Friday, September 19, 2008

Instructional Design jobs

A job I found interesting is an Instructional Designer for the University of Arkansas- Sam Walton College of Business on the ASTD job listings website. It is a full time position in Fayetteville, AR with a salary of $40,000-50,000. The employee will be required to develop educational materials for face-to-face as well as online classes. They will report to the Director of Instructional Design but also must work with faculty and other “internal and external professionals”.

The requirements of the position include a minimum of a Bachelor’s degree in a “relevant” field but a Masters degree is preferred. The applicant must know instructional design practices and principles and have three years experience in development of technology-based educational materials. They must know Microsoft Office software, course management systems such as BlackBoard, and have experience in “designing blended and/or online courses”. The requirements also suggest the employee must have “proven” ability in working with faculty members and project teams, with minimal supervision and able to meet deadlines.

This is a job I may consider applying for because it’s in academia and very similar to what I do now at the community college level. I would meet the preferred requirements when I graduate. I have had experience creating classes in BlackBoard for faculty at my community college and have used Microsoft Office and BlackBoard for years. I looked at similar jobs in Business and Industry, but they did not appeal to me as much as the ones in academia like this one did.

The URL is http://jobs.astd.org/jobdetail.cfm?job=2971976

4 comments:

Mary Smith said...

I saw several jobs in business and industry as well. I was overwhelmed as I read the job description and the qualifications of the applicant. I would like to keep jobs in business and industry as an option. I only have experience in education so I may be more qualified to apply for those careers.

IT or not it said...

It is amazing how similar some of the jobs in education are to the ones in the business world. That does not necessarily happen in all disciplines of education.

Mike S. - EDTC 6010 said...

This does look like an interesting position. It does bring to mind a question I have: I thought at the university level that professors generally developed their own curriculum within the institutions's core curriculum framework. Anybody want to set me straight on this? :)

Harolyn Lee's EDTC 6010 blog said...

This also sounds like a job I would enjoy.