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Designing eLearning for Cognitive Ease

Integrated Learnings

I recently started reading Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman, and the chapter on cognitive ease offered all sorts of implications for eLearning design. This, combined with additional discussion in the book, suggests that a bad mood creates cognitive strain, and a good mood promotes cognitive ease. By Shelley A.

Cognitive 159
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Competency-Based Training: The Ultimate Guide to Building a Skilled Workforce

Ninja Tropic

These competencies can be divided into two main categories: technical competencies and behavioral competencies. Behavioral competencies include the interpersonal skills and attributes that facilitate effective interaction and collaboration with others. Want to build a high-performing workforce ?

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Fixing the Hidden Gaps in Telecom & IT Training: From Code to Connectivity

Upside Learning

Training That Fails to Keep Pace with Product Lifecycles IT and telecom companies are introducing new goods and services at a never-before-seen pace. Similarly, IT service models are shifting towards cloud-based, subscription-driven ecosystems, requiring constant retraining on updates, integrations, and security protocols.

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AI, Accessibility, PowerPoint: ID Links 5/28/24

Experiencing eLearning

Storyline Accessibility and Mayer’s Principles – Scissortail Creative Services, LLC Kayleen Holt shares tips for creating accessible courses in Storyline beyond just adding closed captions. We’re using the story to convey a specific message, shift attitudes, or motivate people to change behavior.

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Beyond Industrial Age Thinking

Clark Quinn

Yet, I realize that there may be another legacy, a cognitive one. We transitioned from a largely agricultural economy to a manufacturing economy, of goods and services. The cognitive approach is certainly more recent than the Industrial Age, but it carries its own legacies. The premise comes from business.

Industry 295
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Learning by Watching: Social Cognitive Theory and Vicarious Learning

Origin Learning

Have you ever stood in front of a machine, with little or no idea about how to operate it – say at a self-check-in counter at an international airport that has its default language set to Dutch, or in front of a self-service kiosk for a tram that requires you to input information and money to print your ticket? Image Credit – [link].

Cognitive 100
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Want to Change Behavior? Give Learners a Nudge

Learningtogo

Want to Change Behavior? Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein’s Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness introduced the term in 2008 as a framework for achieving social change at scale by making tiny, incremental changes in the behavior of a large population. People can’t be forced to change behavior.

Behavior 182