This post is provided by guest blogger, Lynn Urban, graduate student at the University of St. Francis in Joliet, MS in Training and Development program.
Instructional Design (ID) in Higher Education often holds a mysterious existence for students and educators accustomed to traditional learning. To uncover mystery, it’s helpful to look back and understand how ID became part of what we now know as “e-learning” teaching strategies. Sharon O’Malley (2017) points to a time in military training where the practice emerged during World War II, “when the military assembled groups of psychologists and academics to create training and assessment materials for troops”. (O’Malley, 2017). The author traces ID over decades, landing on the popularity of online courses and remote learning infiltration to higher education practices.
I recommend this article for anyone interested in beginnings of instructional design, and the journey to gain acceptance in higher education. The article is from 2017, when there was still mystery surrounding the field. While written pre-pandemic (and much has developed since that time), the references to ID entering higher education are relevant. Providing quotes and backgrounds of students and educators, readers can glimpse online technology being new and adaptation being slow. Post-pandemic we see that ID has taken a larger space in education, but there is value to understanding history behind technology – to appreciate how far we have come.
Reference
O’Malley, S. (2017, August). Still a mystery. Inside Higher Ed.com. https://www.insidehighered.com/digital-learning/article/2017/08/02/what-do-instructional-designers-do