Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
INTRODUCTION
Advances in Instructional Design
If you want to be successful in designing effective instruction, you need to begin with a clear specification of what is to be learned. This is a central premise underlying various instructional-design theories since their inception (Reigeluth, 1983, 1999; Reiser & Dempsey, 2007). The three chapters in this section provide a useful description of advances in the field of instructional design, focusing on techniques for specifying what is to be learned. In this review, after a brief analysis of the types of knowledge, I examine four phases in the evolution of instructional-design approaches. As summarized in Table 9.1, these phases involve different ways of characterizing what is to be learned – compartmentalized behaviors, compartmentalized knowledge, integrated knowledge, and individualized knowledge.
APPLYING THE SCIENCE OF INSTRUCTION
Learning is a change in the learner's knowledge due to experience (Mayer, 2001). Instruction is the systematic manipulation of the learner's experience in order to foster learning (Mayer, 2003). In short, learning involves a change in the learner's knowledge and the goal of instruction is to foster a change in the learner's knowledge. However, you can only infer a change in the learner's knowledge indirectly by observing a change in the learner's behavior, such as changes in the learner's performance on a specified task.
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