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Original

Learning design in healthcare education

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Pages 180-184 | Published online: 03 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Emerging from ongoing work into educational modelling languages, learning design principles and the IMS Learning Design framework provide formal ways to annotate and record educational activities. Once educational activities have been encoded they can be played, replayed, adopted, shared, and analysed, thereby reifying much that is otherwise lost in face-to-face teaching. The use of learning design tools, including the free and open source LAMS system (www.lamsfoundation.org), allow practitioners to experiment with learning design approaches in their own teaching, both in terms of creating and encoding their own designs and playing, adapting and analysing designs from other teachers either from within or outside a particular field or subject area. This paper reviews the key issues associated with designing for learning in the context of healthcare education, some of the themes and approaches already in development or use, and the implications of this approach on the practice and theory of healthcare education.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Rachel Ellaway

RACHEL ELLAWAY is Assistant Dean and Associate Professor Education Informatics at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine in Canada.

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