Instructional Design and Education Technology
Library Details
Organization
SUNY Potsdam
Date Created
17 Dec 2025
Public
Public
Authors
Anthony Betrus
Description
The Instructional Design and Education Technology Case Library serves as a living repository of assignment-driven learning experiences, exemplary student work, and applied instructional design practice emerging from SUNY Potsdam’s graduate programs in Educational Technology, Instructional Design, and Curriculum & Instruction.
The library is intentionally designed to address a persistent challenge in higher education: preserving institutional learning, pedagogical insight, and high-quality student outcomes beyond the lifecycle of a single course, LMS instance, or faculty tenure. Rather than functioning as a static portfolio gallery, the library curates complete learning design cases that document both process and product—including assignment context, design decisions, timelines, iterations, assessment criteria, and final deliverables.
Cases in the library span culminating project work, practicum and internship experiences, professional development workshops, curriculum design initiatives, and emerging learning technology projects (including AI, XR/VR, podcasting, and digital media). Each case is structured to be instructionally reusable, enabling future students to understand how exemplary work was created—not just what the final artifact looks like.
Instructional Uses
The library supports multiple instructional use cases, including:
- Scaffolding complex, multi-week projects
- Providing exemplars without undermining student originality
- Supporting mentoring and peer-to-peer learning across cohorts
- Building durable institutional memory that resists digital decay
- Showcasing applied instructional design practice to external partners and employers
Over time, this library is intended to grow into a center of excellence for learning design—authored by students, curated by faculty, and accessible to educators, institutions, and collaborators seeking models for authentic, reflective, and technology-enabled teaching and learning.
Relevant Topics
Data Management
Education Quality and STEM Education
Innovation
Organizational Culture
Product Design & Development
Research, Analysis, Evaluation
Training & Development
Skills & Expertise
Accessibility Design
Activity Design
Assessment Design
Audience Analysis
Backward Design)
Breakout Room Facilitation
Career Research
Certification Planning
Chat-Based Engagement
Content Development
Content Strategy
Cultural Research
Culturally Responsive Teaching
Curriculum Design
Curriculum Development
Data Analysis
Documentation
Educational Technology Integration
Experiential Learning Design
Facilitation
Feedback Analysis
Feedback Collection
Gantt Chart Planning
Information Architecture
Instructional Design
Instructional Design Frameworks (ADDIE
Iterative Design
Lesson Planning
Literature Review
Multimedia Content Development
Needs Analysis
Online Teaching
Pedagogical Research
Pilot Testing
Portfolio Audit
Portfolio-Based Assessment
Product Design
Professional Branding
Professional Communication
Project Management
Project Scoping
Project-Based Learning
Qualitative Research
Quality Assurance Frameworks (OSCQR)
Reflective Practice
Reflective Practice Design
Reflective Writing
Research Synthesis
Rubric Development
Scaffolding Strategies
Slide Design
Stakeholder Collaboration
Stakeholder Interviews
Standards Alignment
Survey Design
Technical Troubleshooting
Technical Writing
Tool Evaluation
Unit Planning
Usability Testing
User Research
UX Design for Learning
UX/UI Design
Website Design
Website Development
Wireframing
Workshop Design
Workshop Facilitation
SUNY Potsdam
Educators—particularly in K–12 science—face increasing pressure to integrate technology meaningfully into their pedagogy while balancing curriculum standards, classroom management, student engagement, and equity. While many digital tools and platforms exist, teachers often lack clear, practice-informed guidance on which tools actually work in real classrooms, how to implement them effectively, and how to balance technology use with hands-on, human-centered learning.
At the same time, graduate students in instructional design and curriculum programs frequently produce high-quality research, lesson designs, and reflective work that demonstrate strong pedagogical insight—but these outcomes are often siloed within a single course, submitted once, and then lost to digital decay after the semester ends.
