What Role Does Bloom's Taxonomy Play into eLearning Interactivity?
It’s an exciting time to be in the learning and development profession. As new technologies emerge and insight into brain science unfolds, your tools as a trainer are more sophisticated and your role in supporting learning is more complex than ever before.
According to the Association for Talent Development (ATD) report, Playing to Win: Gamification and Serious Games in Organizational Learning, approximately one-quarter of the 551 survey respondents incorporate a high-level of eLearning interactivity, with 25 percent using gamification in their training courses and 20 percent applying serious games. Nearly half of survey respondents – 46 percent – reported that they are considering such use in the coming year.
Levels 3 and 4 eLearning Interactivity
Gamification and serious games are both examples of Levels 3 and 4 eLearning course interaction. Training using Level 3 interaction is highly complex and customizable, and the learner has a great deal of control. At level 4, the learner is fully immersed in her learning experience. Such interactive course elements are on the rise, according to this research, particularly for employee training, new employee onboarding, and high-potential employee development programs.
At a high level of interactivity, the goal for course design is not to merely impress learners with the bells and whistles of training design – although serious games and gamification are excellent tools to increase participant engagement. Rather, the priority is to enhance understanding, impart knowledge, conceptualize ideas, apply training, and allow for reflection.
Take Bloom’s Taxonomy of Learning for example, a theory guiding our practice since its establishment 60 years ago. These six levels (or orders) within the cognitive domain encompass the simple recall of facts (Level one) to evaluation of newly learned material (Level six). For learners to effectively move up the chain of orders from memorization to application and analysis, and eventually evaluation, eLearning interactivity must be laser focused on training outcomes. To this end, each video, game, simulation, multimedia, and other interactive element incorporated within your course design must be aligned with such strategic goals.
Based on our research, we concluded that highly interactive eLearning courses share the following best practices:
Apply real-life scenarios to encourage the learner to think and evaluate the outcomes based on decisions she needs to make in the moment
Allow for the learner to explore, search, or investigate to accomplish learning goal(s)
Supply sufficiently challenging and relevant activities that will have the learner reflect, process the information, and transfer learning to his long-term memory.
From Best Practice to Applied Practice
This year we are working with the National Association of State Boating Law Administrators (NASBLA), a nonprofit organization that works to develop public policy for recreational boating safety for all 50 states and the U.S. territories. We developed specific criteria with the goal of elevating course interactivity to 50 percent at levels 3 and 4.
“Serious game use in the learning and development sphere aims to expose learners to new experiences and skills through simulations built around stories, goals, feedback, and play”
“Serious game use in the learning and development sphere aims to expose learners to new experiences and skills through simulations built around stories, goals, feedback, and play,” cites the ATD research report. NASBLA represents the quarter of organizations that stand on the leading edge of eLearning by adopting cutting edge training design and delivery methods. With the ultimate goal of boater safety in mind, NASBLA understands that creating highly interactive boater training will better engage learners and move them to advanced levels of learning evaluation and application.
We are excited about our work with NASBLA and other organizations that are committed to reimagining the possibilities of their eLearning courses. Now that you have read this article, do you feel that your eLearning courses align with these trends? Have you selected the right learning outcomes for your courses and does it give you the results that you were expecting? If not, one of our experts at Cynuria Consulting would be happy to guide you with your eLearning strategy.