Ten Steps to Complex Learning: A Systematic Approach to Four-Component Instructional Design

Voorkant
Routledge, 12 okt 2012 - 344 pagina's

Ten Steps to Complex Learning presents a path from a training problem to a training solution in a way that students, practitioners (both instructional designers and teachers), and researchers can understand and easily use. Practitioners can use this book as a reference guide to support their design of courses, materials, or environments for complex learning. Students in the field of instructional design can use this book to broaden their knowledge of the design of training programs for complex learning.

Now fully revised to incorporate the most current research in the field, this second edition of Ten Steps to Complex Learning includes user-friendly examples and case studies, and demonstrates the application of the ten steps in relation to the design of serious games, learning networks, social media, and new developments in educational neuroscience.

 

Inhoudsopgave

1 A New Approach to Instruction
1
2 Four Blueprint Components
11
3 Ten Steps
37
Design Learning Tasks
49
Develop Assessment Instruments
78
Sequence Learning Tasks
112
Design Supportive Information
140
Analyze Cognitive Strategies
169
Analyze Cognitive Rules
223
Analyze Prerequisite Knowledge
235
Design PartTask Practice
247
14 Closing Remarks
268
Appendix
276
Glossary
285
Illustrations
302
References
304

Analyze Mental Models
180
Design Procedural Information
198

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Over de auteur (2012)

Jeroen J. G. van Merriënboer (1959) is professor of Learning and Instruction at Maastricht University, The Netherlands, where he is heading the research program of the Graduate School of Health Professions Education (SHE). He has published over 150 scientific articles in the areas of learning and instruction and medical education.

Paul A. Kirschner (1951) is professor of Educational Psychology, Program Chair of the Learning and Cognition program and Coordinator of Research at the Centre for Learning Sciences and Technologies (CELSTEC) at the Open University of the Netherlands, and Scientific Director of the Netherlands Laboratory for Lifelong Learning (NeLLL).

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