Tag: Narrative Plot

  • Instructional Design in the Metaverse Part 6 What is Different?

    Instructional Design in the Metaverse Part 6 What is Different?

     

    Decorative image with text: Instructional Design in the Metaverse. Our metaverse explorer leaves the laboratory with the secrets to design and she heads out into the dark world.

    Welcome to Part 6! Are you alive? By my calculation, when this goes live, 3 intrepid souls have read all of Parts 1-5 before this. (Insert laughter with tears). Indeed, you may have found this in isolation of the other parts! That’s OK, I’m cool with modularization. Feel free to “go around the Horn” at some other point in the future and read Parts 1-5 later.

    Oh! And, for those 3 travelers AND everyone else, I am making an explainer video of all of this content. But it comes with 2 caveats:

    1. No references or quotes. Just ideas.

    2. Because it moves with a preset piece of music, each idea will have a limited amount of screen time: 2.4 seconds, to be precise.

    Finally, I’ll probably write a full BTS (Behind The Scenes) on this article series on my blog. For those of you that love BTS content, that one will be for you. Translation: these articles were NOT written to be sound-bite worthy.  What I write in the BTS will be.

    This is basically the second of two parts that were originally together: Part 5 is what is the SAME about designing between 2D and 3D and this is what is different.

    Long story short?

    Here is where the fun begins.

    Gif of Anakin Skywalker saying This is where the fun begins.

    2D to 3D: What Is Different

    A learner could learn from a book how to enter a store and buy something. A learner could also learn from entering a real store and buying something. Both are ways to complete the learning, but the designs– that is, how to structure the learning from start to finish, will be different. The book is analogous to direct instruction. There are times when direct instruction will be the better approach. The real store is analogous to experiential learning. There are times when experiential learning will be the better approach. The approaches are different; there is no inherently better approach for all situations.  

    These elements in this section are not meant to imply that they exclusively belong to XR media. That is, many other forms of media contain these same elements. These items are listed here because they are often found within and indeed are combined in design solutions in XR.

    1 Narrative Plot

    Clark and Mayer observed that humans are sense makers and attempt to derive meaning from life experiences (2016). Learners engage in making meaningful connections when words and pictures align during experiences. Meaning is also deeply embedded in the storytelling approach, where it is often the journey that the protagonist goes through that remains memorable long after a story has ended. D. Clark argued, “learning experiences are exactly that, experiences designed to change us, specifically our long term memories” (2022, p. 7). Further, D. Clark advocated for a balanced use of storytelling, explaining that it can bring life to dry information, but should not be overused and wander into a “Disneyfication of learning as entertainment” (2022, p. 7). Lastly, D. Clark argued that stories for learning should be designed as “always beginnings, never ends-in-themselves” if the learning is to be applicable beyond the experience, into the “long tail of practice, transfer, and performance” (2022, p. 7).

    Points for poetry, D. Clark! 

     “always beginnings, never ends-in-themselves”

     

    Decorative Image: Our metaverse explorer is exchanging stories with other storytellers.

    Humans crave stories that bring meaning

     

    Indeed, the storytelling approach in learning pulls the learner through the experience. To use storytelling, the learner should experience a flow through their experience, a beginning and middle of the story. The end could happen in XR or more substantially outside of XR into desired application. The learning experience should be planned and not haphazard. Learners should be guided on a planned route. XR storytelling can be first person or group experiences. Regardless, each learner is a protagonist; their decisions determine what they will experience. Recalling the constructivist learning theory foundation, what the learners experience becomes the learning experience that is being designed for. If learners are exposed to situations where they actively construct their knowledge, then the reality that the learners construct was constructed by them, not constructed by the media or by others. Further, learners do not arrive as empty vessels to be passively filled with information if they are the protagonists of their own learning event. Learners add, sort, emphasize, or suppress new experiences when compared to old experiences.  Subsequently, a learner already experienced in real life (non-XR) is bringing those experiences into XR with them. In summary, learners arrive already ready to experience a story. Thus, narrative plot or a story arc is a good approach to XR instructional design.

    Plot, narrative, or narrative plot are all descriptions of phases within storytelling. There are slight variances in names but the phases generally focus on the user’s (or in our case, the learner’s) experience (Lichaw, 2016). 

    Narrative Plot steps from Lichaw: Exposition, Inciting incident,  Rising action, Crisis, Climax, Denoument, End.

