How to Use an Easy-To-Use Format to Create a ‘Microlearning Map’
In the realm of modern education and training, the concept of microlearning has gained significant traction for its ability to deliver targeted knowledge in bite-sized chunks. However, effective implementation requires more than just breaking down content; it necessitates a strategic approach. One such approach involves creating a 'Microlearning Map,' a tool designed to streamline the process of structuring and delivering microlearning content in an easy-to-use format.
At its core, a Microlearning Map serves as a blueprint, guiding content creators through the development and organization of microlearning modules. By leveraging an easy-to-use format, creators can ensure that learners navigate through the material seamlessly, maximizing comprehension and retention.
To begin crafting a Microlearning Map, start by defining clear learning objectives. These objectives serve as the foundation upon which the microlearning modules will be built. By articulating what learners should know or be able to do after completing each module, creators can tailor content to meet specific learning outcomes.
Once learning objectives are established, the next step is to identify the key topics or concepts that align with each objective. Break down complex subjects into manageable units, ensuring that each module focuses on a single idea or skill. This segmentation is crucial for maintaining the microlearning format's effectiveness, as it allows learners to absorb information in digestible portions.
With topics identified, creators can then determine the most suitable delivery format for each module. While text-based content may suffice for some topics, others may benefit from multimedia elements such as videos, infographics, or interactive quizzes. By diversifying content formats, creators cater to different learning preferences and enhance engagement.
After selecting content formats, creators should outline the structure of each module. Start with a brief introduction to establish context and provide an overview of what learners can expect. Then, present the core content in a concise and structured manner, avoiding unnecessary detail or filler material. Finally, conclude each module with a summary or key takeaways to reinforce learning objectives.
As creators develop content for each module, it's essential to prioritize clarity and simplicity. Keep language straightforward and jargon-free, ensuring that learners can easily understand the material. Additionally, incorporate visual aids and examples to enhance comprehension and illustrate abstract concepts.
Once content creation is complete, creators can arrange modules into a cohesive Microlearning Map. Consider the logical flow of topics, arranging modules in a sequential order that facilitates progressive learning. Additionally, provide clear navigation options to allow learners to navigate between modules effortlessly.
As creators finalize the Microlearning Map, it's crucial to test its usability and effectiveness. Solicit feedback from learners or subject matter experts to identify any areas for improvement. Iteratively refine the map based on feedback, ensuring that it aligns with learners' needs and preferences.
With a well-crafted Microlearning Map in hand, creators can deploy microlearning modules with confidence, knowing that they provide a structured and effective learning experience. Whether used for employee training, educational courses, or skill development programs, the Microlearning Map serves as a versatile tool for delivering targeted knowledge in an easy-to-use format.
In conclusion, the adoption of microlearning methodologies continues to reshape the landscape of education and training. By embracing tools such as the Microlearning Map, creators can streamline the development and delivery of microlearning content, maximizing its impact and effectiveness. With its user-friendly format and structured approach, the Microlearning Map empowers creators to design engaging and impactful learning experiences for learners across diverse settings and industries.
0 notes
View on Twitter
Since it came up recently, link to that therapist on twitter 👆 who was discussing Bucky's terribile therapist in TFATWS and how they should’ve been.
Transcript:
"As a therapist myself I've had a lot of feelings about Bucky's therapist on TFatWS, and have decided I need to rant a little to let it all out. I've worked w/active duty, trauma survivors, and court ordered clients, so here's some therapeutic conjecture on Bucky's therapy:
Aesthetically her office and presentation don't fit for someone who has been through the trauma that he’s been through. A client like this would need something non-threatening and safe- the whole vibe is overly formal and official in an office building, not at all therapeutic.
6 months working together she calls him Mr. Barnes and then James-he has identity issues and is struggling with who he is, so I think that one of the 1st things they would have done is figure out what he is comfortable being called, by whom and what that means for him.
He is still full out lying to her about pretty much everything including PTSD sx—I’m not saying clients never lie if they have good therapists, but if after 6 months he still doesn’t feel like he can be truthful at all then they haven’t built any trust/ solid therapeutic rapport
The pen and notebook thing-that’s clearly a trigger for him, there’s no reason to antagonize him and take notes in session like a punishment, it’s a power play on her part and it only emphasizes his lack of control in being forced into therapy (she should know his hx w/notebooks)
The whole little arm motion she made when she said “they need to make sure you don’t…” – that made so much light of what has happened to him, he probably feels like his arm is only good as a weapon and things like that will not help him accept it as part of his body
The rules, UGH the rules—from how they were talking about them clearly not something he actively created for himself, more like directives that he’s been ordered to adhere to—something fed to him and reinforced, feels like a way to sign off on liability only
THE AMENDS—this is probably my biggest issue. Amends are for people who need to take accountability for their actions and the repercussions of those choices. He had NO choice. He was a victim of horrific crimes against him, and framing it in a way that he needs to make up for
the crimes that others used him for is abhorrent. The lack of trauma informed care as astounding in the way it is being framed that he has to atone for sins that weren’t his. Its clearly reinforcing the idea in his head in ep 2 when he says “HYDRA were my people".
