ATD Blog
Mon Mar 21 2022
No matter your experience level in creating e-learning courses, designing an asynchronous learning experience is a very different challenge than authoring an instructor-led classroom or live online course. It’s more than a set of PowerPoint slides; the learner needs to experience real-life scenarios, try out tasks, and obtain feedback along the way. A smiley face and a thumbs up icon at the end of the training effort aren’t enough.
As a certified ATD Master Trainer™ and certified ATD Master Instructional Designer™, credentialed APTD® holder, and senior internal facilitator with ATD, I understand the value of solid training plans and strong facilitation. Here are the top five lessons I learned from designing and developing asynchronous e-learning programs:
Take a credible e-learning instructional design training course to learn the fundamentals—one that delivers research-based content and personalized learning. The value of an expert instructor is key, but just as important is a course that allows for peer-to-peer interactions. Look for a course that takes a practical, actionable approach to instructional design. You should receive tools and learn methods that you can apply to your work immediately and effectively.
You’ll need to do more than you realize. Is your job title instructional designer or something similar? If so, get ready to add a few more titles underneath it_. Narration actor. Graphic designer. Investigative journalist. QA tester. Writer._ You may need to play all these roles when designing and developing an e-learning course. Evaluate your strengths and weaknesses. It’s OK to outsource one or two elements of the project—like voice-overs or graphic creation—to experts.
Once I had to rollout a series of e-learning modules without a full QA review or pilot due to tight timelines. In fact, I was the only reviewer before implementation! Guess what happened. The learners emailed me. “Nikki, I wanted to let you know that I could not proceed past the fifth slide; the e-learning sent me in a loop.” If you end up in a similar situation, try this: Ask an intended learner to take the course while you observe over their shoulder or via screen share. You’ll be amazed at the small hiccups that arise when someone else is navigating the course.
All organizations have process changes, so updates will be needed. If you don’t have access to the original e-learning course files, you are back at square one. When a team member of mine went out on maternity leave, I was asked to fix one quiz question. Easy—if I had the file. It was on my team member’s desktop, and I had no way to get it. I had to completely rebuild the course to amend a single quiz question. Store files in an accessible, central location.
Participants in my authoring tool classes walk away with confidence because they can use variables and markers, add animations and triggers, and create quizzes with ease. However, they may not have mastered the art of design. What does your organization want the learner to be able to do at the end of the e-learning course? Typically, it’s not “be amazed by how many interactive features the developer was able to execute within the authoring tool.” Use design to expand the learning experience, not distract from it.
Have your remote learners practice with you in real time. Do a screen simulation with a try-it mode and have them perform the steps. And don’t create a complicated quiz on something like the process of how to co-sign a document. That memory test is not what they will end up doing back on the job! Hopefully these tips will help you design and develop more successful asynchronous e-learning programs.
“For more than 75 years, ATD Education has empowered talent development professionals with the knowledge and skills they need to be successful and remain competitive. For more than two decades, ATD has been a leader in setting standards for and delivering online learning programs. ATD’s live online and on demand courses enabled professionals around the globe to learn with continuity and gain the essential skills necessary to the disruptions to our workplaces and our society. As an established industry resource continuously adapting to the evolving talent environment, ATD Education has the courses, certificate programs, and professional credentials leaders need.
Editor's note: This post was originally published on eLearning Industry.
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