Examples

In 2006 Richard E Mayer set out "Ten Principles for Multimedia Learning" based on his research at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

This blog gives you the opportunity to agree or not with Mayer's ten principles.

To start with look at a few example educational pages,do they totally support support Mayer's principles? or are there any snags?Try a few examples from multimedia educational sites around the web. Do they support Mayer's principles - or not?

Keep the ten principles in mind as you surf - add your own examples that support one or more of Mayer's principles.

Found a site you think proves or disproves a principle?
Think the principle drives a coach and horses through the principles of good web design?
Post your comment on any of the examples here and tell the world why.

Sunday, November 02, 2008

Coherence Principle:
People learn better when extraneous words, pictures, and sounds are excluded rather than included.

For our younger viewers? How Stuff Works is a popular learning site. Here we look at the topic area of transistors again. Do you think Mayer's Coherence principle could be applied here?
Maybe you would like to choose a short video to explain the transistor topic more fully?
Maybe you're just bored and would like to surf around?
You may still be learning - but what was it we came here for?

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I think this would best be called the "Extraneous Removal" principle