February 25, 2008
The Post-it™ Way
Posted by Betha under Creativity, Learning Styles, PowerPoint, Presentation Tips, training
“… the widespread use of Post-it™ notes and cheat sheets reveals a lot about the way people learn and how they apply that knowledge to their jobs.”
This is from an intriguing post by Tom Kuhlman on the Rapid E-Learning Blog: What We Can Learn About Instructional Design from Post-it™ Notes. I have to admit that I recognized myself in the description of a typical e-learning designer, who has a tendency to include “more information than is necessary to learn the task.”
After reading it, I did a quick tour of my office to see how many people had post-it notes scattered around their desks. Fourteen out of sixteen desks had visible post-its or equivalent note scraps. Why is the Post-it note such a winner?
- Its small size forces you to record the bare essence of a thought or instruction. In Kuhlman’s words, a note does not contain all you need to know, but what you need to do.
- It can be stuck on things to easily catch your attention.
- It can be grouped with other Post-its and rearranged as needed.
- Only the most immediately relevant bits of information stay within view, limited by the area of your desk.
I’m not going to convert all my training materials to Post-it notes, but I could do more to apply the “what you need to do” filter to instructional design. Along the same lines, Presentation Zen tells us we need to choose between deep or wide scope. “How much can I cover today vs. how much can my students absorb today?” Why not think of a PowerPoint presentation as a series of Post-it notes? Pare each slide down to the shorthand essence of what you want to convey.
Think Post-it! This is my new mantra. I have a Post-it on my laptop to remind me.
February 25, 2008 at 2:11 pm
Very interesting. I have friends who really live by the post it note (and are especially good using post it notes in the car to grab those fleeting thoughts that occur while driving.)
I’ve never gotten into post-it notes because they tend to get unstuck and fall behind by desk before I get around to taking action.
Now this is my kind of post it!
http://postit.note.txt2pic.com/
February 25, 2008 at 5:19 pm
I agree that the glue could be a tad more aggressive.
February 26, 2008 at 1:58 am
Thanks for the plug.
BTW, there’s actually a way to get the notes to stick better.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rIR94VNUTAQ
February 26, 2008 at 1:53 pm
Nice trick! It worked when I just tried it.
Funny that I prefer my virtual post-its with a built-in curl.