1 / 10

The Eight Multimedia Learning Principles

The Eight Multimedia Learning Principles. A brief overview of the Multimedia Learning Principles and examples of how they are used and applied in presentations. The Principles. Multimedia Principle.

agatha
Télécharger la présentation

The Eight Multimedia Learning Principles

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Eight Multimedia Learning Principles A brief overview of the Multimedia Learning Principles and examples of how they are used and applied in presentations.

  2. The Principles

  3. Multimedia Principle • The Multimedia Principle states that using words and graphics in a presentation is better than using just words alone. • People understand topics better when they engage in active learning. • Example: • Words + = Better Understanding/Improved Learning • Rather than just words = Learning

  4. Contiguity Principle • The Contiguity Principle states that words and graphics should be organized neatly and not just thrown together. • Try to make sure that your text corresponds to an appropriate graphic. • Example: • This graphic can be too confusing and will cause learners to focus more on the graphic and demonstrate a less capacity for deeper learning.

  5. Modality Principle • The Modality Principle states that audio that repeats the on-screen texts can distract the learner. • Graphics and narration are better to use than narration and text that repeat each other. • An example of this would be to narrate the step-by-step process of tying your shoes. • Better to have a visual of each step and a narration of what to do • Rather than if there were a visual of each step, a narration of what to do, and also text on-screen that repeats the narration.

  6. Redundancy Principle • The Redundancy Principle states that you should not repeat information in additional slides. • An example of this is not to use audio that states what the text says. • Using either on-screen text and graphics or: • audio and graphics works better than audio, texts and graphics combined.

  7. Coherence Principle • Less is More • Example: • Adding music or pictures that do not fit the presentation can actually harm the lesson.

  8. Personalization Principle • The Personalization Principle states that recently, conversational style has grown in popularity and that conveying information as if you are discussing it with a friend can help guide the learning process. • The use of avatars and virtual coaches are an example of how to personalize your work.

  9. Segmenting Principle • The Segmenting Principle states that breaking up a lesson into ore manageable parts (segments) increases the learning from the student. • Example: • Breaking up a presentation on World History into smaller, more manageable sections. • U.S. History • European History • African History • Asian History

  10. Pretraining Principle • Prior Knowledge. • An example of this would be learning the names of state capitols before learning where they are located on a map of the United States.

More Related