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Complete-solution instructional design consulting, focused on behaviour change through scenario training.

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Embracing the Newest Instructional Design Tool – Microsoft Word

December 13, 2021 Joel Smith
An illustration of the Microsoft Word application icon on a pedestal, surrounded by light and adorned with a bright red ribbon bow

Introducing the latest L&D tool?

‘Let’s keep it simple’

I recently finished up a design for a client who’s needs lead me to make a design choice I never would have expected.

He enlisted me to help him update his sales training offering and make it teleconference-ready.

He wanted to deliver a new version of his training that relies less on his series of facilitated sessions, and extend the learning between sessions with reinforcement activities for learners to complete on their own, while also priming their learning for the upcoming session with some light reading.

But — here’s the rub — being a one-man trainer-for-hire, he doesn’t have capacity for the overhead or admin that a technology solution would require — “I’d like to keep it simple.” Roger that.

Toolchest Triage

Okay, so let’s see: 🤔

  • I needed a versatile tool that can present information in design-rich ways, and also allow users to input data but require no platform overhead or admin.
  • Something “simple” that absolutely every one of our learners is certain to have easy access to.

Well, with those requirements, there was really only two options I could think of:

  • form-fillable PDFs, or
  • Microsoft Word

Portable Document File Probably Doesn’t Fly

The PDF option was my first choice, but as I looked at it in more detail problems presented themselves; I didn’t want to limit the scope of the content the learners might be able to create in the activity assignment. And as I looked into creating PDFs that would accomodate large content entry, the solution seemed unclear.

Sure, Adobe’s LiveCycle / Experience Manager Forms was an option. But it looked like a real yak-shave to author. And, in my experience, the reliability of PDF as a format really drops off when you start tinkering with its core spec. (Not to mention that anytime Adobe becomes part of the solution it’s usually the opposite of keeping it simple!)

And of course, the skills for learners to annotate PDFs is not as universal as we’d probably hope!

Sorry PDF — you’re out.

Word up?

Okay, but really — Microsoft Word?

Let’s see — every learner is almost certain to have access and basics skills with it. So that’s a huge tick.

Word can of course display content of almost any design, and a document can obviously have sections for input, and grow naturally within its file spec as content is added. Sooo…maybe it’s right in this instance?

But it’s Word! And I’m a rotten Apple snob. The quality of design matters and Word documents – are just…ugly, right?!? And besides, how could I be certain that the designs would display properly on a Windows machine.

Check your ego, son and design something!

Okay, Joel — get over yourself. Yes, design matters, but utility is most important. And, besides it is actually possible to design good looking documents in Word. So pull your head in!

Fair enough. Apple snob moment over.

So, the solution looks like this:

  1. Select a platform-universal font like Calibri (🙄 – hey, it could be worse!)
  2. Design the workbooks in Pages on the Mac. (My Word skills are admittedly rudimentary.)
  3. Export for Word and check in Word for Mac. Make adjustments.
  4. Sync files to the new PC (that I bought exclusively for this purpose) and check in Word for Windows. Final adjustments. Done.

The Result – Spread the Word: Simple is Better

So that’s the solution we deployed:

  1. Before each of my client’s facilitated sessions we would send out the Word ‘workbook’ file that would:
    • recap the previous session,
    • deliver written assignment activities that could be completed directly in the document,
    • present the foundations of the upcoming session’s content.
  2. Each facilitated session was delivered via Microsoft Teams. My client presented while I drove the slides and annotated the conversation visually via MindNode mind-mapping tool.
  3. Once all the facilitated sessions were completed we delivered learners a final ‘master’ PDF of all the content from the course that they could refer back to without having to sift through their Word workbooks.

Our post-training survey via TypeForm demonstrated some satisfactory success — learners felt very comfortable with the Word format, and appreciated having linkages between sessions to help support the development of their scaffold as they worked toward becoming skilful in sales.

So I was convinced: we’re often enamoured with the latest shiny L&D tools. But by embracing the simplest tool and deploying it with learning best practice we created a quality learning experience that felt comfortable and safe for our learners.

I’d be interested to hear your ideas on what tools you would have chosen, given the brief, or other instances where you’ve found simpler to be better.

In L&D Solution Design, Case Studies Tags instructional design, L&D, Microsoft Word

Planning to Fail…to Succeed

October 1, 2021 Joel Smith

Great News – You failed! Try Again…

Last weekend I was playing a Legend of Zelda game with my sons. It was the youngest's turn and he was facing a boss battle.

"What are you thinking here, Austin? How you gonna tackle this guy?"

"Hmm…," he thought for a second. "Well I'm planning to fail at least a couple times so that I can learn his moves and get some practice. Then after lunch I'll come back and kick his butt."

😳 Okay then. If only I'd been so wise so young.

I've been reflecting on it ever since; his strategy exemplifies a core tenant of idStudios — Failure Planning: Fail, Learn and Return.

For all of my upbringing failure was something to be avoided at all costs, and certainly not something I would plan to do! My father was raising a Winner and winners don't fail, right? 🙄…what a waste of time and emotion.

It turns out that winners do fail, and that's precisely why they win! They fail early and often. In fact they rush toward it to get it out of the way. And now the rest of us are beginning to catch up, realising that failure is unavoidable.

It turns out that failure is the only way humans have ever learnt anything. Either through our own mistakes or the mistakes of others, failure is the sole means by which humanity has evolved to the brilliant state it has. So why should we pretend otherwise?

Nonetheless, there's still plenty of my fathers in the world. And their stigma of failure persists. So the work remains undone.

So, I'm sorry to disappoint you dad — idStudios stands in defiance of your only-win-never-lose attitude. We are a proud, ardent advocates of failure.

Where better for Failure Planning to take root than in instructional design. By designing experiences that let workers make mistakes and learn from those mistakes we can deliver behaviour change training that's both incredibly compelling for learners and free of the expensive, real-world consequences. That's what we at idStudios aspire towards.

Later on, after lunch, we sat back down, and Austin picked up the controller. With the knowledge gained through his planned failure, he entered the battle with confidence, knowing already what awaited him. I watched his young eyes flit across the screen and fingers dance across the controller — his practice paid off, and he did exactly what he planned to do — kicking his enemy's butt. Easy!

Let us all plan to fail so that we can sooner succeed.

"suckin' at something's the first step at being sort of good."

Source: https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:l...

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