Late in applying for the Jan-March session? Don’t worry. We’ll process your application for the April-June session.
If you are thinking of applying for the April-June session, send in your application soon. We have opened registrations, and will be accepting 6 participants only!
Meanwhile, you can get the book to refresh your ID knowledge or level up.
I did a color-pencil drawing of a dragon (or, to be more precise, a dragon’s head). Nothing to brag about, really, except that I had to beat a severe case of demotivation to pick up my pencils.
In this LinkedIn post, I talked about the reason why an artist puts in a lifetime of hard work to acquire the ability to create the exact image of something that they have in their mind.
And if we understand that, we’d understand why instructional design, too, is art.
We, instructional designers, have a lot to learn from fiction. As kids, most of us were taught to shun fiction as a useless hobby/pursuit, and while I am not totally against the argument, I believe that, as adults who work in the field of instructional design, we would do well to read some fiction.
In this post, we’ll see how some important principles of ID (such as the schema theory and the ARCS model) are reflected in fiction.
I’m falling in love with instructional design once again. A starry-eyed instructional designer sits with “For the Love of Instructional Design – The Non-textbook for Learning Professionals.”
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