Mayer's 12 Principles of Multimedia Learning are a Powerful Design [PDF]

Jun 20, 2017 - He is an avid fan of Mayer's 12 Principles of Multimedia Learning, and he very successfully walks the wal

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Mayer’s 12 Principles of Multimedia Learning are a Powerful Design Resource By Kelly Walsh - June 20, 2017

What you Need to Know to Create the Best Videos for Learning One of the many great sessions I attended last week at UBTech 2017 was Brian Klaas's “Spielberg not Shakespeare: What we can Learn from YouTube When Flipping Classrooms“. Klaas is Senior Technical Officer at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. I've seen Klaas speak before, he is an engaging, dynamic presenters. He is an avid fan of Mayer's 12 Principles of Multimedia Learning, and he very successfully walks the walk in his own presentations. One interesting thing about these principles is their applicability over the long haul. While education's growing use of technology as an instructional aid calls for the use of guiding constructs like these more than ever, these fundamental principles were published back 2001 and it's a safe bet that they will remain relevant for decades to come. Here are Mayer's Principles: 1. Coherence Principle – People learn better when extraneous words, pictures and sounds are excluded rather than included. 2. Signaling Principle – People learn better when cues that highlight the organization of the essential material are added. 3. Redundancy Principle – People learn better from graphics and narration than from graphics, narration and on-screen text. 4. Spatial Contiguity Principle – People learn better when corresponding words and pictures are presented near rather than far from each other on the page or screen. 5. Temporal Contiguity Principle – People learn better when corresponding words and pictures are presented simultaneously rather than successively. 6. Segmenting Principle – People learn better from a multimedia lesson is presented in user-paced segments rather than as a continuous unit. 7. Pre-training Principle – People learn better from a multimedia lesson when they know the names and characteristics of the main concepts. 8. Modality Principle – People learn better from graphics and narrations than from animation and onscreen text. 9. Multimedia Principle – People learn better from words and pictures than from words alone. 10. Personalization Principle – People learn better from multimedia lessons when words are in conversational style rather than formal style. 11. Voice Principle – People learn better when the narration in multimedia lessons is spoken in a friendly human voice rather than a machine voice. 12. Image Principle – People do not necessarily learn better from a multimedia lesson when the speaker’s image is added to the screen. Let's look at how some of these principles relate to truly effective learning content. Coherence The best learning materials limit extraneous content. It doesn't help. Keep it simple. Think of the many ridiculously dense, loud, cluttered slides you've seen from time to time. It's very hard to learn from content like that. This page contains a couple good examples of violations of the Coherence Principle. Contiguity The two contiguity principles inform us that people learn better when corresponding words and pictures are presented near rather than far from each other on the page or screen, and when corresponding words and pictures are presented simultaneously rather than successively. I borrowed this image from this site – this is a great example of the contiguity principles in action:

Segmenting This principle tells us to break things into user-paced segments. An excellent application of this principle when it comes to video to create multiple short videos rather than one long one. Multimedia Words and Pictures together are better than words or pictures alone (but, following the other principles, keep it simple). Klaas illustrated this with simple elegance by showing a the word circle, then a separate picture of a circle, followed by a picture of a circle with the word “circle” on the some slide. It was quite obvious that the latter slide provided the best learning experience. Signaling When I first read this principle, it reminded me of the first part of the three part adage, “tell them what you are going to teach them, then teach them, then tell them what you taught them”. However, the video below, from Sarah Martin, gives a different perspective to signaling (I suppose both of these ideas are essentially signaling, i.e. reminding the learner what to expect and pay extra attention to). So that's a quick look at some of these powerful principles from Mayer. I look forward to exploring them further in future articles, and to applying them in content I create from this day forward. For a deeper dive into Mayer's Principle, you can consider buying or renting the book. It is expensive it print format, but I found it available for rent in digital format on Amazon for $13.44.

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Kelly Walsh https://www.emergingedtech.com

Kelly Walsh is Chief Information Officer at The College of Westchester, in White Plains, NY, where he also teaches. In 2009, Walsh founded EmergingEdTech.com. He frequently delivers presentations and training on a variety of education and technology topics at schools and conferences across the U.S. Walsh became the Community Administrator for the Flipped Learning Network in June of 2016. He also writes the "Technology Perspectives" Column for University Business magazine. In his "spare time" he writes, records, and performs original music ... stop by kwalshmusic.com and have a listen! [Disclaimer: The opinions expressed here are my own, or those of other writers, and not those of my employer. - K. Walsh]

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