Category: Learning design

  • Working together in module design

    Working together in module design

    By Amy Leon and Catherine Du Baret High quality, online and distance education materials, building on a huge legacy of groundbreaking distance education. This is what Learning Designers and editors, working alongside academic colleagues, at the Open University shape and hone during the creation of new modules. The Open University (OU) creates around 150 new…

  • Designing assessment for distance learners: what matters?

    By Katharine Reedy and Mark Williams What is the most important feature of assessment for you and your students? This is a question we put to those present at the Assessment Design workshop our team led for the OU staff community in May 2021. The word cloud below shows that people thought that assessment should…

  • Listening to students in real time: how feedback leads to success

    Listening to students in real time: how feedback leads to success

    Like all robust development processes, our learning design approach includes a number of opportunities to learn from feedback. One is our curriculum design student panel (aimed at capturing students’ views on learning design ideas before they’re live). Another is real-time student feedback (RTSF), which gathers feedback from students as they’re studying with the aim of ensuring they get the support they need. Short questionnaires focusing on recently studied topics are embedded into…

  • Learning from practice: refreshing the OU activity types framework

    Learning from practice: refreshing the OU activity types framework

    The activity types framework – a categorisation of learning material into different types based on the student activity involved – is one of our core learning design tools. It shows, simply and accessibly, the variety of ways in which module teams can actively engage students with their subject content and skills development alongside reading, watching…

  • Conference to practice: more takeaways from ALT-C

    Conference to practice: more takeaways from  ALT-C

    ALT-C was intense. It featured more than 100 sessions, many of which called for some deep thinking and reflection. Some time has now passed since the ALT-C conference, so we thought it would be good to reflect on what stood out for us. Here, Mark, Olivia and Shawndra share their highlights.

  • Conference to practice: reflecting on a week at ALT-C

    Conference to practice: reflecting on a week at ALT-C

    I’ve been a Learning Designer for three years now, and ALT-C (The Association for Learning Technology Conference – September 2021) was my first conference within the role. While I’d never expected my first experience with this to be online, I must say I thought it was fabulous.

  • Designing a bootcamp – what did we get from the experience?

    Designing a bootcamp – what did we get from the experience?

    We’ve spent quite a bit of time in 2021 working on a Learning Design Bootcamp, alongside colleagues from several other HE institutions. As hosts in a typical sense we would normally have been physically hosting sessions for the bootcamp as well as contributing ideas toward the programme of activities and providing an OU LD flavour to the…

  • Feedback loops: reflecting on five years of feedback from the curriculum design student panel 

    Feedback loops: reflecting on five years of feedback from the curriculum design student panel 

    If you’ve ever felt frustrated by a product that doesn’t seem to work for you, you’ll understand the importance of building opportunities for feedback into a design process. It’s certainly an essential part of our learning design process: alongside various organisation-wide evaluation initiatives whose insights we access as part of our work, the learning design team runs the curriculum design student panel, which provides opportunities for students…