Designing for Learning: The Pursuit of Well-Structured Content
How do you make course content really accessible to your students? Just as
being an expert in your discipline is not by itself a guarantee of good pedagogy,
your best-laid technology plans might miss the mark if they are not fine-tuned
to the content you wish to present. And the best technology strategies benefit
from semantically clear, structured content. Here, Judith B'ettcher takes a
look at the characteristics of "well-structured content" as it relates to the
design of instructional technology resources.
With the emergence of the Web as a new space for instruction, the focus of
most analyses of teaching and learning has been on process—overhauling what
faculty and students are doing within the learning experience. The organization
of what is being taught and its availability in various formats—the structure
of the course content—has received much less attention.
Meanwhile, content development has certainly not been neglected. Digital libraries,
national content projects such as MERLOT (www.merlot.org),
and the work by the W3C on Web accessibility (www.w3.org/WAI/Resources/)
are all efforts that foster the evolution of standards and tools for interoperability
and easy access to content resources. There is clearly a trend toward further
development of knowledge repositories within the disciplines.
But I think it is time now for a renewed emphasis on content resources for
learning, along with increased efforts to make course content efficient and
effective for students—in other words, well-structured content.
The Meaning of Well-Structured Content
The dictionary definition of the word "structure" is useful. The basic definition
of structure is "the result of the action of building or constructing." This
definition links well to the currently favored learning theory of constructivism.
A more elaborate definition of structure is "something arranged in a definite
pattern of organization." This definition suggests one of the desirable characteristics
of well-structured learning content. That is, content for which an organization
is clearly visible and in which concepts are presented clearly and precisely.
Course content—the material to be learned or studied—is one of the
four core components of the learning experience. The other three are the teaching,
the learner, and the environmental components.
Consider the relationship of well-structured content to the design of an online
course. Online learning based on well-structured content impacts the identification,
selection, and development of course content in three ways:
- Content must be semantically well-structured for instruction; this corresponds
to the teaching component of the learning experience
- Content must be a good fit or well-structured for a particular student;
this corresponds to the learner component of the learning experience
- Content must be technologically well structured; this corresponds to the
environmental component of the learning experience
Note that the meaning of well-structured content g'es well beyond the dictionary
definitions of structure. It includes the nuances of interaction with the other
three components of the learning experience—teaching, learner, and environmental.
Principles of Designing for Learning
Before delving more deeply into the characteristics of well-structured content
for digital learning resources, let's review a few basic principles. A core
principle of designing for learning is that existing knowledge structures in
the brains of faculty and students are different. A student approaching a discipline
such as physics, psychology, or biology for the first time will likely have
few core concepts, principles, or facts to build on. At this first approach
to a subject, students' thought processes might be compared to the tundra, a
bare and cold landscape. The students' brains might have other areas with rich
growths, but in the area of physics, their brain space might be called Tundra
Territory.
But the discipline knowledge of the physics faculty, at least in the area of
physics, might be comparable to jungles—rich, dense growths representing complex
structures of knowledge, concepts, principles, applications, and problems. The
lectures by physics faculty to the students in large undergraduate courses might
be described as "Where the Tundra Brains meet the Jungle Brain."
Research into the differences in the knowledge structures in the minds of students
and faculty has a long tradition in cognitive research, studying the distinctions
between the knowledge structures and behaviors of novices and the knowledge
structures and behaviors of experts. Well-structured content can figuratively
warm the landscape of the mind and support the building of foundations for complex
knowledge structures.
Multi-Modal Learning Resources
A recognized principle in educational research that works well with the notion
of well-structured content and technology use is that efficient learning can
be facilitated with sensory input. This includes multi-modal experiences, incorporating
multiple senses. Fortunately, the current ready availability of multimedia resources
makes designing for learning easier than ever.
Well-structured content can make the "jungle" of concepts, rules, and principles
more readily learned by students. Multimedia resources, such as animations,
simulations, and microworlds encourage student involvement and increase sensory
input. Dialoguing online—with other students, with faculty, and with other online
resources—also increases sensory inputs.
In addition to being well-structured semantically, content resources ideally
fit student goals, readiness, and the individual's current preferred learning
environment.
Some students will come to a particular discipline with rich knowledge structures
of their own, but still sparse in comparison to the faculty. For faculty, this
means identifying and selecting a rich set of resources that may meet the needs
of many students. Nishikant Sonwalker (Syllabus, November 2001) suggests the
selection and identification of many sets of resources, providing multiple paths
through a course.
Studying a Subject versus Taking a Course
I was reminded of the importance of content recently when I was chatting with
a new college graduate. Her new position involved work with physics materials,
so I asked her if she had studied physics in college. She replied quickly and
emphatically, "Oh, no, I didn't study physics. I did take a couple of physics
courses, but I didn't study physics!"