    If you remember nothing else about designing educational XR, remember this.  Credit: Lichaw, 2016.

    These phases describe what is happening to the protagonist. In the case of XR, the learner is the star and they should be brought through these phases in an effective design plan. Table 1 compares a storytelling arc with the Pixar story arc, a story arc example of Cinderella, an XR story arc, and an XR narrative plot example. 

    Examples of the storytelling arc of 6 steps: Literary, Pixar, Cinderella, XR template, and XR example

    Examples of the storytelling arc of 6 steps: Literary, Pixar, Cinderella, XR template, and XR example

    Pixar story arc from Khan Academy. (2017). Pixar in a box: Introduction to storytelling [Video]. YouTube. https://youtu.be/1rMnzNZkIX0 Cinderella story arc derived from Kurt Vonnegut, as documented by Derek Sivers. (2009, September 1). https://sive.rs/drama

    Example of Narrative Plot in XR

    Introduction. The who, what, where, why, when of the experience is explained. The scene opens. This starts before the digital experience begins and lasts 30 seconds to a few minutes into the experience, depending on how much needs to be explained. This is the beginning of the exposition.

    Set the scene. Provide guidance on the affordances within the experience, how to communicate, walk, navigate, where is help (e.g. where is a digital companion). The learner is invited to move, change appearance, and communicate.

    Dilemma. Introduce the conflict or the scenario that the learner will participate in. The learner is presented with a challenge or problem. This is the inciting incident and rising action phases. This can be a great time to guide and practice small solutions to small problems.

    Crisis. The learner must act and initiate some sort of change. It is action-oriented, and the learner is on center stage.

    Change or Denouement. The results of the change have an impact on consequences or the environment. Said another way, the change ripples through the experience to change it for the learner. The results are non-trivial and not haphazard.

    Resolution or End. The mission is complete, and the world has changed around the learner. The learner is living out the consequences of their decision.

    Some research has shown that most of the instructional emphasis does not need to be within the XR experience itself. Dede (2021), when reflecting on what he now believes after over five decades of immersive learning research, said:

    “I used to believe that if you had resources, you should spend 95% of the resources on the immersive experience and then you just do a little thinking about what kind of induction you use before people go into immersion and what kind of post experience debriefing you do.  I’ve come to believe now that the induction and debriefing is where the learning takes place predominantly, and so designing those is very important.”

    This indicates the importance of the on-boarding and the follow up experiences. The story of an experience begins before something is activated and ends long after.

    The main point of keeping a narrative plot mindset in ID XR design is to keep the learner at the center of the experience. Every step of the narrative plot approach focuses on what the protagonist- that is, the learner- experiences: dilemmas, crisis, change, etc. This approach, then, keeps the ID focused on the learner’s experience, not the technology. For example, let’s say a platform can recreate the school environment down to the desks and chairs. An ID might reason, ‘This a great place to hold a class! I can assign classes to virtual rooms and the instructor can use web-sharing boards.’ 

     

    Capture of a classroom in virtual reality, complete with desks, chairs, and chalkboard.

    Don’t try this in VR

    That approach puts the technology first and does not consider the learner. It also recreates the problems of regular in-person classrooms and throws in a few more virtual problems as well (i.e., poor internet connections might have avatars distractedly appearing and disappearing). Rather, a learner-centric approach might ask “What is the main experience or emotion that the instructor wants the learners to have in this lesson?” As Mayer stated, “How can we adapt multimedia technology to aid human cognition?” (2020, p. 15). This might cause the ID to look at the entire XR event differently and not recommend a virtual classroom. There is more on emotion in design in Section 5.2.

    Lord of the Rings Narrative Plot Diagram. Basical huge spaghetti.

     Credit: https://fbvisualisation.blogspot.com/2014/04/narrative-charts-tell-tale.html

    2 Visual and Sound Range

    For the ID, the added visual depth and sound possibilities beyond 2D must be designed. However, more to design means more risk. With XR, the added ability to put information anywhere has more risk of overwhelming the learner than helping the learner. Indeed, D. Clark (2022) agrees that Mayer’s Principles lean towards less is more.

    2.1 Visuals

    Alger (2015) noted these basic principles for visual range called the Comfortable Content Zone: 77 degrees of viewing range side to side and a range of 0.5 to 20 meters in depth. There are Periphery Zones to the sides and above, but the learner should be only prompted to use those. 

