- Interactive tutorials are time-consuming, expensive and complex to put together.
- It takes a great deal of expertise to do a really good job of designing an engaging solution, and this is in short supply.
- The format has hardly advanced since the 1980s, except perhaps in superficial graphical terms, and there appears to be little interest among producers for fully exploiting the potential for intelligent, adaptive tutorials.
- The learner is isolated from peers, experts and others who can assist their learning.
- Assessment is often superficial and knowledge-based.
- It can be tricky to deploy these tutorials on mobile devices.
- It is hard for the learner to re-visit any of the elements of the tutorial for reference, without getting caught up in the sequential, page-driven navigational system.
- Videos can be easily delivered to any device and can be highly-engaging as long as they are kept short and sweet. Even when professionally produced, they cost little and can be ready in as little as a few hours. Whether you need interviews, demos, how-to's or animated explanations of difficult concepts - video works perfectly.
- Web articles and PDFs are not a glamorous or high-tech solution, but they are the resources we normally turn to for a more in-depth examination of an issue. Web articles are the more flexible of the two options, but PDFs are better when you know the document is going to get printed.
- Scenarios are the one ingredient of contemporary e-learning which I would keep in my everyday toolkit. They do not have to be technically difficult to develop (they can be as simple as a piece of text followed by a multiple choice question) but they do have to be challenging, authentic and relevant to the learner's real-world problems. Scenarios are a form of guided discovery; they encourage insights; they help to get across the big ideas.
- A forum is another simple, inexpensive tool which sits nicely alongside the packaged self-directed materials. Forums allow for Q&A, for debate and for the externalisation of learning. Obviously there are other ways to achieve the same result, not least a face-to-face discussion, but the forum does the job.
- Links might seem too trivial to be considered a self-directed core learning tool, but they act as a gateway to all sorts of other resources beyond the packaged materials that you have put together. You can act as a content curator and suggest links, but then so, of course, can learners. Come to think of it, they can come up with some pretty good videos and web articles too.
- Learning journals (blogs) provide a way for a learner to record and share their reflections over a longer course of study.
- Wikis provide a way for groups of learners to work together in building a knowledge resource. Not strictly speaking a self-directed element but who wants to be self-directed all the time?
- Sims and games provide highly-authentic opportunities for skills practice and discovery learning.
- Quizzes provide an indication of what the learner knows. They also provide a means for rehearsal of facts, concepts, rules, principles, etc.
- Narrated slide shows are probably second best to videos but if your starting point is a slide show then this is probably the way to go. And you can always turn it into a video!
- Practical assignments are going to help learners put ideas into practice, individually or in groups. They also provide a means for assessing competence. Ideally a facilitator will be on hand to provide feedback. If not, you could ask the learner's manager to step in or provide some means for peer assessment.
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