Update EDER 673
History of ID
ID Terminology
Instructional Design Philosophies
SMCR/Feedback Communication Model
Learners and Learning Theories
Context based designs
ID Models A peek
Needs Analysis
Media Selection
Task Analysis
Ordering Content (elaboration)
Evaluation
Motivation
7Tasks occur in an organization how well do
designers know that which surrounds our
prospective instruction.
Workplace Setting Analysis
- Ed Admin. 700 on one slide
- Is the administration / work flow integrated or
hierarchical? - Bureaucratic - or less than bureaucratic?
- Division of labor
- Technocratic - or less technocratic?
- Division of expertise and related power regimes
- Is the organization open or closed?
- Is the organization pro-change or change averse?
- Is this a learning community or a production
community? - Is there a cultural component that is important?
- Do clear values support the mission/goals/policies
? - Who leads?
- Employees
- Supervisors
- Committees
After Sergiovanni, 1990, Drucker, 1997
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
8The Main Instructional Development Concern about
the Work Environment is..
Workplace Setting Analysis
Optional Reading
- The total surrounding context for the person or
subject of interest. - Because
- The instructional design process is a change
effort that is intended to meet or avert
deficiencies in knowledge, skills or attitudes. - (Kazanas, 1998, p. 103).
- Considering
- Organization resource constraints (time, money,
people, ) and culture affect - The length of time a project can take
- Which media can be used
- Which instruction testing strategies can be
used
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
9Workplace Setting Analysis How to Identify
which factors matter..
Workplace Setting Analysis
Optional Reading
- Environments affecting ID development, delivery
and application matter - especially if you are
have a constructivist / inquiry designer
epistemology. - Focus on 3 environments
- 1. Development Environment
- 2. Delivery Environment
- 3. Application Environment
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
10Organization / ID Environment Assessment
Characteristics
Workplace Setting Analysis
Optional Reading
- Some High Performance Workplace Characteristics
for Instructional Development (Work) - Training and continuous learning
- Information sharing
- Employee participation
- Organization Structure
- Worker - Management partnerships
- Rewards systems exist and are understood
- Employee job security
- Supportive Work Environment
(Dubois and Rothwell, 1996)
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
11Setting Analysis Quality CheckAs a Developer,
Did I Get it Right?
Workplace Setting Analysis
Optional Reading
- Was the analysis conducted?
- Was the analysis conducted at the proper time?
Place? - SWOT Analysis Is instruction right for this
organization? - Strengths of this org for T D
- Weaknesses of this org for T D
- Opportunities for T D
- Troubles foreseen with T D in this context
- Designer Competency Check
- Is the designer capable of explaining why they
conducted a setting analysis and the reasons they
chose to focus on certain features of the design,
delivery and application environments?
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
12Work Analysis in Context Job, Task and Content
Analysis in a Training Setting
Optional Reading
Needs Assessment (finds the gap)
Learner Analysis (finds learner Characteristics)
Organization Analysis (Identifies Training
Constraints)
Work Analysis (procedures in the Org.) Identify
what worker does, how they do it, what mental and
physical Requirements exist,what kinds of tasks
are done, what Constitutes mastery or low
performance,
Create Perform. Objectives
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
13Job Analysis (Planning for one)(good for
job-specific training/instruction needs)
Job analysis
Optional Reading
- Who will do conduct it?
- Why do it?
- How will the results be used?
- Who depends on these results?
- What data collection analysis methods should
be used?
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
14Job Analysis (Implementing the Plan or Doing
It)(good for job-specific training/instruction
needs)
Job analysis
Optional Reading
- Do the plan steps (previous) to collect info.
About jobs under investigation - THE RESULTS
- A Job description
- A job specification
- A task listing
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
15Task Analysis Task Language
TASK analysis
- 2 Types of Tasks
- Cognitive Task (Mental performance).
Unobservable performance. (Knowing cannot be
observed by Kazanas Do not follow a prescribed
order. IE Choose a personal computer. - Also called a transfer task
- Goal Find a personal computer.