This case addresses the opportunity to design a durable, practitioner-facing educational resource that synthesizes applied research, classroom-tested strategies, and instructional design thinking into a coherent, accessible digital product. The goal is to demonstrate how graduate-level learning can translate into a real-world educational asset that supports practicing teachers while preserving institutional knowledge and exemplary student work for future cohorts.This case is intentionally structured as a repeatable assignment framework, allowing future students to pursue different instructional contexts, content areas, or technologies while following the same research-informed, reflective design process demonstrated here.The resources included below represent one exemplary instantiation of this case challenge and are provided to illustrate quality, depth, and process—not to prescribe format or topic.
SUNY Potsdam
Designing a Professional Instructional Design E-Portfolio Aligned to Quality Standards (Exemplar: Professional Portfolio)
Graduate students in instructional design and educational technology are expected to demonstrate not only theoretical knowledge, but also applied skills, professional readiness, and alignment with industry-recognized quality standards. However, many students struggle to translate coursework, certifications, and practicum experiences into a coherent professional narrative that clearly communicates their value to employers, hiring committees, and collaborators.
At the same time, institutions invest significant effort in teaching instructional design frameworks, accessibility standards, and quality review processes (such as OSCQR or a comparable framework), yet these competencies are often assessed in isolation rather than synthesized into a durable professional artifact. As a result, students may graduate with strong skills but limited ability to showcase them holistically.
This case addresses the opportunity to design a standards-aligned, accessible, and professionally positioned instructional design e-portfolio that integrates coursework, certifications, applied reviews, reflections, and artifacts into a single, cohesive digital product. The project demonstrates how a culminating experience can function simultaneously as a learning process, a professional credentialing pathway, and a career-facing deliverable—while also creating a reusable exemplar for future students navigating similar career transitions.This case is designed as a reusable assignment framework, allowing future students to pursue different instructional design roles, tools, or contexts while following the same structured, standards-aligned process.
SUNY Potsdam
Designing a Culturally Responsive Art Curriculum Integrating Traditional Beading and Weaving (Exemplar: Curriculum Design)
Educators are increasingly called upon to design culturally responsive curricula that honor Indigenous knowledge systems while meeting contemporary educational standards, fostering student engagement, and integrating reflective, portfolio-based assessment. However, many teachers lack concrete models for how to responsibly integrate traditional cultural practices—such as beadwork and weaving—into formal classroom instruction without reducing them to surface-level activities or disconnected craft projects.
At the same time, instructional design students and pre-service educators often struggle to demonstrate how culturally grounded curriculum design can be structured, assessed, and documented in ways that are academically rigorous, standards-aligned, and transferable to real classroom settings. While lesson plans may exist in isolation, fewer exemplars show how multi-week units, formative and summative assessments, reflective practice, and portfolio documentation can be woven together into a coherent instructional system.
This case addresses the opportunity to design a complete, culturally responsive art curriculum that integrates Haudenosaunee beadwork and weaving traditions into a structured, multi-unit learning experience. The project demonstrates how Indigenous art practices, collaboration with cultural experts, hands-on making, reflection, and digital portfolio development can be intentionally scaffolded into a standards-aligned instructional product ready for classroom implementation—while also serving as a durable exemplar for future educators and instructional designers.
SUNY Potsdam
Designing and Facilitating an Interactive Online Workshop on Meaningful Discussion Prompts (Exemplar: Internship & Practicum)
Online discussion forums remain a core component of many digital and hybrid learning environments, yet they are frequently perceived as low-impact, repetitive, or disconnected from authentic learning goals. Instructional designers and faculty developers are increasingly tasked with improving the quality of online discussions—without eliminating them—by redesigning prompts, aligning them to course outcomes, and fostering meaningful peer interaction.
At the same time, graduate students pursuing instructional design careers often struggle to translate theory into practice, particularly in professional settings where projects must be scoped quickly, aligned with organizational needs, and delivered to diverse, expert audiences. Opportunities to design, facilitate, and evaluate live professional development experiences—especially in fully remote environments—are limited but critical for career readiness.
This case addresses the opportunity to design, facilitate, and evaluate a live, interactive online workshop focused on improving discussion prompt design in online courses. Drawing on research-informed best practices and lived experience as a current online student, the project demonstrates how an instructional design intern can contribute practitioner insight, collaborate with experienced designers, navigate ambiguity, and deliver a professional learning experience that supports real organizational needs.
