Techsoma Homepage
  • Reports
  • Reports
Home Opinions & Perspectives

From Classroom Theory to Product Design: How Learning Psychology Shaped the Way I Build Digital Products

by Muhammed Adepoju
August 8, 2024
in Opinions & Perspectives
Reading Time: 4 mins read
From Classroom Theory to Product Design: How Learning Psychology Shaped the Way I Build Digital Products

I didn’t arrive at product design through the typical path of bootcamps, agency jobs, or creative internships. My journey started in Educational Technology at the University of Ilorin, where I spent four years studying how people learn, how they process information, and why some ideas stick while others fall apart.

At the time, I didn’t realise how much those theories would influence the way I design today. But looking back, everything I do as a product designer is rooted in the same principles I learned in those lecture rooms — comprehension, clarity, structure, and empathy for how people think.

Designing Like an Educator

In education, learning is framed around three core domains: cognitive, affective, and psychomotor. Without forcing the comparison, I eventually realised these same domains exist inside every digital product.

1. Cognitive: Helping users understand what’s happening

In school, the cognitive domain focuses on comprehension and problem-solving. In product design, it’s the foundation for every interface.

Before I design a flow, I think the way an educator would: What does the user already know? What mental shortcuts will they bring? What might confuse them?

I spend a lot of time observing behaviour, mapping prior knowledge, and simplifying complexity. Great teachers use visual structure to make difficult topics digestible. I use hierarchy, patterns, and language to help users understand a product without feeling overwhelmed. The goal isn’t aesthetics. The goal is comprehension.

2. Affective: Designing for emotion, not just function

The affective domain deals with motivation, attitude and emotion, something I pay close attention to in fintech especially. Users don’t engage with products purely on logic. They feel things — uncertainty, frustration, confidence, relief.

When I design, I’m constantly thinking about how the experience makes people feel. Does this flow calm them or stress them? Does the product reduce anxiety or create more? Does the user feel in control or lost?

Trust is an emotional outcome. Good UX has to earn it.

3. Psychomotor: Respecting how people physically interact with technology

The psychomotor domain relates to physical coordination. In product design, it shows up in the small decisions that determine usability:

  • touch targets
  • thumb zones
  • gesture tolerance
  • micro-interactions
  • layout ergonomics

These decisions may look small on a screen, but they determine whether an experience feels natural or forced. It’s the same principle teachers apply when they design learning environments that support physical engagement.

Techsoma Africa

Why This Matters Even More in the Age of AI

We are in a period where AI adoption is accelerating faster than user understanding. People are interacting with systems they don’t fully trust, don’t fully grasp, and can’t fully predict.

I’ve learned that most AI products fail not because the technology is weak, but because the user cannot mentally adopt the system. They don’t understand what the model is doing, why it made a decision or what will happen next. This is not just a technical problem. This is a learning problem.

Designers need to create clear explanations, transparent pathways, predictable interactions, and emotional reassurance

This is where my Educational Technology background becomes extremely relevant. AI requires new learning models — new ways of helping users build confidence with unfamiliar systems. My job as a designer is not just to make AI usable, but to make it understandable.

Beyond the Interface: Why Mentorship Matters to Me

My career has always been shaped by community. I learned to design the scrappy way — watching people work, asking questions, experimenting on an old laptop that barely survived the process.

Because of that beginning, I feel a responsibility to make the path easier for others. I’ve mentored hundreds of designers through workshops, one-on-one sessions, and open resources. I’ve created templates, design tools, and interaction libraries that are used globally — not as side projects, but as part of my belief that design only grows when knowledge is shared.

Mentorship isn’t something I do for recognition. It’s something I do because someone needed to do it for me.

A Theory That Became a Career

People often think UX design is about tools like Figma, prototypes, and component libraries. Those are useful, but they’re not what make someone a strong designer. My strength comes from understanding how humans learn, behave, and adapt. That philosophy is the backbone of every product I touch — from fintech tools to AI systems to everyday consumer experiences.

Educational Technology didn’t just prepare me for design. It gave me a framework for building products that:

  • teach
  • guide
  • Reassure
  • adapt
  • and respect the user’s cognitive limits

When you blend learning psychology with product design, you don’t just create better interfaces; you create experiences people trust, understand, and return to.

ADVERTISEMENT
Muhammed Adepoju

Muhammed Adepoju

Recommended For You

National Grid in Nigeria currently fails remote workers
Opinions & Perspectives

Nigeria’s Power Crisis Forces Remote Workers to Spend Up to ₦13,000 Daily on Generator Fuel

by Kingsley Okeke
March 13, 2026

For Nigeria's growing class of remote workers, the promise of flexible, location-independent employment is running headlong into an old, familiar wall: the lights keep going out. As of early March...

Read moreDetails
ALERZO

Alerzo’s Moniepoint debt crisis and the survival plan that could reset the business

March 11, 2026
Why stronger NIMC data security is critical to restoring trust in Nigeria’s digital ID system

Why stronger NIMC data security is critical to restoring trust in Nigeria’s digital ID system

March 9, 2026
Why Learning Tech Skills Takes Longer Than You Think: The Mindset and Strategy Most Beginners Miss

Why Learning Tech Skills Takes Longer Than You Think: The Mindset and Strategy Most Beginners Miss

March 2, 2026
Snapchat on Iphone

Your Snapchat Looks Better on iPhone – Here’s Why That’s Not an Accident

February 26, 2026
Next Post
The Future of Digital Payments: How Fintech is Redefining Financial Transactions

The Future of Digital Payments: How Fintech is Redefining Financial Transactions

The Future of Digital Payments: How Fintech is Redefining Financial Transactions

The Future of Digital Payments: How Fintech is Redefining Financial Transactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Recent News

AI Hallucinations

AI Hallucinations Are Getting Worse as Models Scale, and the Industry Has No Real Fix

March 13, 2026
2Africa subsea cable

Iran-Israel War and Houthi Attacks Halt Meta’s 2Africa Subsea Cable Project in the Persian Gulf

March 13, 2026
National Grid in Nigeria currently fails remote workers

Nigeria’s Power Crisis Forces Remote Workers to Spend Up to ₦13,000 Daily on Generator Fuel

March 13, 2026
CBN’s New AI Mandate: How Nigeria’s Banks and Fintechs Must Automate AML by 2027

CBN’s New AI Mandate: How Nigeria’s Banks and Fintechs Must Automate AML by 2027

March 13, 2026
UNIVEN and African Technology Forum Form a Powerful Alliance to Build Africa’s AI-Ready Generation

UNIVEN and African Technology Forum Form a Powerful Alliance to Build Africa’s AI-Ready Generation

March 13, 2026

Where Africa’s Tech Revolution Begins – Covering tech innovations, startups, and developments across Africa

Facebook X-twitter Instagram Linkedin

Quick Links

Advertise on Techsoma

Publish your Articles

T & C

Privacy Policy

© 2025 — Techsoma Africa. All Rights Reserved

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.