    Diagram showing that main content should be placed between 0.5m and 20m to the front of the user. The sides are the peripheral zone and the back/behind is the curiosity zone. Anything within 0.5 of the user is the no-no zone, meaning put nothing there.

     Credit: Alger, 2015

    This reflects real life. If one was working at a workstation, critical information would be within easy viewing and reach. Other information could be available in what Alger calls the Curiosity Zone – behind and below the learner, but learners should be prompted, as in real life, by sound, light, or foreknowledge, to engage with that non-obvious space (2015).

    Alger (2015) further proposes that the visual hierarchy matches the importance of information. To find information in 3D, we look at the center ahead first, then left and right, then below, then above, then finally at our own bodies. Everything above eye level is for things beyond the learner’s control like weather, time, or authority notifications. Everything at or below eye level is within the learner’s control.

    Caption describes gif.
    Basic visualization of where a VR user would look for something; first center ahead, then left and right, then above and finally at the user’s own body.

    These user interface principles skew towards conservatism in detail; less is better. IDs should design minimal spaces, with prompts, and within easy arm reach. IDs can create storyboards with isomorphic qualities that both curve around the learner and contain planning space for the foreground, mid-ground, and background visuals.

    Capture showing how designs expand between foreground, midground and background.

    Credit: Alger, 2015.
     
    Credit for below: ExperienceDynamics.com but I received these XR storyboards from the Interaction Design Foundation.
    XR storyboards, blank and capable of showing 3 scenes; the idea might be one scene per step in narrative plot.
     

    A center grid pattern has 4 rectangular grids out in front showing design spaces to use in XR around a user.

    Another type of XR storyboard; this showing 4 possible areas for the user to look at.
    Single scene XR Storyboard, emphasis on zones around the user.

    A single XR scene storyboard. Emphasis on the zones around the user.

    2.2 Sound

    Immersive sound is a rising field within XR design. Poor sound can ruin an XR experience. Experiences can have spatial sound where the loudness drops off over virtual distance or flat sound where the loudness is the same throughout the entire space. As much as possible, it is good accessible practice that all senses should have learner controls: brightness, sound, movement, and intensity. 

    Capture of inside Cosmonius High game showing more accessibility features that users can select.
    After Cosmonious High from Owlchemy Labs did some vision updates, they had over 1.53 million times users put their hand over an object to request text-to-speech–in one month and only with Quest users. Still think accessibility features are optional?
     

    Many platforms and experiences already contain volume controls for separate parts of the experience (e.g., voice chat, environment, or notifications all have separate volume controls). Learners should be trained on these controls at on-boarding.

    Capture from inside Cosmonious High game showing accessibility features

     

    Cosmonious High capture of some accessibility settings. Note that only one hand is needed to play this VR game.

    Generally, for information that is necessary for the learning event:

    • If the information is in speech, provide text equivalents (e.g., transcript).

    • If the information is in sound (environmental sounds or notifications), it should have equivalent visual and/or text indicators.

    • If the information is in text only, provide sound equivalents.

    2.3 Interaction & Movement

    Interactions in XR could be reaching, grabbing, and moving. Good experimental research exists from organizations like IEEE VR or ACM IUI on 3D user interface recommendations. Alger’s (2015) design advice showed a seated avatar seated work will be more comfortable than standing in XR.

    See Mike Alger's 2015 thesis for more but these images show where a user can be reasonably be asked to reach or gesture.

     Credit: Alger, 2015

    Almost every new XR user has walked their avatar into a wall. It happens. 

     

    Capture of my friend Peter when he walked his avatar into a corner.

     

    You stay in that corner until you can act like a good avatar, Peter!

     

    Given that the wall isn’t real, mistakes like this are forgiven quickly. IDs can ask learners to move. 

    (And Peter knew I took his picture at this moment above.)

    Movement in XR is an advantage of the metaverse. While research does not indicate that movement causes learning, it can greatly assist in the storytelling aspect of bringing a learner through an experience by requesting that the avatar move through the story in virtual space time.

    Movement is relative in this media. Frame of reference can be manipulated. The avatar can move, or the avatar can stay in one place and the scenes can move or change around them. There are a LOT of choices for movement in XR. From gaming research, it looks like most of the possibilities are aiming to reduce vestibular mismatch.

    In this area, movement-based engagement can be an area of exploration in designs. For example, asking learners to move to one side of the room or another is an interesting way to run a poll. XR movement often includes dancing and flying. Future research should explore the use of controllers or hand detection for learning.

