Archive for September, 2009

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Daily Bookmarks 09/30/2009

September 30, 2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Daily Bookmarks 09/29/2009

September 29, 2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Accessibility in Instructional Design Programs

September 22, 2009

I received a question today that I can’t really answer, so I’m hoping that some of you out there who have actual degrees in instructional design can help me out.

Did most (or all) ID degree programs teach accessibility?

When I polled people on how you learn about accessibility earlier this year, only 1 person indicated they learned about accessibility from a formal course. However, my sample size is small (only 80 responses), so take that with a major grain of salt. Still, it seems like a minority of people learned it that way.

Maybe my results are skewed by people who are like me and don’t have a degree though. Can anybody help this reader out with info about accessibility in a formal ID degree program?

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Daily Bookmarks 09/21/2009

September 21, 2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Two Free Online Conferences

September 21, 2009

Learn Trends 2009

Learn Trends 2009

This morning I learned about two free online conferences, one focused on educational technology in K-12 schools, one more focused on corporate learning.

The first is the FETC Virtual Conference and Expo on October 22. I haven’t attended this conference before, but it looks interesting and the price is right. This is geared mostly for K-12 teachers and leaders.

The second is LearnTrends 2009, November 17-19, with the theme of “Convergence in Workplace Learning.” Join the Ning group and register on the conference event page. I attended the mini-conference in June live blogged my notes if you’re interested in seeing what types of conversations we had.

In this economy, everyone’s budget is down, but free opportunities like this can be very valuable.

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Daily Bookmarks 09/18/2009

September 18, 2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Demand for Instructional Designers

September 18, 2009

I’d like some help answering the following question I received this morning:

May i know the demand for instructional designers increase in the near future?

A similar question came up on the eLearning Guild discussion board a few months ago. At that point, the best anyone came up with from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics was predictions for Instructional Coordinators and Training and Development Specialists. By the BLS classification, instructional coordinators are more academic (think curriculum planners for a school district) and training and development specialists are in the corporate realm. There’s no separate figures specifically for instructional designers though.

For instructional coordinators, the BLS has predicted 22% growth between 2006 and 2016 (the most recent prediction available). For training and development specialists, they predict 18% growth during the same time period. Both of those predictions are for faster than average growth.

But neither of these is really quite right. Does anyone have any better numbers specific to instructional design or e-learning? What about outside the US? I have no idea where to even look for statistics for other countries. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Update 4/12/10: I just found this chart from Indeed.com. No real specifics, but at least it gives a general trend over time.


Instructional Designer Job Trends graph

Instructional Designer Job Trends Instructional Designer jobs
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CCK09: Connectivism and Constructivism

September 17, 2009
Magnetix

Magnetix

This was written as a comment on April Hayman’s post comparing Legos and Magnetix as metaphors for constructivism and connectivism. One of her readers, Plain_Gillian, said she was struggling to verbalize the difference between the two learning theories. My response is below, but you should go check out the original post and discussion there too.

I think the table comparing learning theories to connectivism is a good way to start. I admit though that even having gone through CCK08 and having done all this reading that I struggle to summarize connectivism in a sentence or two the way I could crystallize the point of constructivism.

If the idea of the difference between building knowledge with pieces and connecting ideas isn’t significant enough to really help you visualize it, think instead about how you would deal with a really, really complex overabundance of information. In the constructivist view, you would take little pieces out of that overabundance and build them into something new. If you’re thinking more social constructivist, you probably socially negotiate what’s important out of the river of information. But does either of those methods of learning really give you an overall picture of the trends or substance of something really big?

From a connectivist standpoint, the response to a huge amount of information isn’t to look at the individual pieces, but to look at the patterns. The human brain is designed to look for patterns, and that’s a big part of connectivist theory. If you analyze a large text sentence by sentence, deconstructing it and reconstructing a new analysis, that’s a constructivist response. If you analyze a large text with a word cloud to look for trends, that’s a connectivist approach.

Does that help at all? This isn’t all the aspects of the theory (which is part of why it’s hard to summarize in a sentence or two), but you might find it easier to think just about one part of it at a time. (And yes, that is sort of a constructivist approach to understanding connectivism.)

If you’re having trouble verbalizing it, then go with some other medium makes sense. If wrestling with these ideas inspires you to paint or draw or make a mind map or play with Play-Doh, then do that. Connectivism is a complex theory because it’s designed to work best for complex, rapidly changing knowledge. There isn’t a single best way to approach understanding it.

Image Credit:

Magnetix by Guapolo

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Daily Bookmarks 09/16/2009

September 16, 2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Daily Bookmarks 09/15/2009

September 15, 2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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