Bruce Graham is one of these gentleman. He's a frequent responder in the Articulate Community forum (a place where users of Articulate can gather help on the product in general, but more specifically on elearning design and delivery tips, tricks, and general idea sharing). Recently someone (Jenise Cook) asked about her course on protecting your SIN#. She was just looking for some different ways to perhaps present the material. Various ideas were shared by a few different community members, but the one that stuck out for me was Bruce's.
His thought, which again I thought was brilliant, was to present the material back to the learner in a completely sarcastic manner. In a way this would showcase to the learner that the main points of the lesson should be "so obvious" to the average user that there should be know doubt in their mind that they should know and remember this information. The "over the top" course would reinforce the lesson, most likely, in a humoristic manner that would stick to the learner.
Identity theft is one of the fastest growing hobbies in America. Anyone who has your Social Security number can use it to get other personal information about you. But HEY!. That's OK - we're all friends here. Lesson One - DO NOT MAKE EFFORTS TO PROTECT YOUR NUMBER
The lesson is filled with humour and sarcasm (maybe way I like it so much), but the overall summary or morale of each lesson is solid and factful. A brilliant twist on a normal lesson delivery. Spin the tale into a way the learner would never imagine. Shock them with the material and it will stick.
The other example of ingenuity was from Thomas Baker (and if you haven't added his blog to your readings you should - an incredible and fun interactive teacher). How much do you love this pic?
![]() |
| At Universidad de los Andes in Santiago, Chile. Thomas Baker having fun in class doing Limbo. Students waiting on their turn. (Source: La Tercera newspaper) via Final: The 80-20 Rule Re-Visited: Implications for Teacher Talking Time #ELTchat (blog posting) |
What a simple yet ingenious way to present material back to a learner in a different format. It broke a long article in to manageable chunks. It place that bit of human interaction back into what was just text and from, originally, one perspective. More importantly it was well received by Stephen as well.
These two examples have me looking for more and more ways to think very differently about the way I would like to present courses to learners. Give them something they don't expect and look at the material from a completely different point of view. I will be watching, reading and learning from these gentlemen for many years to come. I thank them both for opening my mind to new and different possibilities.





1 comments:
I love eLearning that has (appropriate) "shocks" in it. Here's another book you may want to get for inspiration - http://www.amazon.co.uk/Complete-Utter-Failure-Life-Everything/dp/0273661663
I recently created a course for a client that had "2 new company mission statements" in them...one was "To only ever sell our clients and never try and upsell to them", the other was "To offer our clients the wrong products when they call". I then added that, (of course), these were both absurd, HOWEVER they were EXACTLY what we do if we fail to understand their business and what their job roles are, (the point of the course....).
If usd sparingly, it's a great technique to try out, it can be very powerful.
Take care.
Bruce
Post a Comment