I just read a fascinating discussion that Cammy Bean and John H. Curry had on the Effective Design blog. They raised a number of great issues about instructional design and how the academic approach to it does not always match the work in practice.
Ahh, how I love when the gap between research and practice becomes so apparent. As a self-described scholar-practitioner in the area of human resource development (an a professional instructional designer), I found their conversation engaging and respectful, while also raising countless issues about the field of ID / ISD:
- should there be professional certification?
- are the certifications already out there not doing their jobs well enough?
- who should decide?
- does Corporate America care?
- what will gap(s) will this type of certification fill?
- who will make money from the certification process?
- how if at all will universities change or even become part of this process?
- is there enough of a market for this?
- is there enough research to actually have a body of knowledge, or is it only best practice?
- is research needed outside of best practice at all?
- how have related fields, such as training, OD, HRD, workplace learning and performance, and what have you addressed this and to what success?
These are just my first thoughts from a conversation that occurred in the recent past. I wonder what can be next to consider with this?
This entry was posted
on Monday, April 14th, 2008 at 11:55 am and is filed under Academia, Instructional Design.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

[...] Yesterday I posted some open questions in reaction to a discussion that Cammy Bean and John H. Curry had. They both suggested (here and here) that we pursue this further, so here goes. [...]