Forum Discussion

KellOrding's avatar
22 days ago

Got an L&D Topic You Nerd Out On?

I recently led a session on Rise Tips and Tricks for Articuland, and it got me thinking...

If I were to pick any topic to share with others, it would be all about setting up L&D or instructional design workflows and processes that help you work smarter, not harder. I'm super passionate about creating systems to make everything run smoother. šŸ™ŒšŸ¼

 

Now I want to hear from YOU! šŸ˜Ž

šŸ‘‰šŸ¼ What's something in the L&D world you're an expert in (OR feel like you have a lot of experience with) that you could share with others?

If you were to to a short talk or quick video, what would your topic be? 

Drop your thoughts in the comments below! Your experience might be an example of what someone else needs to hear! ✨ Feel free to record a lil video or share more information if you're interested! 

6 Replies

  • I totally nerd out on the potential of AI to personalize learning for each individual. I work in medical education, and I see so much opportunity for adaptive learning to support our audience—not just for the high-stakes exams they face in training, but throughout their careers and across specialties.

    I’m also a huge advocate for simulation-based experiences, which are especially impactful in med ed.

  • Smizzl's avatar
    Smizzl
    Community Member

    My topic is "use your human creativity and hard earned skills instead of AI, cause otherwise, soon no one needs you anymore!"

    I could talk and discuss about that for days šŸ˜‰

    • SusanOMalley-d5's avatar
      SusanOMalley-d5
      Community Member

      I hear you on this—concerns about AI replacing human creativity are definitely valid and widely felt. But I’d argue that’s exactly why we need to teach the next generation how to harness AI with intentionality.

      In my view, it’s not about replacing human skill but expanding what’s possible with it. Especially in fields like education and healthcare, AI should amplify human expertise, not erase it.

      The reality is, AI isn’t going anywhere. Nearly every job description in the near future will include some element of AI integration—so the challenge (and opportunity) is making sure people know how to use it ethically, effectively, and creatively.

      • Smizzl's avatar
        Smizzl
        Community Member

        I'm not concerned about "replacing me as a worker or human". I am concerned about replacing creativity (as you wrote it, too in your last word). And this means no one needs my creativity anymore, cause (for example) even an ape can press a button to generate the craziest pictures or videos, or generate perfect text.

        So I have to correct my sentence from the first posting into "no one needs you anymore as an E-Learning Developer, Instructional Designer, etc."!