The ASID Education Guidelines were developed based on the feedback from the ASID Continuing Education Committee (formerly known as the Professional Development Committee), a national, volunteer committee whose members represent active design practitioners and educators. As leaders with experience in both developing and consuming learning content for the interior design audience, these members provided valuable insight and guidance to ensure that our standards reflect current practices, quality, and trends in professional development.
It is recommended that content providers and presenters in all delivery platforms use the ASID Education Guidelines when creating content for any of our events and programming. The main intent is to provide the best possible experience for learners to gain the knowledge and information they seek in support of the advancement of the interior design profession.
ASID Education strives to achieve what we call the 4 A’s of Quality Education. Our professionally designed programming moves learners first from awareness then to application then to analysis to finally achievement. All education content curated by ASID Education follows this scaffolded spectrum:
Awareness: Build a foundational understanding about a topic and provide the knowledge, tools, and resources necessary to succeed.
Application: Apply concepts learned through exercises, testing, case studies, or other activities that engage learners and can be directly employed into practice.
Analysis: Evaluate learned outcomes and coordinate elements to form a plan of action or new structure/approach.
Achievement: Inspire learners to take action and acknowledge commitment to professional learning through certificates of completion and earned recognition for excellence.
Determine the experience level persona, audience groups, and the skill level of educational content.
ASID Education offers learning opportunities throughout an interior designer’s career and experience level personas. They are:
ASID provides educational resources and content while acknowledging these personas which directly correlate to generic professional audience groups. These audience groups have been indicated with each aligning persona above. All educational content reviewed by ASID must identify the audience in which the content is focused and the skill level required.
Skill levels have been defined by the International Design Continuing Education Council (IDCEC). ASID Education follows these definitions as noted from the IDCEC Manual.
Utilizing an approach that is inclusive and representative of all our voices in the design community.
ASID Education is committed to providing educational content and experiences where consideration is given to whose voices are included and maybe some who are not represented. Our mindset incorporates multiple perspectives in the deployment of a thoughtful and intentional approach throughout content development processes. Additionally, we acknowledge that content creation from all sources should be made accessible and relevant to diverse audiences promoting an equitable experience for all learners following these requirements that we model.
See how we incorporate adult learning theories and concepts into our educational offerings.
Instructional design for adult learners requires intentional focus on what are the desired outcomes as a driving force. When developing educational content, it is essential to employ precise instructional design methodologies reflecting sound learning principles to reach the learning goals. It is imperative to consider what motivates adult learners.
MOTIVATION TO LEARN
There are 5 areas that tend to motivate adult learners. They are:
Interested in being a speaker or presenter at GATHER, or content contributor to Design Learning by ASID or other ASID Education program? Use the following guide sheets and checklists to help you create the best quality educational product.
Developing Continuing Education Units (CEUs) or Learning Units (LUs)