The document discusses a study on instructional design (ID) practitioners' judgments during practice. It aims to understand what judgments take place and how they align with design judgment frameworks. Researchers observed 8 ID practitioners for 20 hours total, taking field notes and later conducting interviews. They identified 11 types of design judgments, such as framing, appreciative, and navigational. Results showed practitioners made an average of 35 judgments per observation. The most common judgments were framing, appreciative, quality, and instrumental. This suggests design judgments are an integral part of ID practice and occur frequently throughout the process.
3. background,
purpose,
&
previous
studies
- Views
on
design
have
been
shifting
in
instructional
design
- From
prescriptive
enactment
of
theory
to
disciplined
practice
(Bichelmeyer,
Boling
and
Gibbons,
2006;
Smith
&
Boling,
2009)
- From
practice
defined
by
research
to
practice
as
definitive
of
design
(Gibbons,
Boling,
&
Smith,
2014;
Schwier,
Campbell,
&
Kenny,
2007)
- Research
on
ID
practice
has
been
limited
- On
its
own
terms
(Rowland,
1992)
- Comparing
practice
to
existing
ID
models
or
frameworks
(e.g.,
ADDIE)
(Wedman
&
Tessmer,
1993;
Visscher-‐Voerman
and
Gustafson,
2004)
- Attempts
to
approach
the
complexity
of
practice
by
translating
it
into
explicit,
teachable
terms
(Ertmer,
York,
&
Gedik,
2009;
Ertmer
et
al.,
2009)
4. design
practice
&
judgment
- Moving
beyond
a
scientific
or
scientised
framing
of
design
practice
(Cross,
2011;
Stolterman,
2008)
- Reframing
our
understanding
of
practical
knowledge
(phronesis)
as
specialized
knowledge,
not
just
common
sense
that
accompanies
scientific
action
(Dunne,
1997)
- Related
constructs:
- Tacit
knowledge
(Holt,
1997;
Polanyi,
1966;
Vickers,
1984)
- Conceptual
design
sense
and
critical
flexibility
(Yanchar
&
Gabbitas,
2011)
- Design
character
and
judgment
(Nelson
&
Stolterman,
2012;
Korkmaz
&
Boling,
2014)
5. Type Operationalized
Definition
framing Creating
a
working
area
for
design
activities
to
occur,
often
by
introducing
constraints
(client
or
tool)
or
ways
of
assessing
outcomes.
This
occurs
dynamically
across
multiple
levels.
deliberated
off-‐hand Recalling
to
consciousness
previous
judgments
that
have
led
to
successful
practices
and
opening
them
to
the
possibility
of
adaptation
or
use.
appreciative Placing
high
value
and
emphases
on
certain
aspect/s
of
a
design
situation
while
backgrounding
others.
quality Making
design
decisions
about
the
effectiveness
of
visual
and
other
forms
of
style,
or
to
demonstrate
due
diligence,
often
in
accordance
with
company
standards,
in
relation
to
a
concrete
design
artifact.
appearance Assessment
of
overall
quality,
relating
to
an
entire
product
or
experience,
rather
than
just
a
portion.
This
often
includes
part/whole
relations
within
a
frame
of
aesthetic
experience
or
measurement
against
heuristic(s).
connective Making
connections,
or
bridging
various
design
objects
that
are
central
to
the
design
process
and
activity.
The
connections
made
in
this
context
are
not
generalized
but
specific
to
the
design
situation.
design
judgment
types
6. Type Operationalized
Definition
compositional Making
connections
or
bringing
various
design
objects
together
that
are
central
to
the
design
process
and
activity.
The
connections
made
in
this
context
are
generalized
and
not
specific
to
a
particular
design
situation
but
to
the
overall
process.
instrumental The
selecting,
utilization,
or
influence
of
a
tool,
concept,
or
method
in
reaching
an
established
design
goal.
navigational Considering
a
path,
plan,
or
certain
manner
(of
individual,
disciplined
preference)
in
approaching
a
task
or
a
challenge
to
get
to
a
desired
state.
default Giving
an
automatic
response
to
a
situation
without
deliberation.
core Statement
about
one’s
value
or
thinking,
usually
revealed
when
pushed
by
“why”
questions
concerning
one’s
judgment.
design
judgment
types
7. research
questions
- What
do
IDs
do
in
practice
consistent
with
design
judgment?
- What
design
judgments
take
place
in
ID
activities?
