Effective E-learning: Design, Development and Delivery

Madhuri Dubey

ISBN: 9788173717284 | Year: 2011 | Paperback | Pages: 300 | Language : English

Book Size: 180 x 240 mm | Territorial Rights: World

Price: 1025.00

Out Of Stock

About the Book

Effective E-learning deals with the fundamentals of content design, development and delivery. Universities across India can use it as a textbook for their e-learning programmes. Content designers and developers in the corporate, academic, vocational and government domains can use it to develop e-learning course material. Real-life examples and hypothetical scenarios have been included. Illustrations, worksheets, exercises, check lists, questionnaires and a glossary make this a useful tool for the learner.

Contributors (Author(s), Editor(s), Translator(s), Illustrator(s) etc.)

Madhuri Dubey has been working in the field of e-learning for over a decade. She has managed several e-learning projects and handled various aspects of content design, development and delivery. She now works for Cordys Software India Pvt Ltd, where she is responsible for product marketing and blended learning. An ardent advocate of the use of technology in education, Ms Dubey has a doctorate in Curriculum Studies from the English and Foreign Languages University (EFL University), Hyderabad. Click here to visit the author's website.

Table of Content

Section I: E-learning – the big picture
1. ICT and E-learning
Introduction
Understanding ICT
Impact of ICT on learning
ICT makes a difference in learning
ICT as an enabler
The relationship between ICT and e-learning
Challenges in e-learning adoption
2. An Overview of E-learning
Introduction
E-learning: Definitions
Characteristic features of e-learning
Evolution: E-learning then and now
Different uses of e-learning
Academic e-learning and corporate e-learning: Differences
3. E-learning in India
Introduction
Infrastructure
Support from the government
The market perspective – e-learning industry in India
E-learning in the academic context
E-learning in corporate training
E-learning in the rural context and vocational training

Section II: Holistic approach to design, development and delivery
4. Theoretical background
Introduction
Insights from learning theories
Learning styles
Adult learning principles
The role of memory, motivation and interaction
Learning, instruction and performance
Issues with traditional learning
Evolving notions of learning
Learning organisations
Teaching and learning with the help of the Internet
5. The Framework
Introduction
The need for a holistic framework
Significance of process orientation in the framework
Visual Communication Design
Instructional Design
Working with Instructional Design models
Role of an instructional designer in e-learning
E-learning technologies

Section III: Getting started with e-learning
6. Analysis
Introduction
Significance of analysis
Need for holistic analysis
What constitutes holistic analysis?
Informed decision making in different contexts
Getting started with analysis
7. Design
Introduction
The relationship between analysis and design
The significance of design
Developing the instructional and visual strategy
Three levels of design decision making
Bloom’s taxonomy – cognitive, affective and psychomotor domains
Working with content – visual strategy
The strategy in action – prototyping
Getting started with design
8. Development
Introduction
Significance of development
The development process
Pre-production
Production
Post-production
Assessments
Types of content development processes
Getting started with content development
9. Delivery
Introduction
Significance of this phase
Delivery options
Emerging trends in e-learning delivery
Modes of delivery
Content delivery process illustrated with an LMS
10. Evaluation
Introduction
Significance of the evaluation phase
Conducting summative evaluation
Kirkpatrick’s model for summative evaluation
Evaluation and ROI
11. Looking ahead
Glossary
Appendix 1: Learner analysis — sample questionnaire
Appendix 2: Subject matter expert (SME) — interaction questionnaire
Appendix 3: Content analysis — sample questionnaire
Appendix 4: E-learning evaluation — sample questionnaire
Bibliography
Index

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