NO, HYDRA were your captors. They were not your people. That type of thinking needs to get deconstructed and challenged. He can dedicate himself to bringing good into the world and righting wrongs that happened WITHOUT taking on the responsibility of those actions.
Her whole attitude and demeanor were condescending and demeaning. I know some people have said “I love how she calls him out on his bullshit!” That’s not what I see happening. I call my clients out on their shit all the time—this was not that.
And I can only do that with clients ONCE we’ve built the type of relationship where it’s going to be therapeutic for them to hear it, and it’s done intentionally and with purpose. She just came off shaming and mean because they don’t seem to have any form of therapeutic rapport.
She said “you have no history, no family”- there is no therapeutic reason for that, and she’s wrong. He most likely has family alive (he used current tense when talking about his sister) and he was close to Shuri and TChalla, his history is vital to understanding him
When she said “Look, I know that you have been through a lot, but you’ve got your mind back. You are being pardoned. These are good things. You’re free.”—Yeah this feels really dismissive and like toxic positivity. “I know you’ve been through a lot BUT BE HAPPY!!??”
He certainly doesn’t seem to feel like he’s free (especially having therapy mandated), and you can’t just tell someone they’re free. I felt like she was pretty much just like, “shake it off, look to the future!” which feels really shitty when you’ve experienced excessive trauma.
HELLO breach of confidentiality, just introducing herself to Sam as his therapist and confirming it to Walker and the whole police station, it doesn’t matter if they know he’s in therapy you do not break someone’s privacy like that, he still deserves some control over his tx.
Ordering Sam into a session, NO, he’s not your client and you don’t know him well enough to know if that’s appropriate or if it would be harmful to either, and you haven’t asked your client for his consent to have another person in his session
Forcing a trauma victim who was stripped of his bodily autonomy for 70 years into a physically intimate exercise with a coworker that he’s barely interacted with in the last several months? NOPE, just reinforcing to Bucky she has control over him the way his handlers used to
To me, I think she is more focused on signing off on his psychological eval that he isn't a liability rather than any actual healing or attention to his trauma. This unfortunately isn’t unusual in the military where “mental health treatment” is focused on being mission ready.
They are making sure he’s ready to be an “asset” w/ mandated therapy, which he shouldn’t even be forced to do as part of his pardon because he shouldn’t have needed a pardon at all because he was a victim of horrific war crimes, brainwashing, and dehumanization for 70 years.
I’m just saying, if that was me he would be on my big squishy couch, bright open windows, bowl of Hershey kisses, random fidget toys, and two therapy dogs laying all over him while we work through that trauma and he builds back his identity and finds the calm he wants so badly.
And yes he would probably need someone who would see through his BS, call him out when he needs it, not be overly "touchy feely", but only if he feels safe and there is trust, where he gets to work on what HE wants, not what others think he needs.
Anyway thanks for coming to my TEDTalk, I❤️my work and I think being a therapist on retainer for the Avengers would've been a fucking trip, they all needed a team of mental health professionals at their disposal 24/7 and things would've been so much better🤣
ps. They can be a good therapist and just not be a fit for the client, that happens regularly. We know when to make it part of the conversation and when to refer out. Nothing good is going to come out of a contemptuous therapeutic relationship, mandated or not.
pps. That whole situation and the scene with Zemo was so rough. I can't imagine how much it brought back the violation, humiliation, anger, and helplessness of when he was the WS. I'm just imagining him having a therapist he trusts and being able to process that afterwards 😭😭😭"
722 notes
·
View notes
very specific opinion i have:
I don’t think the Lotus Hotel & Casino should automatically acclimate its inhabitants to the modern time period, because the entire point of the hotel is that it’s trying to keep people there and they will never leave, so the ideal scenario is to prevent them from experiencing the passage of time. The best way to do that would be to keep things changing as little as possible from the guests’ perspectives, and convince them they’ve spent less time there than they thought.
Even though the guests are canonically in a sort of daze, Percy specifically notes that time felt extremely distorted in the hotel, not just in the sense of “we were here for what felt like hours but outside the hotel it was a week,” but in more of a “It only feels like we’ve been here like half an hour, but i guess it might have actually been a couple hours or so- oh, a week has passed outside.”
I like to imagine the hotel is actually pretty labyrinthine when you start getting into it, and the deeper you go the older the sections of the hotel start becoming, so you get these really eerie effects when traveling through it. Especially since the hotel would theoretically shift with the other mythological locations, so if you go back far enough the hotel probably starts getting really weird, because also it’s just kind of infinite inside. People have definitely gotten lost in the depths of the hotel forever, outside of the whole never leaving the hotel thing. The di Angelo siblings might have been slightly extra resistant to the daze effect though and so were able to travel further outside their designated era wing than they normally would and start noticing that there was Something Really Weird Going On. But it still probably would have taken them awhile.
181 notes
·
View notes