Remove ADDIE Remove Agile Remove Facebook Remove Problem
article thumbnail

ADDIE isn't dead; how can it be?

Integrated Learnings

There has been a lot of discussion, and an infamous article or two, in our field about the death of the ADDIE model. As a reminder, ADDIE stands for Analyze, Design, Develop, Implement, and Evaluate. And if the attacks are based on the long timelines typically associated with ADDIE, then they make some valid points.

article thumbnail

Looking Back on 2010 with ADDIE

Integrated Learnings

Though a variety of models guide our instructional design work, I’d argue that ADDIE functions as the basic backbone of the process. Just about every model, trend, and best practice in the field supports one of the phases of ADDIE. A = Analysis (analyze the problem/opportunity and its causes).

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Cases in custom content development: tentative suggestion 2 - never regard a job as finished

Clive on Learning

Automatic online updates make ti practical to fix mistakes, handle usability problems and add new features on a regular basis. If you find a problem, it can be remedied quite painlessly just as soon as you have a fix. Why is a more agile model desirable? Excuse me, but I sense a disconnect.

article thumbnail

Top 68 eLearning Posts from April - Hot Topics iPad Google Buzz

eLearning Learning Posts

Facebook has more than 400 million active users and 50% of those active users log in every day and 35 million of those users update their status daily. Facebook Press Room. Rather than declare ADDIE dead, wouldn’t it make more sense to be sure that we are using it properly? Facebook for Learning? More Random Web 2.0