Once you have identified the sources of complexity in your instructional design, you can apply some principles and strategies to reduce it and enhance your students' learning. For instance, focus on essential information and skills, use clear language, visuals, and formats, organize the information into meaningful units, align activities with learning objectives, scaffold and differentiate activities according to students' prior knowledge, readiness and preferences, foster interaction and engagement among students and yourself, and evaluate and revise based on student feedback. Additionally, eliminate or minimize irrelevant or redundant information, avoid jargon, acronyms or ambiguity, guide students' attention and comprehension with headings, summaries and transitions, clarify expectations with rubrics, examples or models, use formative assessment and feedback to monitor progress and performance, and choose a variety of modes or media to suit content or context.