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Reddit mentions of Design for How People Learn (Voices That Matter)

Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 4

We found 4 Reddit mentions of Design for How People Learn (Voices That Matter). Here are the top ones.

Design for How People Learn (Voices That Matter)
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    Features:
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  • One case of twelve, 15-ounce boxes of Kellogg's Pop-Tarts Wild Berry Frosted toaster pastries
  • Eight individually-wrapped, baked toaster pastries per box--96 toaster pastries total
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Height9.25 Inches
Length7 Inches
Number of items1
Weight1.14199451716 Pounds
Width0.75 Inches

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Found 4 comments on Design for How People Learn (Voices That Matter):

u/apledger · 2 pointsr/instructionaldesign

What about field interest you? Elearning? Corporate training? High Tech? Higher Ed?

Look for job listings and ask yourself what it would take to meet the requirements (Check out the FAQ if you haven't already)

I would start by adapting my existing content into an online portfolio, learning some authoring tools (Storyline and Captivate are the big ones) and beginning to teach myself an ID-related skill I don't already possess.

To echo u/counttess, adult education is where the jobs are-- so you need to demonstrate your value to an organization that sees training solely in terms of ROI.

Oh, and start reading! Design for How People Learn might be a good starting point.

Good luck!

u/elearningblends · 2 pointsr/instructionaldesign

My absolute favorite. Design for how people learn by Julie Dirksen. Explores motivational aspects of how we pay attention.

https://www.amazon.com/Design-People-Learn-Voices-Matter/dp/0321768434

u/counttess · 1 pointr/instructionaldesign

People have already gave some great suggestions. A couple of books you may like:

u/oxala75 · 1 pointr/instructionaldesign

My pleasure! As an aside, Julie Dirksen is plain awesome in many arenas of L&D/workplace performance.

As I said, we (well, ADL) are working on more instructional designer-focused materials. Coming soon!