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chunking

chunk·​ing 

'chən·​kiŋ 

Verb

Taking a large amount of content and splitting into smaller units of related information.

Chunking Page Content to Enhance Learning

Image
Chunking Content: Three hands holding a puzzle piece.
Photo Credit

Credit: © Penn State is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

As you develop content pages for online courses, it is important to chunk the information appropriately. This can be accomplished using headings, subheadings, short paragraphs, bullets, images, videos, and white space. As you can imagine, without these elements, the example above would be a wall of text, which would be hard for anyone to digest or get excited about engaging with.

Using Chunking to Develop Content for an Online Course

Text = how to chunk content

Credit: © Penn State is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

The concept of chunking is the act of breaking course content into small, meaningful units of information that can be digested and navigated easily. The information in each chunk should be related, logical, meaningful, and organized sequentially (Shank, 2018). Research tells us that there are several reasons to chunk content when writing instructional text, including: