Design Online Course
Design a structured online course using proven instructional design principles that ensures learners achieve measurable outcomes through aligned objectives, activities, and assessments.
Why This Is Best Practice
Adopted by: US Army Training and Doctrine Command (ADDIE origin), Quality Matters (QM) rubric used by 1,500+ institutions globally, Coursera and edX course design standards
Impact: Courses designed with ADDIE achieve 30–40% higher completion rates than self-developed courses (Quality Matters research); Gagné's nine events applied to online modules improve test score outcomes by 25% (meta-analysis, Merrill 2002)
Why best: ADDIE (Analysis-Design-Development-Implementation-Evaluation) is the most validated instructional systems design process; Gagné's nine events of instruction operationalize cognitive learning theory into concrete instructional actions.
Sources: Branch "Instructional Design: The ADDIE Approach" (2009); Quality Matters "Higher Education Rubric" (8th ed., 2023); Gagné "The Conditions of Learning" (1965)
Steps
- Analyze — identify: target learner profile (prior knowledge, demographics, technology access), business/learning need, performance gap, course constraints (duration, budget, delivery platform).
- Write terminal and enabling learning objectives — terminal: one overarching measurable skill; enabling: 3–7 sub-skills that together constitute the terminal objective; use Bloom's Taxonomy verbs at the correct level (remember/understand/apply/analyze/evaluate/create).
- Design course structure — organize enabling objectives into modules (5–7 modules per course); sequence from foundational to applied; each module should be completable in 20–40 minutes.
- Align assessments to objectives — for every learning objective, design an assessment activity that directly measures that objective; misaligned assessments invalidate learning measurement.
- Select instructional strategies — apply Gagné's nine events per module: (1) gain attention, (2) state objective, (3) recall prior knowledge, (4) present content, (5) provide guidance, (6) elicit performance, (7) provide feedback, (8) assess performance, (9) enhance retention.
- Design the content mix — plan: video (5–8 minute segments maximum), interactive exercises, readings (<10 pages per module), discussion prompts, quizzes; varied modalities increase engagement and accommodate different learning styles.
- Develop assessment rubrics — create grading criteria for each assessed activity; rubrics must be learner-facing so expectations are transparent before submission.
- Build a storyboard — for each video segment, write a shot-by-shot script with on-screen visuals, narration, and timing; storyboard review catches content gaps before production.
- Develop content — record video according to storyboard; build interactive elements (H5P, Articulate, etc.); write assessments; configure LMS (Canvas, Moodle, Teachable, etc.) with module sequence and release conditions.
- Pilot and evaluate — run with 5–10 learners from the target population; measure: completion rate, quiz scores, learner satisfaction (Kirkpatrick Level 1), and behavior change (Level 3); iterate before full launch.
Rules
- Every instructional element must map to a learning objective — content without an objective is filler that reduces completion rates.
- Video segments must not exceed 8 minutes — completion drops sharply after 6 minutes for instructional video (Guo et al. MIT research, 2014).
- Assessments must be formative (during) and summative (end) — summative-only assessment provides no learning support during the course.
- Accessibility compliance is mandatory — all video must have captions; all PDFs must be tagged; all images must have alt text (WCAG 2.2 AA).
- Pilot testing is not optional — deploying without a pilot produces a broken experience for the full learner cohort.
Common Mistakes
- Writing objectives as activities not outcomes — "Learners will watch a video about X" is not an objective; "Learners will be able to X" is.
- Front-loading content, skipping practice — cognitive load research shows retention requires practice interspersed with instruction; not just a lecture then a quiz.
- No spaced review — knowledge covered only once and never revisited follows Ebbinghaus's forgetting curve; build retrieval practice into later modules.
- Ignoring mobile learners — 70% of LMS access is mobile (Moodle telemetry 2022); design for small screen from the start.
- Assessment without feedback — quiz with "wrong, try again" but no explanation leaves learners unable to correct misconceptions.
When NOT to Use
- Performance support (job aids, reference materials) — these are not courses; design as searchable resources
- Single-topic microlearning (<15 minutes) — use microlearning module design instead
- Rapidly changing content where course production cycle exceeds content shelf life