Over the semester of eight weeks, I shared with you the program management process through my postings. I detailed information about program management in instructional design based on the framework and standards of the Project Management Institute and the Project Management Body of Knowledge Guide best practices. During this time I also managed a project of my own utilizing this framework.

My training program is designed to improve assessment for a peripheral intravenous insertion and venipuncture course. To view my finished work click here: Final Project.
As you can see I followed the project management framework. I initiated my project by composing a project charter and identifying key stakeholders. In the planning phase, I developed a project management plan, defined the scope and created the work breakdown structure of tasks to be met. Activities were defined and
sequenced. Budgets were established. Resources were planned. Quality planning and risk analysis were identified to meet project expectations with little interruption. The project was executed, monitored and controlled to verify that the scope was met, the schedule was on time, and the costs were under control.
At the end of the project, deliverables were presented, procurement was closed, the stakeholders were released from any further obligations and expectations were met.
I found the process to be well organized providing direction that saved time and money. Executing the elements of the framework allowed me to identify all the aspects of the project, monitor and control the processes and maintain a schedule for completion effectively. Through my experience did you discover the benefit of using project management in instructional design? Was it clear that following this framework made the process of managing a design project easy?
I hope so, because it did.
Will you use project management for your next training program?








