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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A new authoritative standard reference for CBT design,
By A Customer
This review is from: Computer-Based Instruction : Design and Development
This book is an authoritative compendium of instructional design practices applied to computer-based instruction, including web-based training (WBT). Drawing heavily from M.D. Merrill's Component Display Theory and ID2 project, the book has strong chapters on instructional strategies for each of the major types of learning. It also has good treatments of basic design practices for tutorial and simulation CBT design.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Zen of Gibbons,
By
This review is from: Computer-Based Instruction : Design and Development
This book focuses on the different instructional strategies that should be used when teaching procedures, processes, concepts, principles, and memory instruction. The core idea being that the best way to teach people about concepts is different than teaching people about a procedure. And that teaching people to memorize a list is very different from teaching principle-using behavior, and that the methods used to teach each type of learning are different. To help you understand what the book is like, here is some quotes about using instructional strategy to teach a process: A process is a pattern of events. Procedural processes describe the influences and effects of a procedure as it is performed, from a third-person point of view. When procedure and process instruction are combined, a student learns to perform the procedure while at the same time learning how the procedure affects the environment in which the procedure is performed.(P.222) ...Process knowledge is comprised of several possible event paths which events might follow depending on how conditions vary. The most superficial degree of process knowledge consists of memorizing the steps in a process.(P.225)
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