With the rise of social and informal learning, and ubiquitous mobile devices (tablets, phablets, smartphones and everything in between), micro-learning as a concept and practice has taken off. Clients who earlier asked for e-learning are now further specifying the type of e-learning. A typical requirement statement could sound like this: "We want short capsules of learning or learning nuggets that will run on all devices. Our employees are busy and want to learn on-the-go." In short, micro-learning is the need. And this is just one of the needs that short capsules of learning can fulfil.
Typically, micro-learning or learning bytes or learning capsules work well as a component of informal learning where the learner pulls what they need to solve an immediate problem. Recently, I downloaded a couple of apps from the Amazon Appstore - one of these being on the British Museum. Whenever I want to know about a specific section or an artifact or era, I can go to the app and to that precise section and read up.
Micro-learning is effective when the nature of the learning required has some or all of the characteristics:
- When the learning required are bytes of facts, episodes, etc., as illustrated in the museum app example above.
- When it covers parts of a process or steps to be followed.
- When the learning required is simple or complicated but not too complex (complex learning is interconnected, and often, experience-based and non-transferable).
- When the learning happens in a collaborative environment like an enterprise discussion forum or a social media platform. Where there is scope for anytime, anywhere access facilitated by technology
For instance, WhatsApp can be a powerful micro-learning platform where members of a group can share interesting links, photos, write-ups, posts and so on. Sites like Common Craft specialise in short "how-to" learning videos using a very unique design style of cutout figures in conjunction with hand gestures. Pinterest with its rich repository of images is another example of how micro-learning exists in various forms.
Sahana Chattopadhyay, deputy head, instructional design, and consultant at Tata Interactive Systems. Re-printed with permission.
Link: http://www.idreflections.blogspot.in /2014/08/micro-learning-its-role-in-formal.html
Link: http://www.idreflections.blogspot.in /2014/08/micro-learning-its-role-in-formal.html

)
