Robert
M Gagne is best known for his nine steps for instructional design. Hetook an
interest in the information processing view of learning and memory in The Conditions of Learning (1965), which
outlined his learning theory. An article Learning
Hierarchies in 1968 was followed
by Domains of Learning in 1972. In these texts he developed
his five categories of learning and a universal method for instruction defined
in his nine instructional steps.
Five categories of
learning
Gagne’s
theory has five categories of learning:
1. Intellectual
Skills: Demonstrated by classifying things and problem solving
2. Cognitive
strategies: Demonstrated by their use and appropriate application
3. Verbal
information: Demonstrated by stating the information accurately
4. Motor
skills: Demonstrated by physical performance
5. Attitudes:
Demonstrated by preferring options
This
was an attempt to move beyond and widen Bloom’s tripartite distinction: Cognitive (knowledge) Psychomotor (skills) and Affective
(attitude), with a taxonomy that focuses on real world activities,
rather than abstractions.
Nine instructional steps
But
he is better known for his single method of instruction that can be applied to
all five of his categories of learning. This instructional process was to be
the recipe for good instructional design. You were expected to move through
them, step by step.
1.
Gaining attention: Get the learner
into an expectant state
2.
Stating the objective: Get the
learner to understand what they will be able to do as a result of the
instruction
3.
Stimulating recall of prior learning:
Get the learner to appreciate that they posses existing relevant knowledge
4.
Presenting the stimulus: Expose the
learner to the content
5.
Providing learning guidance: Get the
learner to understand the content
6.
Eliciting performance: Get the
learner to demonstrate what they have learned
7.
Providing feedback: Inform the
learner about their performance
8.
Assessing performance: Reinforce the
learning
9.
Enhancing retention and transfer to other
contexts: Get the learner to indulge in varied practice and to generalise
the new capability
Criticism
‘Gaining attention’ is often reduced to
clichéd ice breakers or overlong animation in
e-learning and rarely a truly engaging interactive event. In ‘Stating the objective’ the learner is often presented
with a dull list of objectives (At the end of this course you will…). This
works against the attention and arousal, necessary for learning. There is a
strong argument for emotional engagement at the start of a learning experience
and not a dull list of objectives. Stimulating recall of prior
learning is fine but not if the content is truly new to the learner who has no
real past experience to draw on and ‘Presenting the stimulus’ betrays
behaviourist tendencies. However, ‘Providing learning guidance’, ‘Eliciting performance’, ‘Providing feedback’ and ‘Assessing
performance’ are all sound strategies, as is ‘Enhancing retention and transfer
to other contexts’. In practice, much of this is reduced to exposition.
Learning and instructional designers often use Gagne’s nine
steps and there is much to commend if it is seen as a checklist. However, it
can be argued that his instructional ladder leads to predictable and over-structured
learning experiences, a straightjacket that strips away any sense of build and
wonder. It is also inappropriate for all learning strategies, as he claimed.
Scenario-based learning, many types of simulation, games pedagogies and
sophisticated adaptive learning are just a few techniques that do not fit
readily into this step-by-step recipe.
E-learning
Gagne
has influenced much of what has appeared as self-paced e-learning over the last
30 years. This has served designers well for simple self-paced e-learning, but
the step-by-step approach is now seen as inappropriate for alternative informal
learning, especially informal learning and more advanced pedagogies. Some see
this approach as producing formulaic, often uninspiring and over-long courses.
Conclusion
Gagne
was one an early learning theorists who provided some simple and practical
advice on instructional design, which in some way accounts for his success.
Although his instructional model is not applicable to all types of learning,
and can be seen as a restriction, he brought a certain method to design which
produced lots of solid learning experiences and content.
Bibliography
Gagne, R. M. (1965). The
Conditions of Learning, New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston.
Gagné, R. M. (1970). Basic
studies of learning hierarchies in school subjects. Berkeley,Calif:
University of California.
Gagné,
R. M., Richey, R., ERIC Clearinghouse on Information & Technology.,
International
Board
of Standards for Training, Performance, and Instruction., & United States.
(2000).The legacy of Robert M. Gagné. Syracuse, N.Y: ERIC Clearinghouse on Information
& Technology, Syracuse University
1 comment:
A Nice well organised hatchet job
on N.L.P. Mr. Clark
Excellent was the method of commencing the piece to show us immediately a part founder
Wonderful catalog of academic comments and researched information.
Shame that you missed some important
facts Mr. Clark in your Plan B.
Some info perhaps on a Plan A.
The new researched working methods in creative teaching. A comparison of this NLP-Rubbish and what is working well in education/health/business/sport\ in mind-power we own. Maybe these friends of yours who find it easy to kick building bricks down so easily. Where oh where is their input of value.
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