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Record ID marc_openlibraries_sanfranciscopubliclibrary/sfpl_chq_2018_12_24_run04.mrc:256391564:18933
Source marc_openlibraries_sanfranciscopubliclibrary
Download Link /show-records/marc_openlibraries_sanfranciscopubliclibrary/sfpl_chq_2018_12_24_run04.mrc:256391564:18933?format=raw

LEADER: 18933cam a2200565 a 4500
001 826175998
003 OCoLC
005 20151005100919.0
008 110325s2011 caua b 001 0 eng
010 $a2011012858
016 7 $a015776097$2Uk
020 $a9780470874301 (hardback)
020 $a0470874309 (hardback)
035 $a826175998
035 $a(OCoLC)701808352
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050 00 $aHF1106$b.C55 2011
082 00 $a658.3/12402854678$222
092 $a658.3124$bC5494e 2011
100 1 $aClark, Ruth Colvin.
245 10 $aE-learning and the science of instruction :$bproven guidelines for consumers and designers of multimedia learning /$cRuth Colvin Clark, Richard E. Mayer.
246 3 $aElearning and the science of instruction
250 $a3rd ed.
260 $aSan Francisco, CA :$bPfeiffer,$cc2011.
300 $axviii, 502 p. :$bill. ;$c25 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
520 $a"Thoroughly revised and updated, this third edition of the best-selling book offers a comprehensive review of multimedia learning for both users and designers. The book contains design principles that are written to increase learning while debunking many popular theories about good design. The book also contains the most current research and includes new topics (e-learning for educators, new delivery technologies, social media, and more) and offers helpful guidelines. The book's many examples: create working multimedia that inform the research guidelines; have been update to include real-world screen captures; extend principles to illustrate their application to synchronous e-learning tools"--$cProvided by publisher.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
500 $aMachine generated contents note: Acknowledgments.Introduction.1. e-Learning: Promise and Pitfalls.What Is e-Learning?Is e-Learning Better?The Promise of e-Learning.The Pitfalls of e-Learning.Inform and Perform e-Learning Goals.e-Learning Architectures.What Is Effective e-Courseware?Learning in e-Learning.2. How Do People Learn from e-Courses.How Do People Learn?How e-Lessons Affect Human Learning.What We Don't Know About Learning.3. Evidence-Based Practice.What Is Evidence-Based Practice?Three Approaches to Research on Instructional Effectiveness.What to Look for in Experimental Comparisons.How to Interpret No Effect in Experimental Comparisons.How to Interpret Research Statistics.How Can You Identify Relevant Research?What We Don't Know About Evidence-Based Practice.4. Applying the Multimedia Principle: Use Words and Graphics Rather Than Words Alone.Do Visuals Make a Difference?Multimedia Principle: Include Both Words and Graphics.Some Ways to Use Graphics to Promote Learning.Psychological Reasons for the Multimedia Principle.Evidence for Using Words and Pictures.The Multimedia Principle Works Best for Novices.Should You Change Static Illustrations into Animations?What We Don't Know About Visuals.5. Applying the Contiguity Principle: Align Words to Corresponding Graphics.Contiguity Principle 1: Place Printed Words Near Corresponding Graphics.Contiguity Principle 2: Synchronize Spoken Words with Corresponding Graphics.Psychological Reasons for the Contiguity Principle.Evidence for Presenting Printed Words Near Corresponding Graphics.Evidence for Presenting Spoken Words at the Same Time as Corresponding Graphics.What We Don't Know About Contiguity.6. Applying the Modality Principle: Present Words as Audio Narration Rather Than On-Screen Text.Modality Principle: Present Words as Speech Rather Than On-Screen Text.Limitations to the Modality Principle.Psychological Reasons for the Modality Principle.Evidence for Using Spoken Rather Than Printed Text.When the Modality Principle Applies.What We Don't Know About Modality.7. Applying the Redundancy Principle: Explain Visuals with Words in Audio OR Text: Not Both.Redundancy Principle 1: Do Not Add On-Screen Text to Narrated Graphics.Psychological Reasons for the Redundancy Principle.Evidence for Omitting Redundant On-Screen Text.Redundancy Principle 2: Consider Adding On-Screen Text to Narration in Special Situations.Psychological Reasons for Exceptions to the Redundancy Principle.Evidence for Including Redundant On-Screen Text.What We Don't Know About Redundancy.8. Applying the Coherence Principle: Adding Material Can Hurt Learning.Coherence Principle 1: Avoid e-Lessons with Extraneous Audio.Psychological Reasons to Avoid Extraneous Audio in e-Learning.Evidence for Omitting Extraneous Audio.Coherence Principle 2: Avoid e-Lessons with Extraneous Graphics.Psychological Reasons to Avoid Extraneous Graphics in e-Learning.Evidence for Omitting Extraneous Graphics Added for Interest.Evidence for Using Simpler