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Instructional Design and Rapid Prototyping: Rising from the Ashes of ADDIE

Dashe & Thomson

Tom Gram, one of my favorite bloggers, a few years ago responded to the hue and cry about ADDIE’s demise in the field of instructional design. In ADDIE is DEAD! Long Live ADDIE! , For many years the five ADDIE phases were the foundation for the design of most systems. ADDIE vs. Rapid Prototyping.

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Quinn-Thalheimer: Tools, ADDIE, and Limitations on Design

Clark Quinn

On the other hand, processes like ADDIE make it easy to take a waterfall approach to elearning, mistakenly trusting that ‘if you include the elements, it is good’ without understanding the nuances of what makes the elements work. First, before I harp on the points of darkness, let me twist my head 360 and defend ADDIE. It just might.

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ADDIE: 5 Steps To Build Effective Training Programs

LearnUpon

The Addie model is an instructional design methodology used to help organize and streamline the production of your course content. Developed in the 1970’s, ADDIE is still the most commonly used model for instructional design. Addie Explained. The 5 Steps of Addie. How to implement ADDIE today?

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The Great ADDIE Debate

Clark Quinn

At the eLearning Guild’s Learning Solutions conference this week, Jean Marripodi convinced Steve Acheson and myself to host a debate on the viability of ADDIE in her ID Zone. While both of us can see both sides of ADDIE, Steve uses it, so I was left to take the contrary (aligning well to my ‘genial malcontent’ nature).

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ADDIE: 5 Steps To Build Effective Training Programs

LearnUpon

The Addie model is an instructional design methodology used to help organize and streamline the production of your course content. Developed in the 1970’s, ADDIE is still the most commonly used model for instructional design. Addie Explained. How to implement ADDIE today? Other versions?

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SAM vs ADDIE- Which is better for Learning Design?

Stratbeans

Let us compare a commonly accepted; however, less efficient ID model called ADDIE and a more recently developed robust one called SAM or Agile. For those of you in the learning and development field, ADDIE must be a familiar model; it’s been used for close to 40 years as one of the main learning industry standards for instructional design.

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Microlearning Best Practices

Upside Learning

Here we review the practices through the design process. In general, we can view the design process through the lens of ADDIE: Analysis, Design, Development, Implementation, and Evaluation. Too often, we can take orders for an approach, or throw the latest approach at every problem. You need to test.