Good To Great

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How I used Wordle as a basic TNA tool | Good To Great

Good To Great

Pingback: Folks, allow me to introduce you to… | Craig's Thoughts on Learning stephaniededhar | December 3, 2010 at 3:33 pm | Reply Thanks for all your comments; I’m glad to have provided some food for thought! Pingback: Interactions: to tell or to test?

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Three steps to compliance greatness | Good To Great

Good To Great

Design an ongoing experience, including links to other reference points or learning resources and providing a well-designed crib sheet with key ‘dos and don’ts’ and contact points. ← User-focused design for gold-standard compliance training An e-learning Christmas variety box → Like Be the first to like this post.

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How to write an award-winning submission

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According to Laura Overton at Towards Maturity , ‘award winners will have made every attempt to provide solid evidence that they have met each of the judging criteria set down for the category…Make sure that your submission clearly addresses each of the areas that the judges are considering, preferably in the order suggested!’

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Excellent instructional design: a 10-tip beginners' guide | Good.

Good To Great

This beginners’ guide provides some basic building blocks to help training managers or subject matter experts wear their new instructional design hats with confidence! Instructional design isn’t easy (if it was, there’d be no such thing as bad e-learning), but the basics can be taught and easily adopted.

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Two personal development resolutions for 2012

Good To Great

So the pictures I upload to Project 365 this year may not be the most technically-accomplished, but they will provide a record of my year and something for me to look back on. Having photos of special people and places, and even of quite ordinary, uneventful occasions, is important to me and brings me a lot of happiness.

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15 tips for energising your e-learning | Good To Great

Good To Great

Don’t assume that all the ‘must have’ information provided by subject matter experts and stakeholders really is ‘must have’ Flex your editor’s elbow and be firm: if it doesn’t directly contribute to the learning outcomes, put it somewhere else. Stay focused.

Tips 73
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Lessons from Jamie's Dream School

Good To Great

but David Starkey provided the most wonderful illustration of the big and important difference between a subject matter expert and a learning expert, or indeed between a professor and a teacher. While that’s a great privilege, it’s not always everything it’s cracked up to be.

Lesson 61