CYAIHCMar 13

The RIGID Framework: Research-Integrated, Generative AI-Mediated Instructional Design

arXiv:2603.1278177.1
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of underutilized research in instructional design for educators and designers, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing fields and technologies.

The paper tackles the challenge of integrating research-based knowledge into instructional design workflows by proposing the RIGID framework, which systematically incorporates learning sciences research across design phases using generative AI to mediate the process.

Instructional Design (ID) often faces challenges in incorporating research-based knowledge and pedagogical best practices. Although educational researchers and government agencies emphasize grounding ID in evidence, integrating research findings into everyday design workflows is often complex, as it requires considering multiple context-specific demands and constraints. To address this persistent gap, this paper explores how research in the learning sciences (LS) can be systematically integrated across ID workflows and how recent advances in generative AI can help operationalize this integration. While ID and LS share a commitment to improving learning experiences through design-oriented approaches in authentic contexts, structured integration between the two fields remains limited, leaving their complementary insights underutilized. We present RIGID (Research-Integrated, Generative AI-Mediated Instructional Design), a unified framework that integrates LS research across ID workflows spanning analysis, design, implementation, and evaluation phases, while leveraging generative AI to mediate this integration at each stage. The RIGID framework provides a systematic approach for enabling research-integrated instructional design that is both operational and context-sensitive, while preserving the central role of human expertise.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes