Cognitive Load

Cognitive Load

The total mental effort required to process information at any given moment. Based on John Sweller’s Cognitive Load Theory, which proposes that working memory has a fixed capacity — and that learning fails when that capacity is exceeded.

Why it matters#

Working memory can hold roughly four items at once. When a course demands more than that — through complexity, poor organisation, unnecessary media, or confusing navigation — the learner’s cognitive resources are spent managing the experience rather than acquiring the skill. Understanding cognitive load tells you where that demand comes from and which kinds you can actually reduce.

Multimedia Learning

Multimedia Learning is the use of words and visuals together to support learning. Based on Richard Mayer’s research showing that people learn more effectively from combined text and images than from text alone — provided the design doesn’t overwhelm working memory.

Why it matters#

Adding media to a course isn’t inherently better. Poorly chosen or excessive media increases cognitive load and gets in the way of learning. Mayer’s principles give you specific, evidence-based rules for when and how to use media so it actually helps.