What can an Instructional Designer Learn from Frank Lloyd Wright?
I am an instructional designer at a community college in central Texas. I am also a student in the Distance Education Certificate program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Last week I attended the annual Distance Learning Conference which UW-Madison holds at the Monona Terrace Conference Center. America's most famous architect, Frank Lloyd Wright, was born in nearby Richland, Wisconsin. Many photographs of Wright and his designs are hung on the walls of the center. The conference center also has a gift shop that sells all sorts of Wright memorabilia.
I bought a couple of books about him and several other souvenirs and spent a lot of time studying the photographs of structures he designed. As I studied FLW's creations I became to think about what I as an instructional designer could learn from this master architect, who was designing homes 100 years ago that I would love to live in if I could afford one. I am not going to try to answer my own question in this posting, but I would love to know how my readers would answer this question:
"What can an instructional designer learn from Frank Lloyd Wright?"
I bought a couple of books about him and several other souvenirs and spent a lot of time studying the photographs of structures he designed. As I studied FLW's creations I became to think about what I as an instructional designer could learn from this master architect, who was designing homes 100 years ago that I would love to live in if I could afford one. I am not going to try to answer my own question in this posting, but I would love to know how my readers would answer this question:
"What can an instructional designer learn from Frank Lloyd Wright?"
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