Critical Review of the Gagne 9 Command Event In the early days there were many learning theories such as behaviorism, cosism, constructivism and so on. Each has a big impact on education and learning. More specifically, Gagne has developed steps to teach nine events or instructions known as Gagne 's nine command events. According to what we learned in the last lecture, these nine events are still applicable and applicable, even if a little improvement is needed.
Robert Gagne's nine educational event models provide a systematic way to teach planning and preparation (Gagne, 1985). Gagne, known as a behavioralist, focuses on what happens after learning or training is done (Gagne, 1985). The results, learning, or behavior brought by the training is based on the mental state Gagne found in 1965. From these psychological events, Gagne (1965) proposed nine steps called "instruction program" processing. There are knowledge acquisition conditions. The nine appearances are as follows.
In 1965, Robert Gagne (see below for details) describes three learning areas (cognition, emotion, psychomotor), five learning outcomes (language information, intellectual skills, cognitive strategies, attitudes, motor skills) did. And nine educational events in "Learning conditions", it is still the foundation of educational design practice. Gagne's learning level and effort in performance analysis leads to an important educational concept - to make learners acquire the skills they need before trying out good skills
From the 1950s to the 1960s, teaching methods of teaching materials continued to evolve, and the "educational design model" invented by Robert Gagne in 1965 is also known as "nine educational events", and the framework of e-learning Connie Malamed explained that the basic purpose of instruction design is "to identify gaps in target reader skills, knowledge and attitudes and to create, select and propose learning experiences that fill this gap." Christopher Pappas complements the scope and purpose of this definition and explains this in more detail.