- Action Task (physical performance). Observable
performance. Action causes change. Often a
prescribed order. IE Change a light bulb. - A series of behaviors involving person/person or
person/object interaction - A series of behaviors that changes the person in
some way - A series of behaviors that accomplishes a goal.
- CRITERIA for evaluating an action task
- Task has a beginning and an end
- Task is performed in relatively short time
periods - Task can be observed
- Task can be measured
- Task is independent of other actions
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
16Task Analysis
TASK analysis
- Knowing what they do,
- how they do it,
- why they do it
- A task analysis is an intensive examination of
how people perform work activities. - Tasks A discrete unit of work performed by an
individual, it has a beginning and an ending. - Subtasks the smallest step into which a work
activity can be divided. - Elements a step within a step separate
time-motions - Task listing A list of actions done in work.
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
17Task Analysis The Results
TASK analysis
- To determine the components of competency
(competent performance) - To identify activities that may be SIMPLIFIED or
IMPROVED - To determine exactly what a worker must
- KNOW
- FEEL
- DO to learn a specific work activity
- To clarify resources /conditions needed for job
competency - To establish minimum standards (expectations) for
each task appearing in a job description. - There are many techniques for Task Analysis
- See Leshin Pollock, Riegeluth, Dick and Carey,
Smith and Ragan, Kazanas. And so on
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
18Task Analysis 5 Steps
TASK analysis
- Identify Jobs or tasks to be analyzed
- Clarify the desired results
- Prepare a Plan to do the Analysis
- Implement the Plan
- Analyze the results
- Break down the Task into component parts if need
be. - Restructure the parts if necessary to achieve
(learning / skills) outcomes
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
19Step One Identify the Task to be Analyzed by
identifying the KIND of task
TASK analysis
- Procedural observable action processes (people
machines) - Example Filling a gas tank
- Process partly observable, bound to a particular
process (people people) - Example Equitable hiring practices
- Troubleshooting observe an outcome trace it
back to the observable action that led to the
outcome ( people machines or people people) - Example I always get 2 copies of email from her.
- Mental Unobservable cognitive tasks
(abstraction, compare/contrast). Sequences may be
predictable. (person)
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
20Step 2 Clarifying the Desired Results
TASK analysis
- Ask yourself What do you want from this task
analysis? - Watch that your level of detail is not too fine.
- Jackson (1986) suggests
- 1. Find a task input
- 2. Find a task output
- 3. Figure out the steps between!
- Results can be application of an intellectual
skill (comparison), a cognitive strategy
(memory), verbal information, motor skill or
attitude.
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
21Step 3 PLAN to do the Task Analysis
TASK analysis
- 3 Questions to guide your Task Analysis Plan
- 1. Who will do it?
- 2. What task performance will be examined?
- 3. How will I collect Analyze data?
- Remember the TIME and it will take to analyze
a task. - Will INSIDE ID people or EXTERNAL ID people do
the analysis? - Sources of Information to consider when Planning
a Task Analysis - Performers (master, average, low)
- Nonperformers (managers, people affected,
resource people, SMEs, future performers) - Documents (reference by performers to do tasks
(manuals, online guides often list the tasks
quite welloften) - Environmental features The conditions of
instruction and learning
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
22Steps 4 and 5 IMPLEMENTING the Task Analysis
TASK analysis
- 1. Break the job down into its component parts
- 2. Compare the parts with correct performance
criteria. - 3. Restructure the parts to create an improved
task performance - OUTLINE THE TEACHING AND LEARNING REQUIREMENTS
- To summarize To design OJT,
- Do a task list
- Analyze the task list
- Use the task list to become the basis for
performance objectives - Generate the instructional intervention to
improve GAP tasks.
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
23Another approach to Task Analysis CONTENT
Analysis
CONTENT analysis
Optional Reading
- We are still looking for a way to design
instructional interventions that improve
performance or learning. - This is the process of braking large bodies of
subject matter or tasks into smaller
instructionally useful units. Can be called
Chunking. - Focuses on the information or knowledge
requirements rather than on sequences or
procedures --- FOCUSES ON EXPERTISE OR EXCELLENT
PRACTICE, then backs out the criteria for an
optimal task - Åssumptions
- Learners must know before they can do
- Work tasks might not be a good basis for
instruction-- do all tasks boil down to a single
set of tasks? - Different instructional content might apply for
different tasks.