Visuals.Coherence Principle 3: Avoid e-Lessons with Extraneous Words.Psychological Reasons to Avoid Extraneous Words in e-Learning.Evidence for Omitting Extraneous Words Added for Interest.Evidence for Omitting Extraneous Words Added to Expand on Key Ideas.Evidence for Omitting Extraneous Words Added for Technical Depth.What We Don't Know About Coherence.9. Applying the Personalization Principle: Use Conversational Style and Virtual Coaches.Personalization Principle 1: Use Conversational Rather Than Formal Style.Psychological Reasons for the Personalization Principle.Evidence for Using Conversational Style.Promote Personalization Through Voice Quality.Promote Personalization Through Polite Speech.Personalization Principle 2: Use Effective On-Screen Coaches to Promote Learning.Personalization Principle 3: Make the Author Visible to Promote Learning.Psychological Reasons for Using a Visible Author.Evidence for the Visible Author.What We Don't Know About Personalization.10. Applying the Segmenting and Pretraining Principles: Managing Complexity by Breaking a Lesson into Parts.Segmenting Principle: Break a Continuous Lesson into Bite-Size Segments.Psychological Reasons for the Segmenting Principle.Evidence for Breaking a Continuous Lesson into Bite-Size Segments.Pretraining Principle: Ensure That Learners Know the Names and Characteristics of Key Concepts.Psychological Reasons for the Pretraining Principle.Evidence for Providing Pretraining in Key Concepts.What We Don't Know About Segmenting and Pretraining.11. Leveraging Examples in e-Learning.What Are Worked Examples?The Psychology of Worked Examples.Evidence for the Benefits of Worked Examples.Worked Example Principle 1: Fade from Worked Examples to Problems.Worked Example Principle 2: Promote Self-Explanations.Worked Example Principle 3: Include Instructional Explanations of Worked Examples in Some Situations.Worked Example Principle 4: Apply the Multimedia Principles to Your Worked Examples.Worked Example Principle 5: Support Learning Transfer.Design Guidelines for Far Transfer Examples.What We Don't Know About Worked Examples.12. Does Practice Make Perfect?What Is Practice in e-Learning?The Paradox of Practice.Practice Principle 1: Add Sufficient Practice Interactions to e-Learning to Achieve the Objective.Practice Principle 2: Mirror the Job.Practice Principle 3: Provide Effective Feedback.Practice Principle 4: Distribute and Mix Practice Among Learning Events.Practice Principle 5: Apply Multimedia PrinciplesPractice Principle 6: Transition from Examples to Practice Gradually.What We Don't Know About Practice.13. Learning Together Virtually.What Is Collaborative Learning?What Is Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL)?Some Generalizations About Collaboration.CSCL Research Summaries.Structured Controversy.CSCL: The Bottom Line.What We Don't Know About CSCL.14. Who's in Control? Guidelines for e-Learning Navigation.Learner Control Versus Program Control.Do Learners Make Good Instructional Decisions?Learner Control Principle 1: Give Experienced Learners Control.Learner Control Principle 2: Make Important Instructional Events the Default.Learner Control Principle 3: Consider Adaptive Control.Learner Control Principle 4: Give Pacing Control.Learner Control Principle 5: Offer Navigational Support in Hypermedia Environments.What We Don't Know About Learner Control.15. e-Learning to Build Thinking Skills.Three Types of Thinking Skills.Can Thinking Skills Be Trained?Thinking Skills Principle 1: Focus on Job-Specific Cognitive and Metacognitive Skills.Thinking Skills Principle 2: Consider a Whole-Task Course Design.Evidence for Whole-Task Instruction.Thinking Skills Principle 3: Make Thinking Processes Explicit.Thinking Skills Principle 4: Define Job-Specific Thinking Processes.Teaching Thinking Skills: The Bottom Line.What We Don't Know About Thinking Skills.16. Simulations and Games in e-Learning.The Case for Simulations and Games.What Are Simulations and Games?Do Games and Simulations Teach?Games and Simulations Principle 1: Match Game Types to Learning Goals.Games and Simulations Principle 2: Make Learning Essential to Game Progress.Games and Simulations Principle 3: Build in Proven Instructional Strategies.Games and Simulations Principle 4: Build in Guidance and Structure.Games and Simulations Principle 5: Manage Complexity.Games and Simulations Principle 6: Make Relevance Salient.What We Don't Know About Games and Simulations.17. Applying the Guidelines.Applying Evidence-Based Guidelines to e-Courses.e-Lesson Reviews.Review of Sample 1: Asynchronous e-Lesson on Excel for Small Business.Review of Sample 2: Synchronous e-Lesson on Excel.Review of Sample 3: Automotive Troubleshooting Simulation.Reflections on Past Predictions.Beyond 2011.In Conclusion.References.Glossary.List of Tables and Figures.Name Index.Subject Index.About the Authors.Pfeiffer Publication Guide.
