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Full-Text Articles in Education
What Graduate School Didn't Teach You About Instructional Design Consulting, Joel Gardner, Dawn Snyder, Jim Guilkey, Virginia Abbott, Matthew Barclay
What Graduate School Didn't Teach You About Instructional Design Consulting, Joel Gardner, Dawn Snyder, Jim Guilkey, Virginia Abbott, Matthew Barclay
All Faculty and Staff Scholarship
Instructional design consultants provide learning and performance solutions for their clients. However, it can be difficult for instructional design students and newly graduated instructional designers to adapt to the realities of consulting in a real-world context. This difficulty is magnified by significant technological, social, and other disruptions that often occur in work and learning environments. In our observation, newly graduated instructional design consultants enter the workforce equipped with powerful tools, theories, and models for increasing learning but are less equipped to consult with their clients and other stakeholders. This article is based on our experiences as instructional design consultants, and …
Moving Academic Support Services And Resources Online: Lessons Learned, Alyssa Darden
Moving Academic Support Services And Resources Online: Lessons Learned, Alyssa Darden
The International Institute for Innovative Instruction Blog
As Franklin University shifted to all remote services in mid-March of 2020 due to COVID, our Learning Commons support services of library, academic support, and testing worked quickly to provide equitable services in an online environment. Services pivoted by offering only online tests proctored by ProctorU, moving all tutoring appointments to the online model, and a dedicated focus to of preferring library acquisitions in e-content only format.
Encouraging Non-Native English Speakers In The Classroom, Marivic Lesho
Encouraging Non-Native English Speakers In The Classroom, Marivic Lesho
The International Institute for Innovative Instruction Blog
International students are a vital part of the community at American universities. There are innumerable benefits to this intercultural exchange, but for students to have the best experience, instructors need to be prepared to address certain language-related challenges.
Higher Education – Just How High Is It?, Matthew Barclay
Higher Education – Just How High Is It?, Matthew Barclay
The International Institute for Innovative Instruction Blog
Some people argue that the nature and purpose of education is to gain a broad range of knowledge. Unfortunately, higher education programs and courses are often afflicted with the myopia of knowledge, or even just brief encounters with it, above everything else. I don’t think knowledge alone represents the true heights of “higher education.”
Practice: An Essential Supporting Cast Member Of Outcomes-Based Instruction, Matthew Barclay
Practice: An Essential Supporting Cast Member Of Outcomes-Based Instruction, Matthew Barclay
The International Institute for Innovative Instruction Blog
I love good movies. Most of us do. Movies represent a complex combination of many elements combined by filmmakers to deliver a viewing experience to the audience that can be very moving, endearing, and memorable. Or the movie can fall flat, or just be mediocre.
Among all the elements that go into moviemaking, the lead talent is key to the success of a show. But so is the supporting talent.
Creative Design: Asking “What Is It Like” And “Who Cares?”, Matthew Barclay
Creative Design: Asking “What Is It Like” And “Who Cares?”, Matthew Barclay
The International Institute for Innovative Instruction Blog
How do we put creativity into academic courses without getting irrelevant or distracting? Creative design is somewhat of a holy grail in many industries, and this is certainly true in the area of teaching and learning. As designers and consumers of instruction, we seek creativity.
Evaluation: The Bright, Illuminating Principle Of Teaching And Learning, Matthew Barclay
Evaluation: The Bright, Illuminating Principle Of Teaching And Learning, Matthew Barclay
The International Institute for Innovative Instruction Blog
A few years ago, the planet Pluto was downgraded to “dwarf planet” status. Pluto is a small body made up of rock and ice, located billions of miles from the sun (Nasa, 2012). In other words, it’s a cold and rocky place, of little significance, far from the center of the system. This sounds like a description of evaluation in the realm of teaching and learning—at least a description of how evaluation is often treated.