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Thursday, May 6, 2010
Post from: The eLearning Coach Novice Versus Expert Design Strategies. Tags: DESIGN INSTRUCTIONAL DESIGN expert learners expertise reversal effect novice learners novice to expert Instructional designers might be interfering with the learning process. Here's how.
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Friday, August 14, 2009
In a previous article , I noted that experts have different internal knowledge structures than novices. Expert knowledge seems to be efficiently organized and easy to search through, like an orderly file cabinet. Expert knowledge is deeply intertwined, creating many paths for recalling information. Keep it Organized.
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Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Usually this means the content lives inside the head of a subject matter expert , or SME. They know a lot and usually like being asked for their expert opinion and knowledge. Tags: learning design rapid elearning case study content course design scenario SME subject matter expert But how? Through osmosis? Hypnosis? Not quite.
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Monday, October 13, 2008
Social learning also discovers the experts instead of experts being appointed. We are all experts at something. Now we can let that expertness out and let others take advantage of it. Again, back to the BarCamp example, experts automagically emerge from the croud. But no one is dictated an expert.
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Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Compared to an expert, a novice will have a limited network of mental structures or schemas related to the subject, a reduced ability to make relevant perceptual discriminations, fewer paths for recalling information and inaccurate or fuzzy mental models resulting in less competent problem solving. Designing For Experts. Motivate.
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Tuesday, June 2, 2009
was reminded of this diversity on receipt of a reply to an email, from my blogger colleague and friend, Tony Karrer , who aptly moved from the peripheral to the relevant in saying: "On a different note - any thoughts on how deliberative practice relates to becoming something less than an expert.
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Wednesday, August 4, 2010
What does it take to be an expert? After all, one aspect of our job is to create an environment, and deliver interventions, that helps to improve the performance of novices and experts alike. It’s well worth a read (it’s called The Making of an Expert ). Blah, blah, blah, experts … so what? 1] How often?
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Monday, January 5, 2009
From my own knowledge and experience, most of what Gladwell alleges about expert ability in musicianship alone seems to stack up. But one has to take care when considering exactly what is meant by an ‘expert’; I will discuss one piece of evidence I found in support of this. Tags: study communities expert learning
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Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Here are my tips for working successfully with subject matter experts: 1. By nature, the SME often has a narrower focus than we do because they are the expert. I recently presented a case study at the central Indiana ASTD fall conference. The focus of the case study was on using e-learning templates to facilitate rapid design. etc.).
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Monday, August 10, 2009
That same analogy works well to represent the brain of an expert. The expert’s brain is like a hard-boiled egg. An expert has knowledge structures that differ from those of a novice. It’s important to understand these differences when designing for experts and when designing for novices. Network of Knowledge.
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