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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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Content, Skill and Scale: ID Best Practices?

Infopro Learning

ADDIE Model: The ADDIE model is an instructional design approach that follows a comprehensive and step-by-step process, consisting of Analysis, Design, Development, Implementation, and Evaluation. Gagne’s Nine Events of Instruction: Developed by Robert Gagne, this model outlines nine essential steps to foster effective learning.

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Gaps in the ADDIE Instructional Design Model

LearnDash

I have often written in the past about the strengths of using an elearning model, such as ADDIE , for course design, development, and delivery. I still happen to believe that ADDIE (or derivatives of this framework) tend to capture the most under the instructional design umbrella, but that’s not to say there aren’t any flaws.

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Book review: Leaving ADDIE for SAM: will agile eLearning development become mainstream?

Challenge to Learn

Michael and Richard present us an agile alternative for ADDIE: SAM (Successive Approximation Model). It is followed by an analysis of ADDIE, looking at its original form and some new manifestations. Their conclusion is: ADDIE falls short, we need something else (and I agree). The book starts with why we need a new approach.

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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. Rapid Prototyping.

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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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eLearning Glossary Part 2: More Commonly Used Terms

Association eLearning

ADDIE- The ADDIE model is a process used by instructional designers and training developers offering guidelines for creating effective training. AGILE- AGILE is the counter method to sequential processes like ADDIE. Previously we dug into the alphabet soup of eLearning terms and acronyms. But you weren’t full.