    2.4 Emojis

    Many social XR platforms have incorporated emojis and they can be used for their apparent reasons: love, happy, sad, clapping, or raised hand. Within designs, learners can use them differently, that is for feedback, poll indicators, or silent ‘I need help’ indicators. Learners have been known to redefine emojis to mean whatever makes sense to them during a learning event.

    Capture of a great moment from the start of the International Summit of Educators in VR. Each avatar chose to express a heart/love emoji.

     

    Cheers to Educators in VR for their use of emojis during their International Summit in 2020.
     

    Part 7 will cover designing and building XR experiences for learning. See you there!

    (more…)

  • Dr. Ellie Sattler, Jurassic Park, and Narrative Plot. Or It Wasn’t About Dinosaurs.

    Dr. Ellie Sattler, Jurassic Park, and Narrative Plot. Or It Wasn’t About Dinosaurs.

     

    It’s a rare moment when I can bring 3 themes into 1 post:
    leadership, XR, and design. Also, I’m going to be personal. Believe it
    or not, I’m not really personal on LinkedIn. Enthusiastic, yes. Personal, hardly.

    Over the weekend, I wrote a gushing sentence to a friend that I
    realized I’d never written down before: I became a Biology major in
    college because of Dr. Ellie Sattler.

    A mentor of mine once said writing is thinking. Writing that
    sentence lead me to do a lot of thinking and reading about her character
    and on the impact of the Jurassic Park (JP) movie.  I’m not alone as a
    woman in deciding to go further in STEM because of the Dr. Ellie Sattler
    character.  So huzzah all the Paleobotanists out there!

    We have to time travel to talk about JP. In 1993, we’ve just BARELY
    broken out of the 1980s. For the first time in STEM history, scientific
    breakthroughs are being accomplished by teams instead of white men.  Think: AIDS breakthroughs & the Human Genome Project. Teams means women included. Prior to this point, women were the “also rans” in science.  Sisters. Mentioned on the side. Or worse, they had their research stolen.
    Strong women depicted in media? Disney’s top film of the 80s was The
    Little Mermaid and Aladdin was just released in 1992. Strong women, not
    so much. Video tapes existed; the Internet did not. If you wanted to see
    a movie, you bought a movie theater ticket.

    We arrive when the music was rises in cool, dark, air conditioned theaters.  And then you see this: 

    "Screen capture from Jurassic Park of Dr. Ellie Sattler looking pensive. Remarkably, this depiction of a woman scientist was also not sexualized nor concerned about sex in any way."

     

    Caption: A character who does not care what you think because she’s solving a problem.

    A character who lays out this line while she holds a stare on the richest daddy around:

    “Look…we can discuss sexism in survival situations when I get back” 

    "Gif from Jurassic Park. Dr. Ellie Sattler responds to John Hammond's weak sexist protest that he should be resetting the electrical circuit. She says "Look...We can discuss sexism in survival situations when I get back" while looking at him straight in the eye and placing a walkie talkie in his hand."

     

    I took that to mean that women are better in survival situations (not equal, as others took it.) and my life was shaped for the better.

    I bought a $5 ticket 3 times over the course of that 1993 summer. Now that’s saying something.
    To this day, it’s the only movie I’ve bought multiple theater seats
    for. But realize, I have older brothers that saw Star Wars, what, a
    bazillion times?

    Jurassic Park became the first movie to gross US$1billion.

    Reading some commentaries and watching some videos over the past few
    days, I picked up some tidbits below. Some I agree with, some not.

    1. To this day, the scene of the T-Rex crossing the paddock fence
    HAS NOT YET BEEN BEAT in movie history & you don’t need to try. 
    True disclosure: the raptor jumping up to the ceiling shot? I still
    can’t *barely* watch that. I wince too hard.

    2. There’s been some 2022 commentary on the age difference between
    the Dr. Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern) and Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill)
    characters.  It’s been confusing and I’ve decided to weigh in.

    In the book, Dr. Ellie Sattler was written as a grad student (Age
    23, no advanced degree) but also no relationship. It was apparently
    Laura Dern’s own idea to give the character a full doctoral degree and
    in the movie the character holds her own against dinosaurs. In real
    life, I’m disappointed to say, Laura treats Sam Neill patronizingly
    and actually “left the party” of JP with Jeff Goldblum, which I find to
    be a big mistake. (I said this article would be personal, yo.)

