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Is ADDIE Still Effective in Today’s Learning Environment?

Hurix Digital

For decades, the ADDIE model has reigned supreme as the framework for instructional design (ID). But with today’s rapidly evolving learning environment, questions arise: Is ADDIE still effective? Can it keep pace with the demands of diverse learners and agile development?

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Agile Development for eLearning

Infopro Learning

ADDIE is probably the most well-known method of this linear process. Agile, with cross-skilled teams and an iterative development methodology, allows for changes and creative ideas at all stages of the project. The agile teams are self-organizing and hold full accountability for the product. In comes the leaner way of working.

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ADDIE or Agile? A false dichotomy

Torrance Learning

There’s a lot of buzz these days about whether we should abandon the training industry’s go-to model, ADDIE, for an Agile approach. A disclaimer: we’re all about Agile, or rather, LLAMA – the Lot Like Agile Methods Approach – here at TorranceLearning. But that doesn’t mean we give up on what ADDIE has taught us.

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Key Measures You Must Adopt for a Sustainable Training Delivery

Infopro Learning

Here are the key measures you must adopt to ensure the sustainability of training delivery: Adopt an Agile Learning Design Model- Ensure Faster Training Delivery Organizations have used the ADDIE (Analysis, Design, Develop, Implement, Evaluate) model for training programs.

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Agile eLearning development (2): Culture

Challenge to Learn

I planned to write this second post on agile eLearning development about the backlog and estimations. The difference between a classic waterfall approach and an agile one is way more than applying a different set of tools and techniques, it is a different state of mind. The next image is the heart of his theory. It works like this.

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Agile eLearning development: business goals and road map

Challenge to Learn

This is a first post in a series of post on Agile eLearning development. This series is sparked by the book ‘Leaving ADDIE for SAM’ by Michael Allen and Richard Sites. I do believe that agile software development can offer us even more very practical ‘best practices’ that we can apply to eLearning.

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Agile eLearning development (3): Best practices, Demo’s, user stories and backlog

Challenge to Learn

In the previous post on agile eLearning development I wrote about culture. Agile development offers a range of best practices that are relatively easy to implement. Agile development works in short sprints (one or 2 weeks). You don’t have to implement an agile process to do this. But there is hope. User stories.

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