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After several years of research, Richard Mayer, an American educational psychologist, recommends the following guidelines to enhance multimedia for the purpose of education and communication.

1 Coherence Principle

Use only the information that the learner needs. And most

  • Most often, that means simple text and simple visuals that relate directly to the learning topic.

  • Remove all the fluff.

  • “Is this image 100% necessary to help with comprehension? Or could you find a better one?

  • Does this message use simple enough language so the audience will understand? Maybe I could trim down a few words.”

2 Signaling Principle

Show exactly what to pay attention to.

  • What is the most important part?

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  • Highlight important words.

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  • Using arrows to direct attention.

  • Use slides or scenes that separate learning sections to signal that we’re moving to the next topic.

3 Redundancy Principle

Humans learn best with narration and graphics, as opposed to narration, graphics, and text.

  • Only include graphics or text, but not both together.

  • If they are together, make text minimal.

4 Spatial Contiguity Principle

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Corresponding words and visuals are presented together, instead of in consecutive order.

  • Animation (or visual) should be occurring at the same time as the voiceover audio. This is preferred to having the voiceover audio play first, and then watching a visual after

6 Segmenting Principle

Information is presented in segments, rather than one long continuous stream. Mayer found that when

  • When learners can control the pace of their learning, they performed better on recall tests.

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  • Add next buttons or

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  • allow the user to adjust the speed at which a video plays.

  • Break up learning into smaller, bite-sized chunks. Make sure no one lesson, slide, or video has too much information packed in it.

7 Pre-Training Principle

Humans learn more efficiently if they already know some of the basics. 

  • This often means understanding basic definitions, terms, or concepts before beginning the learning experience.

  • You can use this principle by creating an introductory “guide” or “cheat sheet” for learners to use throughout the course.

  • Or you can create an entire lesson up front dedicated to understanding the basics, before the learner moves into the actual course.

8 Modality Principle

Humans learn best from visuals and spoken words than from visuals and printed words. if

  • If there are visuals and too much text, learners will be overwhelmed.

  • Limit the amount of text you use on screen overall.

  • Rely more on visuals, unless you need to define key terms, list steps, or provide directions.

9 Multimedia Principle

  • Images and words are more effective than words alone

10 Personalization Principle

Humans learn best from a more informal, conversational voice than an overly formal voice.Keeping

  • Keep your language simple and casual.

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  • Avoid overly professional sounding text, or long, complex words.

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  • Use the first person (you, I, we, our). This is where it helps to consider your audience demographics.

11 Voice Principle

Humans learn best from a human voice than a computer voice

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Humans do not necessarily learn better from a talking head video.

  • Relevant images and animations are more effective than a talking head of an instructor.

  • Talking heads can provide some value for the instructor by building credibility and trust.

  • This is especially useful to establish at the beginning of your learning experience.

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  • Try to limit your use of talking heads as your video or course dives deeper into the learning content.