December 9, 2020
Breaking into the Instructional Design Field: Lessons Learned
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December 9, 2020
Breaking into the Instructional Design Field: Lessons Learned
Mykhaylo is a passionate educator and L&D specialist. He enjoys working on various instructional design projects that are meant to empower learners to achieve success in their professional lives. Originally from Ukraine, Mykhaylo currently resides in the US and is constantly looking for ways to grow professionally. Consider joining his professional network exchange ideas and inspire each other! 
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My journey to become an Instructional Designer is not as clear-cut as some may imagine, but then, again, when polling some of my contacts in my professional network, many instructional designers transitioned into this field with some prior experiences in fields that sometimes have nothing to do with adult learning, or learning and development, or instructional design per se. Many instructional designers do not even have an official Instructional Design degree.

I began my transition into the field of Instructional Design when I started taking some courses from the Instructional Design program in the College of Education at Ohio University in 2013; of course, at the time I was full-time faculty teaching English as a Second Language (ESL) to international students. In 2018, I had amassed enough credit hours, so my advisor recommended I complete the program to be able to be awarded a master’s degree in Instructional Design. I enjoyed taking classes as I was able to transfer all my knowledge back to my classroom. I tested out some theories and designed the curriculum for the classes I facilitated. Being the Writing Lab Coordinator, I also designed our training program for the tutors, which included a comprehensive on-demand set of instructional materials in our LMS system to help tutors continue developing their expertise and provide the most effective tutoring services to our students. 

I have learned a couple of lessons along the way that I’d like to share in this blog post with the rest of the instructional design community in this forum. 

1. Be proactive

Instructional Designers need to be able to present a solid portfolio to their potential employers. Unfortunately, instructional design projects do not fall out from the sky, so one needs to be proactive in identifying opportunities for instructional design project work. If one is taking classes in Instructional Design, certain exemplary projects may be included in one’s portfolio; you are in luck if your program offers a capstone project, where you can present certain work you are proud of. However, if this is not possible, be proactive in identifying opportunities to design and develop instructional materials that can later be added to your portfolio. This excellent resource gives you many ideas for your instructional design projects.

2. Build your network

Another important piece of the puzzle in your success as Instructional Designer is building your professional network. What propelled my success in growing my professional network is meeting a co-host of my favorite podcast Instructional Redesign, Cara North and being introduced to some of her contacts, and then the rest is history. Once I met Cara and got introduced to some of her contacts, I started meeting more and more influencers in the field and learning from them, which has been a tremendously rewarding experience. Check out Cara’s video on growing your network

3. Never stop learning

It would be ironic to be in the field of instructional design and constantly educate others about something and not be a life-long learner yourself. It is especially important to stay on top of the most current technology and platforms available to instructional designers. Many such resources provide free trial periods to help you familiarize yourself with the resource so you can confidently speak about your experience with this platform at networking events or at job interviews.

4. Never give up 

It can be quite frustrating to always have to be on top of all new developments in the field and having to constantly grow and update your portfolio, but the truth is – we in the instructional design field cannot afford to give up! We have to be patient, continue learning and growing professionally, grow our network, and the results will soon follow! 

In the comments below, please tell me what your journey to instructional design has been and what were some of the lessons you learned? What are some good tips for new instructional designers to help them gain experience and confidence in the field.

15 Comments
Dec 15, 2020
Dec 15, 2020

For those who don’t know me, English is my third language, and I find it often very poor, lot of words are missing compared with Dutch, Russian, German… to mention some.

Greg, you forget to mention the differences between countries. I have been a professor, but we use another name, English doesn’t have an equivalent. That was indeed post-secondary but at a level that is higher than the community colleges I see in the USA. Their end result is what is supposed to be the end result here in secondary schools. I don’t tell that it always happens, but in that case students take an extra preparing year, not two-three years in a ‘college’.

We have different words for teaching in primary schools (until 12 years) and in secondary schools. And I have been ‘teaching’ flute and chamber music in a secondary music school. I would never use the word ‘teacher’ there, but again don’t know an alternative in English.

I have been training/coaching in a lot of companies, sent out from the college as expert on several topics. Which word should I use?

But training/coaching/teaching remains my passion even when I am now since several years in eLearning development. Without that passion, even the most creative designer will never develop efficient eLearning assets, or they’ll just remain ‘pro forma’ as lot of eLearning courses are at this moment.

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Dec 12, 2020
Dec 12, 2020

I commend you! I had a few classmates who were teachers/educators in my master’s program.

My undergrad is in English: Rhetoric & Composition but I never felt teaching was for me. After 7 years and endless jobs with seemingly no future…I went back to school. No regrets at all, but with so many different paths to becoming an ID, I often wonder how employers perceive prior experience, whether related or not related to instructions.

More curious…I doubt we’ll ever truly know 😉

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Dec 10, 2020
Dec 10, 2020

Those who have seen some of my comments, blogs, articles, webinars, presentations know that I do not believe in ‘certificates’ nor ‘degrees’, only in results. It is very easy to find bad eLearning courses, and the attitude towards ‘learning’ can be very different depending on geographic location. When I first visited USA, I heard ‘Those who can do it, will do. Those who cannot, will teach it’. I couldn’t believe that but proved to be often the truth.

A teacher who is not a passionate learner, should be licensed right away. This has been my moto in my professional life as teacher/trainer. Second moto: no trainee is a dummy, certainly not for eLearning.  Upsetting when you see some training schedules.

A good eLearning developer needs a combination of many skills, and for that reason it would be great if each eLearning course would be created by a team. Such a combination of skills is not easy to find in one person. Sorry about the language, English is my third language:

  • First requirement: being an excellent trainer/teacher, aware of the new pedagogical methods and the environment, history  of trainees… This first requirement is often completely neglected when you watch eLearning courses.
  • Second requirement: being able to use the necessary tool(s). Depending on the situation that is not limited to an eLearning authoring tool, but will include also use of LMS, webserver and tools for asset creation (to keep with Adobe apps: Photoshop, Illustrator, Audition, Animate, Phonegap, Premiere Pro, After Effects, Character Animator, Capture, Color….). Team?
  • Third requirement: being able to communicate with clients and Subject Matter Experts. That can be very challenging, to persuade both of the best approach after many questions. Communication with team members is of course important as well.
  • Fourth requirement: design skills both visual and auditive. This domain is where team work is also rewarding.

Not really what you wanted in this discussion. I have no ID degree, fail at building a ID-network (have a network in building companies due to my career). My passion at improving the result of teaching/training students in a university college, and adults in work environment (college did send me out a lot) have resulted in finding eLearning assets (and tools) to be very useful both in live (flipped) classes, distant learning, project-based learning, problem-based learning, peer teaching. Since I am retired from college, I try to transmit my passion as freelancer in Consultancy and Training jobs to other Adobe application users, with Captivate as most asked for tool.

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