     

    "Screenshot of ending helicopter scene from Jurassic Park. Dr. Alan Grant holds Lex and Tim in his arms while looking at Dr. Ellie Sattler."

    Caption: The look of faithfulness.

    Don’t be like this guy and not see the sexual tension in JP: https://youtu.be/jSPxu3WprSs 
    As far as the age difference? The problem came in when, in the book,
    the “relationship” was not there but in the movie it was. Laura was in her late 20s playing early 20s. Sam (then early 40s)
    continues to feel the (physical) burden of the age difference. If you
    need help to see what was happening, Deshi Basara has collected these gifs. Notice in gifs 2, 3, and 7 how his body immediately reacts to hers when she touches him. This is chemistry, folks.

    I had to wade into all that because the point was that regardless of
    an age difference (which, arguably could be *less* than 23 years),
    there was a *quality difference* between Dr. Ian Malcolm and Dr. Alan
    Grant.

    I will concede this one point (I disagreed with so much here
    that I couldn’t read more than 2 pages of this commentary) that Ellie
    holds her ground just fine (and doesn’t move despite Alan’s come here
    gesture) with a metamessage at the Raptor pit: 

    "Screenshot from a commentary that points out a gesture from Alan to Ellie at the Raptor pit. He says come here. She does not move. It is clear, she holds her own space."

     Vogue got an interview with Laura Dern
    where she points out that the Dr. Ellie Sattler character went on to be
    an activist and whistleblower. Interesting!! I’ll just leave that right there.

    "Photo from Getty Images of Sam Neill, Laura Dern, and Steven Speilberg on the set of Jurassic Park."

    But most I really enjoyed watching these video analyses of the plot of Jurassic Park here and especially by Mike Hill here and why the movie worked when all subsequent versions of JP have not worked. The key was that Steven Spielberg worked in narrative plot. He carried a story all the way through that was human, basic, and emotional. Dinosaurs just happened to be there.

    "Graphic image of a human family inside a heart surrounded by dinosaurs. Image from Mike Hill's YouTube video speech about Narrative Plot in Jurassic Park."


     

    But that shows up in my VR/XR consulting work to this day.

    The famous quote about rushing into things by the Choatician character Dr. Ian Malcolm:

    Ian Malcolm: Don’t you see the danger, John, uh,
    inherent in what you’re doing here? Genetic power’s the most awesome
    force this planet’s ever seen, but you wield it like a kid who’s found
    his dad’s gun.

    Donald Gennaro: It’s hardly appropriate to start hurling accusations–

    Ian Malcolm: If I may, if I may. Uh, I’ll tell you
    the problem with the scientific power that you’re, that you’re using
    here. It didn’t require any discipline to attain it. You know, you read
    what others had done, and you, and you took the next step. You didn’t
    earn the knowledge for yourselves, so you don’t take any
    responsibility… for it. You stood on the shoulders of geniuses, uh, to
    accomplish something as fast as you could, and before you even knew it,
    you had, you’ve patented it, and packaged it, and slapped it on a
    plastic lunch box, and now (bangs the table) you’re selling it, you
    wanna sell it, well.

    John Hammond: I don’t think you’re giving us our due credit. Our scientists have done things which nobody has ever done before.

    Ian Malcolm: Yeah, yeah, but your scientists were so preoccupied over whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.

    "Meme from Jurassic Park scene: Ian Malcolm: Yeah, yeah, but your scientists were so preoccupied over whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should."


     

    I fight this battle every day.

    Industry and indeed some in academia want to use XR liberally in
    education. Yet, the power of XR is still unknown. Our early research is
    pointing to one thing that seems firm:

    The mind believes what the eye sees.

    That means that the XR experiences we put our children into will be real for them.

    What power are we wielding in the classroom? Everywhere?

    There are those that say “XR is the Empathy Machine! We can create empathy, soft skills in the workplace!” 

    Oh yeah?

    The most recent research I saw (from 2018) says that empathy coming from XR is a 50/50 gambit. That does not mean that it causes empathy for whatever you want half the time.

    It means it causes empathy half of the time and causes the opposite of empathy the other half of the time!  

    So, would you like your employees to don a headset to be more
    empathetic towards race, age, body size? Oh really? How would you like
    results that say that half of the time, those employees are going to
    take off the headsets and quietly say to themselves “Thank God I’m not
    black” 50% of the time? That’s one hell of a bet you are willing to take
    with XR.

