Taking Matters into Our Own Hands: Instructional Design with Research in Mind

Audience Level: 
All
Session Time Slot(s): 
Institutional Level: 
Higher Ed
Streamed: 
Onsite
Special Session: 
Research
Diversity & Inclusion
Abstract: 

In this interactive session, we share how and why instructional designers must take educational research into their own hands. Working through a real-world case study, we engage participants to think about how to design, instrument, and evaluate a learning activity to drive evidence-informed changes that measurably improve a learning experience.

Extended Abstract: 

As instructional designers, we spend copious amounts of time and energy trying to build effective learning experiences, but at the end of the day rarely do we meaningfully evaluate whether a learning experience is successful or use robust evidence to identify opportunities to improve. Important questions, such as “Are all students succeeding equitably?” and “Does student behavior match the assumptions presupposed by the learning design?” typically go unexplored and unanswered. And despite instructional designers’ commitment to popular design methodologies and increasing efforts to incorporate evidence-informed findings from the learning sciences, the truth is that each learning setting is so contextualized and unique that it’s impossible to know whether even the best designed learning experience is truly effective. To make matters worse, current approaches to educational research are too slow, too artificial, and too abstract to adequately guide the design of the real-world learning experiences that instructional designers are tasked with constructing.

What is an instructional designer to do?

Fortunately, the increasing availability of educational data, made possible by the widespread use of digital and online learning platforms, has enabled instructional designers to take research into their own hands. It is now possible for instructional designers to collect meaningful evidence of student learning and obtain powerful insights into student behavior, perceptions, and attitudes. Rather than simply designing learning experiences according to industry “best practices” and hoping for the best, we believe unleashing instructional designers to engage in applied education research is critical to improving the quality of online education.

If this sounds daunting, it is! There are many challenges: knowing what data is important to collect, what tools and resources exist to collect that data, and understanding how to analyze and translate data patterns into learning theory informed ideas for improvement. But if instructional designers don’t lead this work, who will?    

In this interactive session, you will join a learning engineering team to help design, instrument, and evaluate a real-world learning activity that is included in an actual online course. Led by an experienced instruction design manager with over a decade of experience and a senior learning data scientist, you will be pushed to step outside traditional instructional design methodologies to think like a learning engineer and educational researcher. You will walk through the key steps our team takes to design an effective learning activity, instrument it to collect meaningful data, and then evaluate the results to drive data-informed improvements. Along the way, we provide commentary and insights from both the instructional design and data science perspectives—challenges we’ve faced and lessons we’ve learned—empowering you to take the evaluation of the learning experiences you design into your own hands.

Position: 
6
Conference Session: 
Concurrent Session 3
Conference Track: 
Research: Designs, Methods, and Findings
Session Type: 
Discovery Session
Intended Audience: 
Administrators
Design Thinkers
Faculty
Instructional Support
Students
Training Professionals
Technologists
All Attendees
Researchers