A curious response! Why would this graduate make a distinction between studying
a subject and taking a course? In taking a course, was she describing a learning
experience that might have covered content but resulted in few knowledge structures
in her memory. And she was well aware of that lack of structure. Might better-structured
content have helped to ensure the development of a lasting knowledge of physics?
A student who has successfully earned a grade by "taking the course" might
have knowledge structures that were created and linked to each other, but not
grounded. These knowledge structures might have been suspended in mid-air, inaccessible
after being temporarily constructed for testing purposes. Continuing our climate
metaphor, the student essentially created a climate that was temporarily nurturing
of isolated knowledge facts, but without integration into other knowledge structures,
the learning was lost.
Characteristics of Digital Learning Resources
In designing an online course, a course with online components, or a course
that includes digital resources, an instructor makes a host of decisions about
the goals and framework, as well as identifying and selecting content. In selecting
content, the instructor defines the parameters for the breadth and depth of
the course and the expectations of students.
Developing knowledge structures that survive a course and provide transferable
knowledge and skills generally requires different types of content. While there
are many hierarchies of content types, the simplest paradigm of content has
three levels: (1) core concepts and principles, (2) well-structured problems
with known solutions and (3) less- structured, complex problems without known
solutions. Below are some guidelines for selecting well-structured content and
incorporating new digital media resources within these three levels.
Level one: core concepts and principles
At this content level, a faculty designer identifies content that:
- Provides descriptions of core concepts dynamically using visual, audio,
and graphic illustrations
- Provides animations that involve the students interacting with the resource
and rehearsing processes
- Demonstrates relationships among core concepts, such as concept maps
- Provides clustering and chunking of information
- Reveals relationships and patterns
- Reveals differentiations and distinctions among concepts
- Links core concept knowledge with current happenings
Level two: well-structured problems with known solutions
At this content level, a faculty designer identifies content that:
- Presents consistent elements of the problem sets to the students
- Reveals patterns inherent to the problems
- Reveals sources and types of knowledge that contribute to problem solutions
- Engages the learner in the solutions, gradually increasing the complexity
of the applied rules and principles
- Uses simulations that chunk and cluster the elements of the solutions
Level three: less-structured, complex problems without known solutions
At this content level, a faculty designer identifies content that:
- Provides complex scenarios, such as Harvard case studies
- Engages the learners in solving problems where neither the elements or
the solutions are known
- Provides simulations of complex interactions
- Provides real-world problems such as those worked on in engineering and
applied disciplines
- Provides opportunities for dialogues with experts on real-life problems
- Uses case studies and problem-based learning
Level three, "less-structured" problems without known solutions maps well to
more advanced students, who can build on knowledge structures already in place
and apply their creativity to problem-based learning sets. Ideally, students
involved in level-three problems will already have well-constructed knowledge,
resulting from previously effective engagement with highly structured learning
modules.
Digital content resources in support of learning need to map to students' needs
and to students' readiness. Supporting the development of lasting knowledge
structures continues to be art as well as science.
What is Different about Digital Content?
Given the richness of the digital resources available, we now think about content
differently. Because content is digital, it is no longer bounded by space and
less and less bound by format. Because content is digital, it may be combined
and recombined. Because content is digital, it can draw on the combined power
of graphics, animations, audio, and video. And because content is digital, it
is easier for students to become creators of content that is custom made for
the growing and nurturing of the knowledge structures in their own minds—to
help them move from the Tundra Territory to the Garden State.
The development of course content is increasingly the work of artists, in particular
those faculty who think visually. Edward Tufte, the author of seminal books
on the display of graphic information, said it this way, "To envision information—and
what bright and splendid visions can result—is to work at the intersection
of image, word, number, art."
Well-Structured Content: Coming to You Soon via XML
One of the emerging content standards is that of XML, eXtensible Markup
Language. Well-structured content is what designers have when they use
XML to mark up content.
XML is complementary to the HTML standard. Jeff Jones (www.swynk.com/friends/jones/articles/xml_101.asp)
used the following analogy to describe the difference between XML and
HTML: XML is to defining information as HTML is to displaying information.
He g'es on to note that while XML and HTML both are text-based and both
use tags, elements, and attributes, XML allows users to structure and
define the information in their documents. Additionally, XML is a meta-language
that allows users to create their own tags, elements, and attributes as
necessary.
What's powerful for designers of today's online learning environments
is that the same XML document can be displayed in a variety of formats,
such as HTML, MS Word, Adobe PDF, or text. Easy portability to handheld
devices is also on the horizon. XML is the future for describing, manipulating,
and transmitting data. The W3C (www.w3c.org/XML/)
is the place to start learning about XML and its design roles for content.