505 0 $aIntroduction.1. e-Learning : Promise and Pitfalls: What Is e-Learning? -- Is e-Learning Better? -- The Promise of e-Learning --The Pitfalls of e-Learning -- Inform and Perform e-Learning Goals -- e-Learning Architectures -- What Is Effective e-Courseware? -- Learning in e-Learning -- 2. How Do People Learn from e-Courses: How Do People Learn? -- How e-Lessons Affect Human Learning -- What We Don't Know About Learning -- 3. Evidence-Based Practice: What Is Evidence-Based Practice? -- Three Approaches to Research on Instructional Effectiveness -- What to Look for in Experimental Comparisons -- How to Interpret No Effect in Experimental Comparisons -- How to Interpret Research Statistics -- How Can You Identify Relevant Research? -- What We Don't Know About Evidence-Based Practice -- 4. Applying the Multimedia Principle : Use Words and Graphics Rather Than Words Alone: Do Visuals Make a Difference? -- Multimedia Principle : Include Both Words and Graphics -- Some Ways to Use Graphics to Promote Learning -- Psychological Reasons for the Multimedia Principle -- Evidence for Using Words and Pictures -- The Multimedia Principle Works Best for Novices -- Should You Change Static Illustrations into Animations? -- What We Don't Know About Visuals -- 5. Applying the Contiguity Principle : Align Words to Corresponding Graphics: Contiguity Principle 1: Place Printed Words Near Corresponding Graphics -- Contiguity Principle 2: Synchronize Spoken Words with Corresponding Graphics -- Psychological Reasons for the Contiguity Principle -- Evidence for Presenting Printed Words Near Corresponding Graphics -- Evidence for Presenting Spoken Words at the Same Time as Corresponding Graphics -- What We Don't Know About Contiguity -- 6. Applying the Modality Principle : Present Words as Audio Narration Rather Than On-Screen Text: Modality Principle: Present Words as Speech Rather Than On-Screen Text -- Limitations to the Modality Principle -- Psychological Reasons for the Modality Principle -- Evidence for Using Spoken Rather Than Printed Text -- When the Modality Principle Applies -- What We Don't Know About Modality -- 7. Applying the Redundancy Principle : Explain Visuals with Words in Audio OR Text: Not Both: Redundancy Principle 1: Do Not Add On-Screen Text to Narrated Graphics -- Psychological Reasons for the Redundancy Principle -- Evidence for Omitting Redundant On-Screen Text -- Redundancy Principle 2: Consider Adding On-Screen Text to Narration in Special Situations -- Psychological Reasons for Exceptions to the Redundancy Principle -- Evidence for Including Redundant On-Screen Text -- What We Don't Know About Redundancy -- 8. Applying the Coherence Principle : Adding Material Can Hurt Learning: Coherence Principle 1: Avoid e-Lessons with Extraneous Audio -- Psychological Reasons to Avoid Extraneous Audio in e-Learning -- Evidence for Omitting Extraneous Audio -- Coherence Principle 2: Avoid e-Lessons with Extraneous Graphics -- Psychological Reasons to Avoid Extraneous Graphics in e-Learning -- Evidence for Omitting Extraneous Graphics Added for Interest -- Evidence for Using Simpler Visuals -- Coherence Principle 3: Avoid e-Lessons with Extraneous Words -- Psychological Reasons to Avoid Extraneous Words in e-Learning -- Evidence for Omitting Extraneous Words Added for Interest -- Evidence for Omitting Extraneous Words Added to Expand on Key Ideas -- Evidence for Omitting Extraneous Words Added for Technical Depth -- What We Don't Know About Coherence -- 9. Applying the Personalization Principle : Use Conversational Style and Virtual Coaches: Personalization Principle 1: Use Conversational Rather Than Formal Style -- Psychological Reasons for the Personalization Principle -- Evidence for Using Conversational Style -- Promote Personalization Through Voice Quality -- Promote Personalization Through Polite Speech -- Personalization Principle 2: Use Effective On-Screen Coaches to Promote Learning -- Personalization Principle 3: Make the Author Visible to Promote Learning -- Psychological Reasons for Using a Visible Author -- Evidence for the Visible Author -- What