    XR is dangerous.

    People say “Look at how you can look all around you! 360 degrees! A
    sphere! Isn’t this cool? Isn’t this new? Just think how this will reach new learners!”

    I can take a learner into a new real physical space (for example on a field trip) and have them be overwhelmed. We’re all on the spectrum, remember? Was that cool? Were they reached
    in a new way when they cried? Would you like for me to even mention
    harassment events in VR that have already happened? We haven’t yet
    arrived into market saturation of haptic bodysuits, but it’s coming.

    XR is dangerous.

    I’d rather have a low, slow, plodding walk into an XR for education
    experience than every bell and whistle thrown at them the first day. The
    line “spared no expense” gives me chills.

    XR is dangerous and if we aren’t careful, we will damage learners
    along the way. Jurassic Park should not have been built or opened. Dr.
    Alan Grant refused to give his endorsement. That was the lesson of the
    movie.

    • I’m proud that I don’t endorse some forms of XR (Dr. Alan Grant)
    • I’m proud that I throw water on some XR ideas (Dr. Ian Malcolm)
    • I’m proud that I tackle problems that no one else can survive. (Dr. Ellie Sattler)

    But the parallel lesson of JP was “Build for story. Because the dinosaurs are not real.

    When I encourage XR design, I build for narrative plot. 

    I build for emotions, 

    because those are real.

     

    "Graphic image of a family inside of a heart. Image credit to Mike Hill."

    #XR #Design #JurassicPark #NarrativePlot #InstructionalDesign #DrEllieSattler #DrAlanGrant #DrIanMalcolm #Dinosaurs #VR #VirtualReality #EmpathyMachine #Leadership #WomenInMedia #FemTech #Sexism #BestMovieSceneEver #Whistleblower #Scientist #PreoccupiedWithCould #SparedNoExpense #Emotion #DesignForXR 

    Article originally posted same day to LinkedIn here: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/dr-ellie-sattler-jurassic-park-narrative-plot-wasnt-dodds-ph-d-

  • Designing XR into Higher Education

    Designing XR into Higher Education

     

    With the dramatic shift to online learning with the arrival of the
    COVID-19 pandemic, faculty, staff, and students within higher education
    worldwide have made the sudden but necessary initial steps to
    incorporate technology into the learning environment in ways never
    imagined. However, forward-thinking administrators are wondering, “what
    comes next?” Immersive learning and XR answer this call. 

    Created with care in Canva. 

     

    Sources: 

    Definitions come from my own writing here: 

    Ziker C., Truman B., Dodds H. (2021) Cross Reality (XR): Challenges and
    Opportunities Across the Spectrum. In: Ryoo J., Winkelmann K. (eds)
    Innovative Learning Environments in STEM Higher Education.
    SpringerBriefs in Statistics. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-58948-6_4 

    Dodds, H. (2021). Immersive Learning Environments: Designing XR into
    Higher Education. In J. E. Stefaniak, S. Conklin, B. Oyarzun, &
    R. M. Reese (Eds.), A Practitioner’s Guide to Instructional Design in
    Higher Education. EdTech Books. https://edtechbooks.org/id_highered/immersive_learning_e

    Slide 6: 

    Mordor Intelligence. (2021). Extended Reality (XR) Market –
    Growth, Trends, COVID-19 Impact, and Forecasts (2021 – 2026) https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/extended-reality-xr-market 

    Slide 8 does not have one source but over 20 years research (including
    my dissertation study) with technology-facilitated immersive learning
    has yet to show a significant improvement other any other learning
    media. This aligns with this important article in the history of
    instructional design: Clark, R. E. (1994). Media will never influence
    learning. Educational technology research and development, 42(2), 21-29. 

    Slides 9, 10, 11 “XR reduces Time, Money, Danger” (similarly expressed
    in my dissertation). There are parallel comments made by Jeremy
    Bailenson documented here as his “DICE” advice. https://stanfordvr.com/video/2019/transformative-experiences-vr-for-good/
    It should be noted that the DICE advice are the 4 occasions for which
    to NOT use VR (against) where my 3 are 3 occasions TO use VR (for). 

    The combination of 4 different models is my own published creation:
    ADDIE (traditional ID model), Design Thinking (from UX), 3DLED (from
    Karl Kapp), and narrative plot (loosely credited to Pixar). They are
    displayed here to show the remarkable similarity of steps/pathway across
    each model, thus supporting the validity of the proposed path.