12 Principles of Multimedia Learning (Richard Mayer)

12 Principles of Multimedia Learning

By Richard Mayer

If you are designing a PowerPoint presentation, developing an online course or preparing to flip your classroom, you may need to reconsider how you will get students to engage with the material without the traditional face-to-face interaction.

In the book Multimedia Learning (Cambridge Press, 2001), Richard E. Mayer discusses twelve principles that shape the design and organization of multimedia presentations:

1. Coherence Principle
People learn better when extraneous words, pictures and sounds are excluded rather than included.

2. Signaling Principle
People learn better when cues that highlight the organization of the essential material are added.

3. Redundancy Principle
People learn better when the same information is not presented in more than one format.

4. Spatial Contiguity Principle
People learn better when corresponding words and pictures are presented near rather than far from each other on the page or screen.

5. Temporal Contiguity Principle
People learn better when corresponding words and pictures are presented simultaneously rather than successively.

6. Segmenting Principle
People learn better from a multimedia lesson is presented in user-paced segments rather than as a continuous unit.

7. Pre-training Principle
People learn better from a multimedia lesson when they know the names and characteristics of the main concepts.

8. Modality Principle
People learn better from graphics and narrations than from animation and on-screen text.

9. Multimedia Principle
People learn better from words and pictures than from words alone.

10. Personalization Principle
People learn better from multimedia lessons when words are in conversational style rather than formal style.

11. Voice Principle
People learn better when the narration in multimedia lessons is spoken in a friendly human voice rather than a machine voice.

12. Image Principle
People do not necessarily learn better from a multimedia lesson when the speaker’s image is added to the screen.


 

GROUP WORK 

Make a summary of the main ideas.