We Don't Know About Personalization -- 10. Applying the Segmenting and Pretraining Principles: Managing Complexity by Breaking a Lesson into Parts: Segmenting Principle: Break a Continuous Lesson into Bite-Size Segments -- Psychological Reasons for the Segmenting Principle -- Evidence for Breaking a Continuous Lesson into Bite-Size Segments -- Pretraining Principle : Ensure That Learners Know the Names and Characteristics of Key Concepts -- Psychological Reasons for the Pretraining Principle -- Evidence for Providing Pretraining in Key Concepts -- What We Don't Know About Segmenting and Pretraining -- 11. Leveraging Examples in e-Learning: What Are Worked Examples? -- The Psychology of Worked Examples -- Evidence for the Benefits of Worked Examples -- Worked Example Principle 1: Fade from Worked Examples to Problems -- Worked Example Principle 2: Promote Self-Explanations -- Worked Example Principle 3: Include Instructional Explanations of Worked Examples in Some Situations -- Worked Example Principle 4: Apply the Multimedia Principles to Your Worked Examples -- Worked Example Principle 5: Support Learning Transfer -- Design Guidelines for Far Transfer Examples -- What We Don't Know About Worked Examples -- 12. Does Practice Make Perfect?: What Is Practice in e-Learning? -- The Paradox of Practice -- Practice Principle 1: Add Sufficient Practice Interactions to e-Learning to Achieve the Objective -- Practice Principle 2: Mirror the Job -- Practice Principle 3: Provide Effective Feedback -- Practice Principle 4: Distribute and Mix Practice Among Learning Events -- Practice Principle 5: Apply Multimedia Principles -- Practice Principle 6: Transition from Examples to Practice Gradually -- What We Don't Know About Practice -- 13. Learning Together Virtually: What Is Collaborative Learning? -- What Is Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL)? -- Some Generalizations About Collaboration -- CSCL Research Summaries -- Structured Controversy -- CSCL: The Bottom Line -- What We Don't Know About CSCL -- 14. Who's in Control? Guidelines for e-Learning Navigation: Learner Control Versus Program Control -- Do Learners Make Good Instructional Decisions? -- Learner Control Principle 1: Give Experienced Learners Control -- Learner Control Principle 2: Make Important Instructional Events the Default -- Learner Control Principle 3: Consider Adaptive Control -- Learner Control Principle 4: Give Pacing Control -- Learner Control Principle 5: Offer Navigational Support in Hypermedia Environments -- What We Don't Know About Learner Control -- 15. e-Learning to Build Thinking Skills: Three Types of Thinking Skills -- Can Thinking Skills Be Trained? -- Thinking Skills Principle 1: Focus on Job-Specific Cognitive and Metacognitive Skills -- Thinking Skills Principle 2: Consider a Whole-Task Course Design -- Evidence for Whole-Task Instruction -- Thinking Skills Principle 3: Make Thinking Processes Explicit -- Thinking Skills Principle 4: Define Job-Specific Thinking Processes -- Teaching Thinking Skills: The Bottom Line -- What We Don't Know About Thinking Skills -- 16. Simulations and Games in e-Learning: The Case for Simulations and Games -- What Are Simulations and Games? -- Do Games and Simulations Teach? -- Games and Simulations Principle 1: Match Game Types to Learning Goals -- Games and Simulations Principle 2: Make Learning Essential to Game Progress -- Games and Simulations Principle 3: Build in Proven Instructional Strategies -- Games and Simulations Principle 4: Build in Guidance and Structure -- Games and Simulations Principle 5: Manage Complexity -- Games and Simulations Principle 6: Make Relevance Salient -- What We Don't Know About Games and Simulations -- 17. Applying the Guidelines: Applying Evidence-Based Guidelines to e-Courses -- e-Lesson Reviews -- Review of Sample 1: Asynchronous e-Lesson on Excel for Small Business -- Review of Sample 2: Synchronous e-Lesson on Excel -- Review of Sample 3: Automotive Troubleshooting Simulation -- Reflections on Past Predictions -- Beyond 2011 -- In Conclusion.
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