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A Little Backyard Gymnastics

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Tue Jul 25 2017

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A Little Backyard Gymnastics-84f2137498cccaa9c0222c6c8d1e5e10d17c201ba579edacc942eb5a075d4e2b

When I was a child growing up in rural Indiana, I spent many afternoons in the backyard twirling and tumbling and throwing myself around to teach myself flips and tricks. I didn’t know the terminology for what I was doing. I didn’t know the proper techniques required to execute anything well (or with grace I might add). What I did know was how to roll up my sleeves and dive right in.   Years later, my parents enrolled me in a gymnastics class where I learned that I had been cartwheeling and back-hand-springing around the edges of our lawn. I suddenly understood what I was doing from an alternative point of view.  

This childhood experience mirrors my relationship with instructional design. A lot of what we do as trainers and facilitators is instinctual, but having the technical understanding of the choices we make in our design process gives us more opportunities to enhance our designs and gain buy-in from key stakeholders. It allows us to create effective training programs that are high quality and outcome driven. 

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A Proper Introduction to Instructional Design 

Design—v. to create, fashion, execute, or construct according to plan. 

The Introduction to Instructional Design Certificate at ATD is a crash course in designing a training program from start to finish. Whether you’re a facilitator wanting to understand the ins and outs of designing a learner-centered course or you’re serving both roles as facilitator and designer, this course is quite simply a game changer. If you’ve ever thought to yourself, “I wish I could see a project come together from start to finish,” then this course is a perfect fit. 

My first foray into instructional design left me hungry for more. I gained the ability to assign language to how I was creating and modifying my courses, and I was able to experience things such as needs assessment (which I love) and creating learning objectives (which I love to hate). I was able to walk in the shoes of the instructional designer, which not only built my skill set but allowed me to enter into future facilitation events with an appreciation and understanding of how the content arrived at the place that it did. 

Just as my backyard gymnastics turned into a championship-winning cheerleading career by the time I went to college, I learned that with a little effort you can make big things happen—even if you’re a little clueless about what’s what at the start. 

The tools and templates gathered from this course give structure and will assist you in future instructional design projects. My favorite aspect of this course is the focus is on outcome, as opposed to content, which supports learner-centered design. And when we design with the learner in mind, engagement happens naturally.

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