instructional system design models
Instructional design is concerned with learning, instruction environment, material and the hollistic system of education and training.
"the process of specifying conditions for learning".
1:45
Program and curricula at the macro level

ADDIE
Instructional design process - systematic and systemic
Systematic: step by step
Systemic: holistic (the entire procesS)
- Analysis
- Design
- Development
- Implementation
- Evaluation

Common vocab
needs assessment
goal analysis
learner analysis
task analysis
contents
strategies
medias
activities
assessments

5:30 | Dick and Carey Model
6:30
Morrison, Ross, Kemp (MRK)

More hollistic and systemtic - you can start at any point of the model.
Design rational for starting at a certain point.
Move to the next component in a systematic and logical manner.
Elements can recur throughout the model.
7:25 | 4C/ID
educational programs for complex learning can always be described in terms of four basic components, namely (a) learning tasks, (b) supportive information, (c) procedural information, and (d) part-task practice (see Figure below). Learning tasks provide the backbone of the educational program; they provide learning from varied experiences and explicitly aim at the transfer of learning.

Learning by doing
Learning tasks at the center of the model.
Designing for Distance Education
Online courses or distance education - cannot be the same as the traditional classroom.
Shift - visuals, engagements, timing, tools, etc.
Interaction as a key - one of the reasons MOOCs are not as successful is the lack of interaction.
Community-based, cultural changes - understanding diverse cultural backgrounds and what they bring to the table as part of their cultural information.
When technology fails - back up plans for when the internet fails.
Evaluation - Quality, evaluations need to happen.