8. method
- Two
sites
of
ID
practice
- 8
practicing
IDs
- Data
Collection
- Field
observations
(20
hours
total)
with
handwritten
fieldnotes
- Follow-‐up
interviews
with
notes
and
audio
recording
- Analysis
- Unitized
coding
of
judgments
- Holistic
case
summaries
11. judgments
are
happening
all
the
time
- Average
of
35
design
judgments
per
observation
- Over
16
judgments
per
hour,
averaged
across
all
participants
judgments
create
and
are
shaped
by
situational
factors
in
design
- Design
environment/office
culture
- Role
or
position
of
the
designer
- Project,
client,
and
external
factors
12. judgments
are
clustered
and
layered
- Multiple
design
judgment
types
are
clustered
and
layered
“in
the
wild”
- Stolterman:
“[judgments]
as
pearls
and
they
are
connected
with
strings…If
you
take
one
and
hold
it
up,
then
the
others
just
hang,
as
a
cluster…”
- Pure
philosophical
types
versus
complex,
contextually-‐
bound
expressions
in
reality
13. Name
Company
Role
Years
of
Experience
Background
Gabriel
Campus-‐wide
Consultancy
Media
Consultant
6
Degree
in
Computer
Science;
Masters
in
Comm.
&
Tech.
Emily
Established
ID
Firm
ID
0.17
ID
in
non-‐profit
fields
Julia
Established
ID
Firm
Senior
ID/Project
Leader
7
Degree
in
Fine
Arts;
Masters
in
IST
Heather
Established
ID
Firm
Project
Manager
11
Degree
in
English;
Masters
in
IST
Ethan
Established
ID
Firm
ID
2.5
Degree
in
IT;
Masters
in
Instructional
Tech.
Claire
Established
ID
Firm
ID
6.5
Degree
in
Ed.
Counseling;
Masters
in
EdTech
Adam
Established
ID
Firm
Course
Director
10
Degree
in
Journalism;
EdS
in
IST
Sally
Established
ID
Firm
ID
3
Masters
in
Screenwriting
14. example
She
started
the
meeting
[with
a
client
via
teleconferencing]
with
questions.
She
needs
clarification
on
the
document
to
understand
the
content
better
and
said
she
wanted
to
ask
questions
to
the
person
who
created
high
level
outline.
[...]
She
continued
making
clarification
on
the
understanding
of
the
content
and
she
asked
“what
communication
skills
and
active
listening
skills
mean.
She
wanted
to
sure
whether
what
she
understood
is
same
what
they
mean
with
these
terms.
Then,
she
stated
that
she
would
like
to
have
the
definition
of
“active
listening
skills.
(Claire,
123-‐124;
164-‐166)
15. limitations
- Data
limited
to
one
ID
at
a
time,
although
others
appear
in
the
frame
- No
continuity
across
projects
or
project
teams
- Convenient
sample,
with
most
IDs
originally
educated
in
a
single
ID
program
- Over-‐explanation
of
practice
in
some
instances
- Operationalization
of
a
philosophical
model
of
judgment
is
incomplete
16. implications
&
future
research
- Judgments
are
made
on
a
continuous
basis
throughout
projects,
and
not
just
as
mental
“adjustments”
to
models;
these
judgments
cannot
be
discovered
through
the
application
of
a
priori
scientific
models
- Move
toward
understanding
practice
on
its
own
terms,
using
this
as
a
base
for
scholarship
that
can
then
improve
practice
———————————
- We
know
almost
nothing
about
this
space
- Knowledge
of
professional
practice
is
highly
important
for
ID
education,
including
engagement
in
authentic
situations
17. references
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Hinweis der Redaktion
----- Meeting Notes (4/1/14 09:37) -----
----- Meeting Notes (4/1/14 09:37) -----
----- Meeting Notes (4/1/14 09:44) -----types of judgmentconstruct not refined enough to explain why core and framing are so far apart
----- Meeting Notes (4/1/14 09:48) -----contrast between what we saw happening and the potential for the ADDIE model (or similar) to suggest that judgment only occurs at critical pointsSWITCH TO COLIN
----- Meeting Notes (4/1/14 09:55) -----Implication is that a certain type of judgment may be connected to other types
In this case, a framing judgment appeared to be foregrounded (i.e., the pearl that is held up), as she sought to understand the content within the document by asking questions. She checked the high level document, and also the person who created it. In the process, she clarified specific terminology, and then asked deeper questions relating to the subject matter of the training, communication. Here, she seemed to be exercising connective judgment, in trying to get to the composite whole of “communication.” While she worked towards this communicative “whole,” she also seemed to emphasize certain aspects of communication over others, which is characteristic of appreciative judgment. In this way, connective and appreciative judgment “cluster behind” or are backgrounded below the primary framing judgment.----- Meeting Notes (4/1/14 09:55) -----5 seconds of silence to allow people to read---Note she is doing these specific things; this is what we saw her do, not a direct list of judgments
----- Meeting Notes (4/1/14 09:57) -----Did not attempt to characterize judgments of people that were not in our primary frametelling rather than showing