|
Hey everyone, “Bite-sized chunks can increase efficiency and transfer of learning by 17%.” (Pulled from a lit review) That’s a pretty bold freakin’ stat. However, many read the term microlearning, assume the science, and implement something that is NOT what it should be. Microlearning is powerful. It’s also wildly easy to misuse. So this issue breaks down both. By the end, I want YOU to decide where it fits best in your curriculum. What Microlearning REALLY Is Bite-sized learning chunks that pack just the right amount of information to support objective achievement. Woah, that definition is bloated AF. Tease out the key pieces: 1️⃣ Bite-sized learning chunks: Smaller than “normal”. ATD says 13 minutes max. 2️⃣ Pack just the right amount of information: THE SUPERPOWER OF DESIGNING WITH MICROLEARNING Microlearning focuses on essential-only content. This mindset helps target “need to know” vs “nice to know”. 3️⃣ Support objective achievement: Objectives and evaluation are still critical. But like #2, it may help more efficiently target how and what to assess. Authentic Example: A Micro vs Macro Rehearsal Macro Goal: Perform Piece X with expressive phrasing and balance, while maintaining rhythmic accuracy at tempo. Macro Approach: Let's run it again, watch the dynamics! Let's run it one more time, let's focus on notes and rhythms. ONE MORE TIME! Intonation and phrasing this rep, please. Students hear and think: Micro Goal: Create phrasing for measures 8-16, 25-32, and 50-67 Micro Approach: ||: Prepare, rep, improve, shift :|| You can still get to each musical focus, but chunking objectives supports real impact. Encapsulated Focus 🟢 You isolate one enabling objective. Improvement is efficient, targeted, and measurable. 🔴 You’re isolating objectives. BIGGEST PITFALL OF DESIGNING WITH MICROLEARNING Educators often build 67 micro-experiences, and never connect them. Terminal objectives (overarching goals) require synthesis and application of those isolated trained skills collectively. “We can define colors, but the art is what learners create with them.” - PIXEL Cognitive Load (Previous issue on cognitive load types) When intentionally designed with loops/spacing, it also helps germane load (process of moving to long term memory) 🔴 Poor design increases context switching. ||: Start -> Stop -> Switch -> Shift :|| Attention 🟢 Microlearning was designed to match a decrease in attention span and increase in need for flexibility. It’s what excites most people about this. Duolingo’s approach thrives on short, focused loops. 🔴 Immersion requires time, don’t dampen momentum and lose sustained inquiry. Overuse microlearning, and learning can feel too rigid and lose the spark. More Pros 🟢 Sharper metacognition (learner self-awareness of improvement) 🟢 Easier differentiation (targets are clearer) 🟢 Faster feedback cycles 🟢 Cleaner data for iterative adjustments 🔴 Easy to skip prerequisite scaffold (intrinsic load heightening) 🔴 Easy to skip evaluation/assessment 🔴 Stacking too many in a session eats time 🔴 The quiet one people don’t like saying out loud? Microlearning can make us feel productive without achieving real impact. How to Implement Microlearning Successfully 👷🏼♀️ Build for consistency | Minimize Context Switching Anchor to a stable context. In performance classes:
💡 Innovate on How You Evaluate Multiple choice isn't always the best option. Evaluate INSIDE the instruction. In music tech, the objective is to Trim and loop samples. If learners can’t progress without demonstrating the steps in the software, the assessment is embedded. 🖼️ Reframe the Design Question Stop asking: “What can I shorten?” Start asking: “What can I tighten?” Which lessons feel bloated? Which objectives are muddy? Which activities try to solve 67 challenges at once? ❓ Ask Before You Implement: “Does this feel like a complete lesson?” SO MANY MICROLEARNING ACTIVITIES DO NOT! Microlearning is small, but still must be whole. Updates From the Music Room 2 new FREE works! 🌅 Move East (preview link): Inspired by songs from an indigenous tribe in Siberia (you can watch the reel explaining its inspiration). MEDIUM difficulty for Actor and Concert Band, plus flex arrangement with strings. 🧪 Experiment Log: Inspired by cross-curricular learning and a shift in science curriculum away from the scientific method (watch the reel explaining the inspiration). BEGINNER work with versions for String Orchestra (link), Concert Band (link), and Flex Band (link). Reminder: For any works I have that are free, just complete this form to get materials. Your Thoughts What topics, objectives, or themes do you teach that are complex and could benefit from microlearning? How might you break them down? Get Inspired, Previous Issue: Cross-Curricular Learning PIXEL Web Links & Socials |
PIXEL is the pen name of composer and educator Evan Combs. This playfully academic newsletter offers a behind-the-scenes look at designing and shaping learning experiences and culture. Supported by practical insights and actionable strategies, it’s perfect for teachers, leaders, and anyone curious about the art and science of learning through the lens of music.
Hey everyone, Learning isn’t confined to the experience you curate. Does that idea make you uncomfortable? Relieved? Defensive? Curious enough to lean in? If learning is happening everywhere anyway, the real question becomes: Are we designing in a way that acknowledges it, or pretending our learning exists in isolation? This issue explores the value of cross-curricular learning and why stepping outside “your lane” might be one of the most efficient ways to strengthen both your curriculum AND...
Hey everyone, and Happy New Year! The annual Mr. Combs School of Music Alumni Event™ (best name ever, full credit accepted, thank you) happened on December 29th. I’ve been at the same program for over 12 years, and every winter I invite former students to a local food court to reconnect and reflect on the small but mighty community we’ve built together. It’s tradition to go around the table, celebrate wins from the past year, and share goals and growth areas for the year ahead. Tangent #1: Of...
Hey everyone, As a father of an 8- and 6-year-old, this issue hits close to home. Watching young kids process the world and move skills into long-term memory is mind-blowing (metaphorically speaking, the kids still have heads). Seeing what humans absorb effortlessly, and what absolutely does not stick without help, reminds you quickly that, bruh, you really can’t control everything. But on their learning journey, they carry a backpack called “cognitive load,” and the weight shifts minute to...