Virtual Training Strategies: Embracing Microlearning
5 Recommendations To Maximize the Learning Experience and What Virtual Learning Experts™ Need to Know.This is part of an ongoing column byVirtual...
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Jennifer Lindsay-Finan : Feb 1, 2024 3:48:00 PM
This is part of an ongoing column by Virtual Learning Expert™ Jennifer Finan. She’s exploring trends that impact virtual classroom trainers and designers with the goal of improving learner engagement in the hybrid virtual classroom.
As a fellow Virtual Training Professional, I bet you’ve been asked to shorten your sessions a few times! We all have. People are busy. Organizations want their people to learn, but don’t want to take them away from their work while they do it. Could microlearning be the answer to more efficient, but highly effective, virtual learning?
While there doesn’t seem to be a commonly agreed definition of microlearning, there is a consensus that it means short pieces of content. AMA Research defines microlearning as, platform solutions that "provide employees with short bursts of focused educational content that fit into a daily workflow and are accessible on any device." Meanwhile, Elearning Industry describe it as “the more engaging, less time-consuming, and cheaper-to-produce sibling of regular eLearning.”
Microlearning material in the blended work environment could be video, text, infographics, job aids, podcasts, or in fact any medium as long as it’s short and to the point. How short is debatable with some professionals stating 2-5 minutes is micro and others saying it’s up to 13 minutes. The time is actually not what’s important, rather that it’s short and focused on exactly what the learner needs to know – and nothing more.
Microlearning is not new – think about the flashcards you used at school to learn spelling or math. Dictionary.com launched the Word of the Day in 1999 and Duolingo, the popular language learning app, has been around for over ten years.
Microlearning has been one of the top 10 trends for the last five years of the L&D Global Sentiment Survey. In 2022, it’s ranked seventh place, ahead of learning experience platforms (at eight) and Mobile delivery (at 11). As the report emphasizes, these results vary significantly depending on country and industry. In fact, if you’re reading this in New Zealand, you’re probably very familiar with the microlearning trend already. New Zealand ranked microlearning in the top three for each of the past years apart from in 2021.
But why is it one of the key trends in our industry? Could it be that attention spans are decreasing to goldfish proportions (or is that a myth? – listen to our experts tackle learning and development myths in the recent Modern Learning on The Air podcast (for more about that). Think of all the different options there are now for reading book summaries (eg. Blinkist, Get Abstract, or Headway) or the popularity of Twitter (where only 1% of Tweets actually hit the 280 character limit) or 60 second Instagram Reels. Maybe less really is more?
Great microlearning is, “less about the time and more about breaking a performance goal into focused steps that are as short as possible, but as extensive as necessary,” said Alex Khurgin, director of learning and creative at Grovo. On this basis, microlearning can have a huge impact on learner engagement.
Microlearning usually involves chunking information down into bite-sized pieces and most of us will agree that makes it much easier to absorb. We know that if we want to intellectually engage our learners, we need content that is relevant to them. Keeping our training focused helps us ensure it’s relevant to our learners’ intent. When we build our training programs, we want to include opportunities for people with different levels of experience to access content that’s meaningful to them. Microlearning helps us do that. We could create chunks of content suitable for beginners and different chunks tailored to those more experienced.
Microlearning is also often considered to be more self-directed by nature since it often involves several pieces of informal learning. Learners are engaged emotionally when they enjoy learning and giving them the choice to watch a video, view an infographic or listen to a podcast will help them enjoy it and take responsibility for their learning. Because microlearning is brief, learners are going to feel that positive sense of accomplishment sooner which may even inspire them to access further training.
So microlearning is likely to be a key component of many learning campaigns, but should it be the only component? Probably not. Consider Dictionary.com’s Word of The Day. This site allows people to learn a new word each day, but without the understanding of how to use the word in a sentence, it’s almost useless. Learners need context. Learners also need practice. Duolingo encourages practice through spaced repetition, but without dedicated practice with speakers of that language, are learners really going to become fluent? Including microlearning in a blended program, including opportunities to provide context and practical application seems to be a more effective solution.
Teaching a BIG class with SMALL content can be challenging- we’ve got a bunch of standalone pieces that need to provide a coherent and meaningful narrative. Everyone on the virtual delivery team has a role to play.
Are you wondering how to design entire live online learning events? We can help with our Trends in Virtual Training - Expert Seminar Series workshop - Creating Virtual Learning Experiences Using Microlearning. And there are 11 more trending workshop topics for you to explore!
Purchase 5 workshops and the 6th workshop is free. Click on the image below to learn more.
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