Author/Authors :
Mengel، نويسنده , , S.A.; Adams، نويسنده , , W.J.، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Educators are showing an interest in media rich
presentation systems as a means of giving additional material
to a class or of showing concepts in a graphical fashion during
class. Educators have concerns, however, about the length of
time it takes to design and implement media rich or multimedia
systems, about copyright issues, and whether the system will be
used more than once. They also want to be able to design the
system using sound instructional principles, but may not have
any time for acquiring such specialized knowledge and, indeed,
they probably did not take any education classes while working
on their advanced degrees. They do not want to spend a great
deal of time in learning how to use a multimedia package nor
do their students who may only need to do a multimedia system
once to fulfill the requirements of a project or degree.
Although educators and students could use expensive instructional
design and multimedia packages, they can accomplish the
same objectives with the World Wide Web (WWW) using the
hypertext markup language (HTML) and SIMPLE designed by
M. Hagler and B. Marcy at Texas Tech University. Both are easy
to learn to use in a short period of time and are free to educators
and students. Currently, however, neither HTML or SIMPLE
incorporate instructional design, hypertext design, or interface
design nor were they implemented to do so. HTML provides a
mechanism for allowing media rich presentations to be made on
the WWW and SIMPLE lets instructors pull already designed
and implemented instructional materials together into a whole.
To help educators and students design effective and instructionally
sound systems quickly, a hypertext instructional design
engineering process can be used to help them to concentrate on
structuring their system and on monitoring design violations. The
process includes a requirements stage, a specifications stage, an
implementation stage, validation for each stage, and evaluation of
the resulting system. The products of these stages are developed
with object-oriented techniques which will eventually result in a
hypertext system for instructional usage. The process has been
utilized to develop a system for teaching machinists how to use
a computer numerically controlled machine. It is currently being
used for designing and implementing a network protocol analyzer
tutorial and WWW courseware.