Design Microlearning Module
Design a focused, self-contained learning module that teaches one specific skill or knowledge application in under 10 minutes, optimized for mobile and just-in-time use.
Why This Is Best Practice
Adopted by: LinkedIn Learning, TED-Ed (5-minute lessons), Duolingo (daily 5-minute sessions), Google's Re:Work training modules
Impact: Bersin (2017) research shows workers have an average of 24 minutes per week for formal learning; microlearning modules have 50% higher engagement rates than traditional e-learning; mobile learning completion rates are 45% higher for sub-10-minute modules
Why best: Working memory can hold 4±1 chunks of new information (Cowan 2001, updating Miller); microlearning constrains module scope to match this capacity, maximizing encoding per learning minute.
Sources: Bersin "The Disruption of Digital Learning" Deloitte (2017); ATD "Microlearning" research (2019); Torgerson "The Microlearning Guide" (2021) Ch. 2–4; Cowan "The Magical Number 4" BBS (2001)
Steps
- Define a single, specific objective — one microlearning module = one learning objective; it must be actionable within the length of the module: "Apply the 3-step customer objection response to a live sales call."
- Confirm the performance context — identify exactly when and where learners will use this skill; microlearning is most effective as just-in-time support at the point of need.
- Scope ruthlessly — cut any content that is not required to achieve the single objective; background, context, and history are not microlearning content unless they are the objective.
- Choose the format — video (3–6 min): demonstration, storytelling; interactive scenario: decision-making, branching; infographic: reference/process; quiz: retrieval practice; podcast: awareness; select based on the cognitive demand of the objective.
- Write a tight script — for video: 120–150 words per minute; 5-minute video = 600–750 words; every sentence must advance the objective; eliminate filler ("today we'll be looking at...").
- Design for mobile-first — single-column layout; minimum 16px text; 44px touch targets; no horizontal scrolling; file size <50MB; offline availability if LMS supports it.
- Add one formative check — embed a single question or reflection prompt mid-module; this is not for grading but for metacognitive processing and attention maintenance.
- Include a concrete application prompt — end with a specific action: "In your next customer call, use the three-step response from this module and note the result."
- Sequence into a learning pathway — standalone microlearning has low impact; link to 5–8 related modules forming a 30–60 minute pathway; cross-link to adjacent modules for deeper exploration.
- Measure completion and application — track completion rate (target >80%); measure behavior transfer via manager observation or performance data 30 days post-completion.
Rules
- One objective per module — scope creep beyond a single objective defeats the cognitive load advantage of microlearning.
- Duration must be under 10 minutes — modules exceeding 10 minutes are e-learning, not microlearning; split or redesign.
- The application prompt is mandatory — without a "do this now" instruction, the module is information, not learning.
- Microlearning does not replace comprehensive training — complex skills requiring deep practice (surgical procedures, complex software) require full-length courses; microlearning reinforces or refreshes, it does not initially build.
- Accessibility is non-negotiable at any length — captions, alt text, and keyboard navigation apply equally to 3-minute modules.
Common Mistakes
- Cramming full course content into a short format — compressing an hour of content into 5 minutes produces cognitive overload, not microlearning.
- No context for use — a module without a clear "when to use this" instruction leaves learners unable to transfer the skill.
- Treating microlearning as video-only — interactive scenarios, spaced repetition quizzes, and infographics are valid microlearning formats for different objectives.
- No pathway linking — isolated modules have no cumulative learning effect; always position within a pathway.
- Measuring completion only — completion is a vanity metric; behavioral transfer 30+ days post-completion is the meaningful measure.
When NOT to Use
- Complex procedural skills requiring multiple practice cycles and feedback
- Compliance training requiring documented completion of comprehensive content
- Psychomotor skills requiring physical practice (hands-on procedures)