Managing and Supporting Instructional Design and Development is a practical guide to managing multiple levels of instructional design activities, based upon management concept and application as well as instructional design process and application. The book takes an integrated approach within each level of an instructional design project: lesson, block, course, and courses leading to a certificate or degree. Topics of special focus ranging from scope and estimation to personnel and communication are addressed initially as discrete and segregated topics and later elaborated in more detail within the context of the different project or program levels.
This volume includes a systemic perspective, elaborated examples, meaningful activities, engaging exercises, multiple contexts, and best practices. In addition, each chapter that introduces the students to instructional project management at a particular project or program level has an integrated, scenario based project activity for students and faculty to develop. The book concludes with an examination of challenging instructional project management tasks, situations, and environments. A companion website contains examples, resources, and activities will be maintained to complement the contents and maintain currency with new and relevant technologies.
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Maße
Höhe: 254 mm
Breite: 178 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-138-79454-2 (9781138794542)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Milton C. Nielsen is Associate Vice President of Instructional Technologies Support at Texas State University.
J. Michael Spector is Chair of Learning Technologies in the College of Information at the North Texas State University and is the editor of the Development Section of Educational Technology Research & Development.
Autor*in
Texas State University, USA
Table of Contents
Introduction
Basic Premise: ID & PM are Parallel, Dynamic, Interacting, Complementary Processes
How to Use the Book: Sequentially or Interleaving Special Topics (Chapters 8 - 10) with Basic Topics (Chapters 2 - 5); Chapter 6 and 7 could be introduced with Basic Topics or with Application Environments
A Single Lesson or Unit of Instruction
A Lesson Block or Major Topic Area
An Entire Course
A Program, Group of Courses, Certificate or Degree
Integration of Disciplines
Integration of Work Areas
Program and Project Evaluation
Special Topics
Scope
Estimation
Funding
Personnel
Communication
Resource Planning: Time, Personnel, Hardware/Software...
Project Analysis
Pilots and Prototypes
Instructional Technology Center
Advisory Committees
Application Environments
Online Courses
Labs (Virtual Labs, Augmented Labs, Interactive Simulations, etc.)