Tutorials:
Advantages, Disadvantages and Considerations
Advantages
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Enables users to learn on demand and when they are motivated
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Tutorial can be done independent of time and geography
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User is able to stop for breaks and to repeat sections as needed
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Easier to briefly review or skip sessions if not a beginner
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Learning through written communication may be easier than learning through
oral communication (e.g. English as a second language users)
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Less ongoing staff time is needed for instruction
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Experts can devise tutorial, even though they are located at a different
institutions
Disadvantages
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Not possible to ask questions of instructor or to learn from questions
asked by others learning the same topic
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Density of presentation may be high because content must be self-contained
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Individuals must be motivated enough to complete tutorial
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Frequently takes novices longer to learn via tutorial than via classroom
setting
Considerations
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Tutorials are very labor-intensive to devise
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Hard to maintain especially if content in tutorial is changing rapidly
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Should tutorial include practice problems or a quiz?
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Using interactivity and examples to make tutorial more effective
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Choosing the right media: audio, video, web, email, combinations?
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Length of sessions --list total time needed, provide clear outline, and
divide topics into modules
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What equipment and other types of infrastructure is needed to deliver tutorial?
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What level of user should you aim at?
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Lobby producers to create tutorials
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Use team to create tutorial
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Last Modified: June 05, 1997
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