Mayer's Principles in Multimedia Learning: Difference between revisions
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| || Collaboration Principle || Strike a balance between advantages of learning in collaborative activities and mental effort required in its coordination | | || Collaboration Principle || Strike a balance between advantages of learning in collaborative activities and mental effort required in its coordination | ||
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| || [[Animation Principle]] || Organize information for incremental processing allowing learners to combine information primitives progressively and hierarchically into a mental model | |||
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| || Embodiment Principle || Give onscreen characters human-like gestures | |||
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| || Embodiment Principle || Give onscreen characters human-like gestures | | || Embodiment Principle || Give onscreen characters human-like gestures | ||
Revision as of 13:32, 16 December 2022
| Goal | Principle | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Basic principle | Multimedia Principle | People learn better from words and pictures than from words alone |
| Multiple Representation Principle | Using diverse representations of information that help students learn more effectively | |
| Expertise Reversal Principle | Provide differential instructions for knowledgeable experts, and not the same as novice learners | |
| Minimize extraneous processing | Coherence Principle | Eliminate extraneous material |
| Signaling Principle | Highlight essential material | |
| Redundancy Principle | Do not add printed text to spoken text | |
| Spatial Contiguity Principle aka Cueing Principle | Place printed text near corresponding graphic | |
| Temporal Contiguity Principle | Present narration and corresponding graphic simultaneously | |
| Split Attention Principle | Present an integrated format of disparate sources of information | |
| Worked Example Principle | Provide problem formulation and solution to help gain initial cognitive skill acquisition | |
| Manage essential processing | Segmenting Principle | Break presentation into parts |
| Pre-Training Principle | Describe names and characteristics of key elements before the lesson | |
| Modality Principle | Use spoken rather than printed text | |
| Transient Information Principle | Help comprehensive processing of spoken information or animations in learners’ working memory and integration with prior knowledge in long-term memory | |
| Social and Affective Features of Multimedia Learning | Personalization Principle | Put words in conversational style |
| Voice Principle | Use human voice for spoken words | |
| Embodiment Principle | Give onscreen characters human-like gestures | |
| Immersion Principle | Incorporate multimedia design principles in immersive virtual environments | |
| Collaboration Principle | Strike a balance between advantages of learning in collaborative activities and mental effort required in its coordination | |
| Animation Principle | Organize information for incremental processing allowing learners to combine information primitives progressively and hierarchically into a mental model | |
| Embodiment Principle | Give onscreen characters human-like gestures | |
| Embodiment Principle | Give onscreen characters human-like gestures | |
| Emotion Design Principle | Make onscreen elements prime positive emotion | |
| Fostering Generative Processing | Generative Activity Principle | Provide prompts for learning strategies |
| Guided discovery Principle | Provide hints and feedback as learner solves problems | |
| Mapping Principle | Ask learners to create a graphic organizer or concept map | |
| Self-Explanation Principle | Ask learners to explain a lesson to themselves | |
| Drawing Principle | Ask learners to make drawings for the lesson | |
| Imagination Principle | Ask learners to imagine drawings for the lesson |