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The Principles of Adult Learning: How to Apply Them to E-Learning

NicoleLegault1's avatar
NicoleLegault1
Community Member
9 years ago

The Principles of Adult Learning. We’ve all heard of them … but what are they, really? They’re a generally agreed upon set of principles and best practices that we apply to building training for adult learners. So let’s take a closer look at these principles and some practical tips for applying them to your next e-learning course.

Experience

Adults have a rich history with many past experiences they can draw upon, which helps them in their learning endeavors.

How to apply this principle to e-learning?

Consider what your learners already know when you’re designing your course. For example: you’re building systems training for employees who have already been using the system for over a year. Don’t force them to do lessons like “logging in” and “logging out”—adult learners will draw from their past experiences and sort those out on their own. If you must include it in the course, make it optional.

Self-Directed

Adults tend to be self-directed in that they like to have control over their own learning content and process.

How to apply this principle to e-learning?

Give learners control in your course. There are many ways you can do this:

  • Don’t lock down your navigation.
  • Let learners choose the order in which they view the content.
  • Allow them to select an avatar to guide them through the course.
  • Build scenarios that give learners various options and allow them to make decisions.

Those are just a few. The key is to find points in your e-learning where you can give learners control over the e-learning experience.

Relevance

Adult learners need to see the direct link of how the learning relates back to their real-life problems and tasks, rather than simply learning theory or academic materials that won’t help them on the job.

How to apply this principle to e-learning?

Focus your e-learning on tasks and use real-life scenarios to provide context for the content. This is why it’s important to do your task analysis up front: it automatically focuses your e-learning on only what the learners need to know on the job, which is what adults are concerned with learning.

Timing

Adults want to learn the information they need to know right away, and are not overly concerned with information they may or may not need down the road.

How to apply this principle to e-learning?

Get rid of any “nice to know” information, or at the very least, make it optional. This ties into the previous point about relevance: if you focus on what’s relevant to the tasks at hand, you’re more likely to create training that focuses on what learners need to know right now, which is what they’re interested in.

Benefits

Adult learners need to understand the benefits and what they stand to gain from the learning in order to be engaged by it.

How to apply this principle to e-learning?

Capture their interest by being explicit up front about the benefits for the learner to understand the material at hand. Will the process they’re learning make their current job easier? Will it save them time or collect better data in the system? You need to identify specific ways this training will make your learner’s job easier and better. If it really won’t, you can at least explain the reasoning behind why they still need to learn this information.

Participation

Adults like to be able to share their past experiences, capabilities, and insights with others.

How to apply this principle to e-learning?

Make your online learning social. Consider an internal chat channel where people have follow-up discussions about the e-learning course they just took, or a question board where the SMEs or course designer can answer questions. You can also consider some aspects of gamification to make it social. For example, you may look at the possibility of including a leaderboard on your company’s internal website or LMS to let people see how they’re ranking.

These are just some of the techniques you should keep in mind to apply the principles of adult learning to your next e-learning course. Do you think this article covers all the principles? Do you have any additional tips of your own to share? If so, please leave a comment below, we love to hear your feedback.

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Published 9 years ago
Version 1.0
    • NicoleLegault1's avatar
      NicoleLegault1
      Community Member
      Glad to hear that, Mohammad! Best of luck with the new project.
  • TomDoyle1's avatar
    TomDoyle1
    Community Member
    Hi Nicole,

    I enjoyed your article. And, as I write a short course for SMEs to learn the basic principles for lesson plan development, I am trying to apply most of what you recommend. Not sure I can "let go" of navigation restrictions - but, everything else was considered. I appreciate knowing from an expert that I am headed down the right path.
    • NicoleLegault1's avatar
      NicoleLegault1
      Community Member
      Happy to hear that Tom! Sometimes it simply doesn't make sense to "let go" completely of nav controls.. I'm working on a course right now where there's a chronological process that I want learners to have to view in the correct order, so I've had to lock down navigation there a bit. I think it always depends on the context and the needs of a specific situation... :) Thanks for stopping by and leaving a comment.
  • NoraCloonan's avatar
    NoraCloonan
    Community Member
    I found this article to be very pertinent and instructive. I think adult learners may often view a course from beginning to end but then want to revisit the sections that most apply to what they are interested in. This is when having open navigation becomes beneficial. Even if it just means they can go to the applicable lesson, as long as lessons are not too lengthy, this should suit their needs. I also love the suggestion for building in a community of practice at the end that allows learners to support each other as they apply the new information.
  • TomDoyle1's avatar
    TomDoyle1
    Community Member
    I like the additional perspective, Alexander. I agree.
  • Very great article, especially you specified how we can apply them in e-learning "short and sweet, "KISS". However, I believe we could add also motivation and Stimulation aspect, what do you think?. You have mentioned some aspects of gamification with one example, could you please add another example? Any novice needs to learn more.

    Thanks
    Abby
  • Hi Nicole,

    This is a great start conceptually for those new to adult learning theories. Are you basing this principles on Knowles'? I feel we need to address readiness as well. That would lead us to include learning objectives and how they are presented in an elearning format. What are your thoughts?
    • NicoleLegault1's avatar
      NicoleLegault1
      Community Member
      Hi Alexander! Thanks for the comment! How would you define readiness if you were to include it? I feel it might tie into the Relevance, Timing and maybe benefits?
      • AlexanderSalas's avatar
        AlexanderSalas
        Community Member
        Hey Nicole,

        I concur with your take and it would encompass also the Experience principle as readiness pertains to the ability of the adult learner to engage in said learning process.
  • KurtZiervogel's avatar
    KurtZiervogel
    Community Member
    Hi Nicole,

    Loved your article! I'll be keeping these points in mind when creating my lessons (^_^).

    Thank you!