Instructional design/Procedural analysis/Page 4: Procedural Analysis: An Overview
Procedural analysis involves identifying the steps required to complete tasks. The analysis covers both the observable and cognitive behaviors associated with a task. For example, while changing a tire, an observable step is to park your car at a safe place. For this step, a cognitive behavior (and decision point) would be to determine whether you are at a solid, level surface that is far from traffic.
This method is suitable for analyzing structured tasks, which have a defined number and sequence of steps that stay the same in any situation. Examples of structured tasks are changing a tire, baking a cake, and installing Microsoft Office on a Windows computer. In contrast, unstructured tasks do not have a defined sequence of steps. The number and types of steps vary, depending on the symptoms and constraints of a situation. For example, troubleshooting a network problem is an unstructured task whose steps vary, depending on the symptoms and cause of the problem.
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