Gagné's Nine Events of Instruction: 1. Gain Attention of The Students
Gagné's Nine Events of Instruction: 1. Gain Attention of The Students
Gagné's Nine Events of Instruction: 1. Gain Attention of The Students
The following nine steps have been adapted from Gagné, Briggs, and Wager (1992).
Help students make sense Inform students of the objectives or outcomes to help them understand what they
are to learn during the course. Provide objectives before instruction begins.
of new information by
relating it to something Methods for stating the outcomes include:
they already know or to — Describe required performance
something they have — Describe criteria for standard performance
already experienced. — Learner establishes criteria for standard performance
7. Provide feedback
Help students integrate new Provide immediate feedback of students’ performance to assess and facilitate
knowledge by providing learning.
real-world examples. Types of feedback include:
— Confirmatory feedback – Informs the student they did what he or she
were supposed to do
— Corrective and remedial feedback – informs the student the accuracy
of their performance or response
— Remedial feedback – Directs students in the right direction to find the
correct answer but does not provide the correct answer
— Informative feedback – Provides information (new, different,
additions, suggestions) to a student and confirms that you have been
actively listening – this information allows sharing between two people
— Analytical feedback – Provides the student with suggestions,
recommendations, and information for them to correct their
performance
8. Assess performance
In order to evaluate the effectiveness of the instructional events, you must test to
see if the expected learning outcomes have been achieved. Performance should
be based on previously stated objectives.
Methods for testing learning include:
Embed questions
throughout instruction — Pretest for mastery of prerequisites
through oral questioning — Use a pretest for endpoint knowledge or skills
and/or quizzes — Conduct a post-test to check for mastery of content or skills
— Embed questions throughout instruction through oral questioning and/or
quizzes
— Include objective or criterion-referenced performances which measure
how well a student has learned a topic
— Identify normative-referenced performances which compares one
student to another student
Summary
Gagné’s Nine Events of Instruction can help build the framework with which to
prepare and deliver instructional content. Ideally, you should prepare course goals
and learning objectives before implementing the nine events (the goals and
objectives will actually help situate the events in their proper context). The nine
events of instruction can then be modified to fit both the content to be presented and
the students’ level of knowledge.
Reference
Gagné, R. M., Briggs, L. J., & Wager, W. W. (1992). Principles of instructional
design (4th ed.). Forth Worth, TX: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College
Publishers.
Suggested Resource
TIP: Thories (2008). Conditions of learning (R. Gagne).
http://tip.psychology.org/gagne.html