Why Mistake-Driven Learning Is Important
There are a lot of metrics that measure the effectiveness of e-learning courses. Ensuring learners get good results on quizzes and other tools for assessing competence are high up on the list. In other words, the drive is usually to make sure that learners answer questions correctly when asked.
While it may sound counter-intuitive, there is a place for facilitating learners making mistakes. This is known as mistake-driven learning.
Of course, it is tempting to walk learners through a course, holding their hand every step of the way to help them get through the content with as little hassle as possible.
Learning from mistakes, however, is an important part of our personal and professional development.
Just look at any successful businessperson or entrepreneur in Dubai or around the world. They will almost always say they have made mistakes in their career and that those mistakes made them not only a better person, but better equipped to achieve success.
Mistakes Are Powerful Learning Experiences
It’s also important to remember that mistakes do not usually occur randomly. When you assess them further, you realise that instead of coming out of the blue, mistakes often occur because of incorrect assumptions, misguided understandings, and a lack of knowledge.
This is one of the reasons why making a mistake is such a significant learning experience. The mistake brings clarity and corrects wrongly held beliefs and outdated or misunderstood knowledge.
How You Can Use Mistake-Driven Learning in Your E-Learning Courses
There are a number of ways you can introduce mistake-driven learning to your e-learning courses. Two of the easiest and most common, however, are in scenarios and in your content.
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In content, don’t just use stories and examples of individuals and teams making the right decisions and being successful. You should also include examples of when things go wrong, highlighting the mistakes made along the way that contributed to the failure.
In scenarios, tighten up the options you present to learners to make the answer less obvious. Then, when learners choose the incorrect answer, don’t just tell them they are wrong. Instead, explain why the learner is wrong and include details of the consequences that result from their decision.
Also, you should not look at scenarios as content elements where it is important the learner gets the right answer. In other words, answering correctly should not be your objective when creating a scenario.
A much more effective way to use scenarios is as a learning tool. The difference between the two – an assessment you want the learner to get right or a learning tool – is subtle, but the distinction is important.
The Benefits of Mistake-Driven Learning
Refining Your Approach
For most e-learning topics and in most circumstances, implementing mistake-driven learning should not be a radical shift. Instead, it’s about changing your mindset and making refinements to your courses and modules to embrace mistakes and use them as a learning experience.
(Originally posted at Capytech.com)