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Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Career as an instructional designer: Designer content

Career as an instructional designer: Designer content


Instructional designers are in great demand these days. Businesses depend on them for creating engaging content to enhance classroom experience for their employees. Governments and academic institutions view them as a panacea for addressing the highly skewed teacher-student ratio.

“They generate content that transforms classroom training,” says Dilip Tikle, founder of Pune-based ConnectDOTS Consulting and Training.  
Several companies like Accenture, TCS and Reliance need instructional designers to create modules for their in-house learning and development programmes for employees.

The demand, however, far outstrips the supply. Only two or three designers work in a place which needs at least 10.

"Business houses are now facing a shortage of designers to cater to their expanding operations. The vacancies are as high as 40 per cent," says Sucheta Phadke, former senior vice president (Global learning), Core Education & Technologies Limited, which creates online learning modules for government and education institutes worldwide.
The rise in demand could be attributed to several factors, say industry experts. While the enrolment in institutes of higher learning has grown six times during the last 30 years, there has not been a corresponding growth in the faculty strength. In fact, according to information gleaned during the Higher Education Summit organized jointly by Ernst and Young and FICCI in 2012, the faculty strength has grown only four times, resulting in high student-teacher ratios.
Redundancy in the content taught in educational institutes is another reason for the rise in demand for instructional designers.

From KG to PG and engineering to management, one cannot depend on content or teaching methodologies that were valid 10 years ago, experts opine.

"With education technology we can adapt our curriculum to the needs of the 21st century," points out Tikle.
Keeping these issues in mind, Planning Commission, in the Twelfth Five Year Plan (2012-2017), has called upon educational institutes to develop computer labs, smart classrooms, e-learning modules and video-conferencing facility, for linking with affiliating universities and sharing information. The Planning Commission has also made suggestions to include content enhancement initiatives like establishing a single national-level consortium for propriety content and creating open-access content repositories.
A typical instructional designer works in sync with trainers and educators to create online learning modules. What is interesting, they convert one hour of reading data into just 10 minutes.

"In simple words, we are like a fashion designer who draws the sketch and passes it on to the tailor for the stitch," says Ritu Uppal, Head, Centre for Education Technology, Mumbai Education Trust (MET). They design the content and adapt it to the medium of delivery. The content is then put together by writers, graphic designers, animators and video editors before being delivered to the faculty for dissemination to the end user.

Since they have to transfer textual or print content into a compact online version, "Instructional designers must be smart listeners and should have a good vocabulary," says Tikle. They should also have a scientific approach to make the content adaptable to the new demands of various industries. Very few institutes impart training to instructional designers.

Earlier, SNDT Women's University, Mumbai (SNDTWU) offered a two years Masters programme in Educational Technology. They have since revamped the course, and are now calling it Master of Arts in Educational Technology (MA ET). University Grants Commission has under its “innovative programme scheme”, has given SNDTWU Rs four million for the course.
"Our curriculum is designed according to the needs of the industry," explains Jayshree Shinde, Head of the department of Educational Technology, SNDTWU.

Now more practical in its approach, the MAET in its new avtar includes specialisation like ‘e-learning’ or ‘interactive multimedia’ in its last semester. It also includes an internship which earns a student a stipend of Rs 10,000. Students have to submit a research project. "We have placement tie-ups with corporate and educational institutes across the world," says Shinde.

Uppal says this is an ideal career for those with a teaching background. Flexible working hours and ‘work-from-home’ options also make it is suitable for women. With good number of years of experience behind you, one can also go on to work as a consultant or even set up one’s own instructional design venture.

"Since effective learning is the need of the hour instructional designing as career has only just begun to boom," signs off Phadke.

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