Introduction/Explanation to Peer
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Project 2 - Group 5 (G5)
How to Repair or Replace
a Flat Bicycle Tire
Group members:Christopher BrunclikXuan CaiCarrie DonovanShaun HammerSarah K. McIntoshCharles Sinclair
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Introduction/Explanation to Peer
The Purpose Of This Instruction Was To:
• Promote fun, safety and fitness.
The Van Meter Parks and Recreation Department in Van Meter, Iowa has spent much time, cost and effort in developing a new bicycle path for its citizens.
It was our intent to educate middle school students on how to effectively repair a flat bicycle tire.
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Potential learners
• General Characteristics from the Learner AnalysisTarget audience: – sixth through eighth grade males and females attending
middle school in Van Meter, Iowa
Ages of Learners:– 11 through 13 years, with an average age of 12 years
• Impact of General Characteristics on Design– Motivation or Desire– Attention span
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• Specific Entry Competencies
– Prerequisite skills– Prerequisite knowledge– Prior experience
• Special Needs
– Learning Styles– Physical Demands
Potential Learners Continued
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Design Summary
• Procedure• Learners• Context• Approach• Instructor
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Design Summary
• Subject Matter Expert• Design• Instructor Materials • Student Materials• Formative Evaluation
– Expert Consulting– Usability Study
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Context• The city of Van Meter IA has recently invested a
network of bike paths. • Parks and Recreation is to Promote the bicycle
paths, safety, and fitness • "Biking is Fun" program - "how to fix a flat tire." • Separate age groups all co-ed• Instruction will be held at Trindle Park Shelter in
Van Meter, Iowa• The bicycle repairing skill can be used
anywhere
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Context• Instruction will be held at Trindle Park Shelter
in Van Meter, Iowa• Spring and Summer• The bicycle repairing skill can be used
anywhere
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Approach
• The model outlined by Foshay, Silber, & Stelnicki (2003)– Motivation is suitable for this age group
• YCDI & WIIFM– Strengthen the new knowledge through practice
• Not enough examples and non-examples• Minimalism discussed after usability study
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Overall Objective Given a functioning bicycle with a flat tire,
portable patch kit, tire tube, portable tire pump, and water bottle, the learners will be able to ascertain the location of the tube air leak, if any, then repair by only adding air, patching a small hole, or replace the flat tire tube, unassisted, where the tire tube is on the bicycle with the tire and is inflated and functional while on a bicycle trail
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Specific Objectives• Given a functioning bicycle with a flat tire and
portable tire pump, the learners will test the airtight integrity of the tire, unassisted, by trying to inflate to the point the tire is inflated and functional or deemed compromised while on a bicycle trail.
• Given a flat bicycle tire, the learners will be able to identify the location of the compromised section of the tire, and then determine whether to repair or replace the tire on a bicycle trail.
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Specific Objectives• Given a compromised bicycle tire tube and a
portable patch kit, water bottle, and tire pump, the learners will work unassisted to repair, the tire tube, to the point where the tire tube maintains air tight integrity while on a bicycle trail. 4
• Given a functioning bicycle and a new tire tube, the learners will place the new tube and existing tire on the bicycle rim, unassisted, ensuring airtight integrity and functionality of the bicycle on a bicycle trail.
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Description of Instruction
• Bicycle Tire Repair/Replacement– Introductory Presentation– Hands-on Practice– Individual Performance– Observation and Assessment
• Focus on relevance, confidence, and satisfaction
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Instructor Materials
• Design• Layout/Format• Content• Intended use
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Student Materials
• Design• Layout/Format• Content• Intended use
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Major Instructional Decisions
• Decision to use one bike per pair of learners – This allowed the learner to both evaluate and
practice– Also prepared for contingency of learner using her
own bike• Decision was made to visually illustrate the
bicycle repair procedure – A C-map was used to depict steps 1-10 from Start to
End of the procedural lesson– We then broke the Cmap into the individual
objectives– “Cueing” was employed by color coding each branch – See next slide
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Major Instructional Decisions
• Decision was made to laminate student materials– To be weatherproof– Storable in a bike bag
• Decision was made to laminate a condensed version instructor manual– To facilitate proper instruction when instructor
assists students at their learning station
• Decision was made to conduct an in-progress analysis with a 6th grade female learner– to determine what physical challenges existed
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Major Instructional Decisions
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Address Instructional Strategies
This is same as instructional approach?
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Major Developmental Decisions
• Decisions were systematic– Which procedural task to use required much deliberation
• Decisions regarding the learners and instructor– Who to use and how to create a real-life context
• Decision to use Van Meter, IA, Parks and Recreation• Next focus was the selection of instructional theory
– Decision to use Foshay, Silber and Stelnicki (2003) procedure model
• Decisions regarding group communications– Wiki, Google Docs, Zoho, email
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Implementation Issues
• For future courses– Instructor materials need to be duplicated and
distributed 5-7 days prior to date of course– Actual materials
• Tubes, patch kits, tire pumps, lever tools, water bottles
• Need to be gathered prior to course by hosting group or instructor
– Student materials need to be duplicated prior to course and distributed the day of the course
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Evaluation and Assessment
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Original design
•One learner per bicycle
•Observe and then participate in an individual assessment
Modified design
•Two learners per bicycle
•Practice as instructor demonstrates, perform an individual assessment, and then evaluate an individual assessment
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Usability Study
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Usability study details
•Bike trail park shelter in Van Meter, Iowa
•Four learners and one instructor
•Team observation and videotaping of the instruction
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Usability Study (continued) Usability study findings • Instruction was found to be authentic• Content was found to be accurate• Objectives were found to be appropriate• Data collection was found to be effective
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Results from Usability Test
What we took away from itWhat we would change
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Potential learners
• For Future Use– Instructor materials– Student materials– Suggestions
• The delivery time of instruction materials• Location of the instruction• Information of actual materials used in this course
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Potential learners
• Overall conclusion– The content of the instructional materials, for both the
instructors and the learners, is accurate– instructional materials have both descriptive instructions
and visualized steps– the instructional quality was good too– But we do have some problems that we found in the
usability test, as shown on next two slides
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Potential learners
• What we would change– Problem: portability of instructor’s material– Change: a binder and a laminated instructor guide– Problem: student materials– Change: Laminate the student materials– Problem: The instructor did not use his own bicycle for
demonstrating the procedure– Change: alright for small groups but not for larger
groups
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Potential learners
• What we would change– Problem: There were too many extracurricular items
within the narrative, such as the reference to pizza– Change: Identify superfluous references in instructional
materials and remove– Problem: terminology problem– Change: simplify the instructor’s narrative to replace
complex terminology
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Lessons Learned
As these challenges and obstacles have come up, the team has maintained its integrity to the instructional design process and its focus on trying to ensure that the goals and objectives set forth line up with the materials we will be presenting during this course.
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Questions?