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
24A 6 Step Content Analysis
CONTENT analysis
Optional Reading
- Identify the subject
- Identify what subject experts know
- See how people perform the mental activity by
- Asking them
- Observing work related activity
- Using other methods
- Conduct a lit search on the subject
- Develop a model of the subject
- Describe the subject
- There is an idea that if you study the content of
a mental process or job, you will likely find an
order or sequence that dictates what part of the
content must be known before others, and known
well for subsequent learning to occur.
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
25Content Analysis
CONTENT analysis
Optional Reading
- Step 1 Identify the Subject (ie teaching
writing skills). - use databases
- Step 2 Investigate what Expert performers
(master teachers) know - use interviews, questionnaires, observations,
docs, internet to explain what a subject is and
how it relates to the work, and how they would
orient a new person to the work. - Step 3 Investigate how people perform the
activity - Check mental performance by job shadowing, other
methods (see Leshin). - Clarify what knowledge is applied in what
setting, how people organize that knowledge.. Sit
with performers while they work. - Step 4 Conduct a lit search on the subject ID
research too. - Step 5 Create a model that fits the subject onto
a performance plane flowcharts, events networks,
graphic models organize information visually. You
want to know what is done, when, and how well it
must be done to design interventions for
performance improvement. (Dick and Carey, 1994). - Step 6 Describe the subject in a way that will
facilitate learning by others. Present what must
be known my experts. THIS IS GROUND FOR SETTING
PERFORMANCE OBJECTIVES. NEXT.
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
26Competency AssessmentAnother kind of Thinking
about PerformanceParticularly skills-based
performance
Optional Reading
- Supplants Task Analysis today at times
- Competency can mean
- Knowledge
- Skills
- Attitude
- Competency is a degree of excellence in
performance, using exemplars as excellence
criteria. - Competency assessment is the process of
discovering the competencies of exemplars. - Competency models are derived from competency
assessment. They can be created for job
categories, departments or organizations. - Organizational competencies can be defined too.
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
27Competency Assessment
Optional Reading
- Is popular as it is a more holistic way to
approach training, as minute tasks and processes
are less of a focus. - A focus on knowledge, skills and attitudes is
thought to be enough for the complex work world
today. - It is a model of intangibles (Kazanas
Rothwell, 1998). - Approaches include borrowed (from another org.),
process driven (doing a content and task analysis
on a specific org. unit), isolating
characteristics of exemplar performers and
verifying the model. - MINIMUM competencies are assessed via focus
groups with both expert and non experts. - There are trends driven approaches, and rapid
assessment approaches where outputs, competencies
roles and quality requirements from work
functions, responsibilities and behaviors emerge.
Gaps are filled by working on the gestalt by
using behavioral interviewing in the group.
(Delphi).
Kazanas, W., Rothwell, W. (1998). Mastering the
Instructional Process, (2nd Ed.). San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. Dick, W., Carey, L. (1996). The
Systematic Design of Instruction. (4th Ed.). New
York Harper-Collins
28- Adieu for this week, EDER 673 !Instructional
Design (iD) Next Week (March 6- March 13)
Ordering and sequencing content Elaboration
Theory (blueprinting)Readings due for Next
Class (March 6, 2003) 1. The Elaboration
Theory Guidance for Scope and Sequence
Decisions. In C. Reigeluth (Ed.), Instructional
Design Theories and Models - An Overview and
Current Status (pp.425-454).2. Read / Use The
Interactive Powerpoint on this topic, available
from the Course Home Page.From, Culnan, A.
(2003). Elaboration Theory. Unpublished M.Ed. Ed
Technology Assignment.See the Home Page by
Friday, 7 PM Feb. 28th for more detail and
reading resources on this topic -- beyond the
class material covered tonight.See the New
Discussion Thread (Groups) in WebCT for your ID
Model Peer Feedback(Rubrics are attached in your
email and in the new Thread)http//www.ucalgary.
ca/ekowch/673/673home.htmlEugene G.
KowchAssistant Professor of Educational
Technology