The best example I’ve seen of a learning agent in action (Course Demo — free account creation required):

The learning agent from Allen Interactions' anti-terrorism course
The course teaches police officers and dispatchers how to identify and respond to terrorism threats. The initial content presentation is made by a learning agent.
Why I think it’s effective:
1) The agent’s appearance and voice are spot-on authentic; I suspect the developers used a real cop. Good call… I couldn’t see a namby-pamby voice talent impressing this audience.
2) Images and narration are used, which are every bit as effective as video, without the hefty bandwidth requirement. Also, making changes will be much easier than with video.
3) Since it feels like we’re in a classroom, the designers gave the agent good presentation skills. It’s not super-thrilling, but he’s not merely reading his slides to us.
Your thoughts? More examples?
Stay tuned: Learning Agents, Done Poorly
Tags: elearning, engagement, examples, ideas, learning agents
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On the use of “images and narration” rather than video to save bandwith, etc. – yes, very effective – the first time I used this mode in an asynch course I had 4 different agents/characters used in the course. The learners recalled the course after 1 day – 1 week as actually having true video. This mode also allowed us to choose the images for their impact and quality and then independently select the audio narrator. Then of course we could test and select from a range of voice actors, tone, style, etc. We also knew that we had high flexibility to record audio in several languages as well.
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These are characters. I’d like to see intelligent agents. Something the designer/instructional designer can use to monitor progress, adapt instruction, etc. Something even a student can use to delegate tasks or responsibilities, grant authority/permissions (or deny some) to act on one’s behalf and in one’s best interest.
Now THAT would be truly dramatic and innovative for elearning.

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