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Instructional Design Models

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Design and Development Phases. Student Assessment Instruments ... develop and teach a course on Fashion Design in the 19th Century (or substitute your ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Instructional Design Models


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Instructional Design Models
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What is Instructional Design?
  • One of the foundational techniques/ processes of
    the field of instructional technology
  • Systematic process for analyzing, designing,
    developing, implementing, and evaluating
    instruction

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What are Instructional Design Models?
  • Prescriptive set of procedures for developing
    instructional materials
  • Organization and management of the process
  • Specific techniques for accomplishing tasks
  • Scalable

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Instructional Design Models
  • Models, like myths and metaphors, help us to make
    sense of our world.

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Dick and Carey Model
  • Simplification of Inter/Services ISD Model
  • Adapted for education as well as training
  • Most widely taught
  • Ten major steps

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Dick and Carey Steps
  • Analysis Phase
  • Needs Assessment
  • Instructional Analysis
  • Learner/Context Analysis
  • Performance Objectives

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Dick and Carey Steps
  • Design and Development Phases
  • Student Assessment Instruments
  • Instructional Strategies and Design Document
  • Instructional Materials

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Dick and Carey Steps
  • Evaluation Phase
  • Formative Evaluation
  • Revisions to Instruction
  • Summative Evaluation

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ADDIE Model
  • ANALYSIS

  • Training needs assessment

  • Selection of delivery system
  • Topic
    analysis
  • Job
    analysis

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  • Gange's Theory

  • Ausebel's Theory
  • based on the behaviorist view
  • His theory supports the following ideas

  • based on the cognitivist view

  • His theory supports the following

  • ideas
  • Learning causes an observable change in the
    learner.

  • Inputs to learning are important.
  • Skills should be learned one at a time.

  • Learning materials should be well organized.
  • Each new skill learned should build on
    previously acquired
  • skills.

  • New ideas and concepts must be "potentially
    meaningful" to the

  • learner.
  • Learning and knowledge are both hierarchical in
    nature.

  • Anchoring new concepts into the learner's already
    existing

  • cognitive structure will make the new concepts
    recallable.

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Gagné
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  • Imagine that you have just been asked to develop
    and teach a course on Fashion Design in the 19th
    Century (or substitute your
  • own area of interest)
  • Where do you begin?
  • What elements of course development do you
    have to consider?
  • What order do you consider those elements?
  • What resources might you access to assist
    you?

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The Systematic Design of Instruction
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