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Course Design By Objectives

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Title: Course Design By Objectives


1
Course Design By Objectives
  • Effective Teaching
  • AHE 6103
  • UTSA
  • By Cynthia Price

2
Research-driven Course Design Redesign
  • A systematic process for course design or
    revision
  • Your Students - Research on learners tells us a
    lot about how students acquire, organize, and
    retrieve information. It also indicates the
    special needs of particular groups first year
    undergraduates. women in non-traditional fields,
    non-native speakers of English.
  • Scope and Content - Many faculty fall into the
    "coverage trap," believing that students will
    learn what we teach, no matter the amount or
    pace. Coverage is an illusion no one can cover
    their entire field even given several semesters.
    The most we can do is provide students with a
    sampling of information, techniques, issues, and
    the skill to continue to learn throughout their
    lives.
  • Teaching Objectives - Student-centered objectives
    enable the faculty member and students to more
    easily monitor progress.
  • Learning Activities to Meet Objectives- Feedback
    - Different learning activities (ways to select,
    acquire, and maintain information) are
    appropriated depending on faculty objectives and
    student needs Lectures, discussion, small
    groups, projects, and writing.
  • Type, Amount and Timing of - Frequent, timely
    and constructive feedback is key to the learning
    process often, however, a lack of resources
    (i.e. time, graders, reliance on traditional
    means) may make providing feedback challenging.
  • Grading Mechanisms - One of students' biggest
    complaints is that grading is often not fair or
    consistent, and that they did not know what the
    instructor expected.
  • Monitoring Your Teaching - Effective instructors
    are effective because they constantly monitor
    what is working in a course and try to determine
    what isn't working and why.

Source 4Faculty.org
3
Introduction
  • Setting goals and objectives are among the
    critical activities that distinguish the making
    of a learning syllabus from simply putting
    information on paper or online.
  • What distinguishes this Learning movement is
    its focus on student success. Teachers are very
    good about explaining, making presentations,
    making good sense, talking to students. But we
    think most often in terms of our discipline, our
    subject, and are not trained or certain that we
    need to be experts in learning as well as in our
    content area. The first step is to move beyond
    our curriculum expertise, to draw on the work of
    instructional designers, learning theorists,
    cognitive scientists to help us zero in on
    helping students master and become interested in
    the material we teach. The thought that we could
    help students learn is very seductive. We havent
    seen ourselves as being the ones to help students
    learn to learn, to communicate, to study, to
    master critical skills. Leaving that teaching to
    experts in Basic Skills or to counselors has not
    produced the results they and we want, not for
    their lack of knowledge or accomplishment, but
    because the skills and attitudes need to be
    taught continuously in all classes, in the
    context of real learning events, or they dont
    stick. The Learning Paradigm emphasizes real
    world application, communication, constant
    improvement for teacher and student. This only
    happens across disciplines. The way to start
    participating in the integration of learning
    skills is by setting goals and objectives that
    emphasize "Doing," and to implement assessment
    practices that monitor progress, success, failure
    so that change is sustained and growth continues.
  • Setting goals is a lever that allows us to hoist
    significant change into place in our courses. One
    of the important changes is to stop thinking in
    terms of what we want to do with the course
    Teaching Goals--and shift to articulating what
    students will be able to do as a result of the
    course and our assistance. This is not a natural
    activity for most of us. It takes some doing and
    seeing results to make it second nature.

Source 4Faculty.org
4
Learned Centered Goals/Objectives
  • Course Goal
  • What will the course do for my students? How
    will the course benefit them?
  • Learning Objective
  • What should my students be able to do upon
    completion of this course?
  • You can stay on a learning-centered track by
    keeping those questions in mind when you plan
    your course. The first question is your reminder
    to discover and emphasize how course material
    relates to the lives and futures of your
    students. This is an important component in
    building a learning environment that nurtures
    intrinsic motivation.  The second question keeps
    your focus on the difference between, What will
    my students know at the end of the course? and,
    What will my students be able to do at the end
    of the course? This distinction is critical
    because setting goals based on DO naturally
    prompts you to design assignments and assessments
    that require your students to think in ways that
    push them higher on Blooms scale. Setting KNOW
    goals tends to restrict assignment and assessment
    design to the Knowledge level of the Taxonomy.
  • Understand that thinking of learning objectives
    in terms of what the students will be able to do
    is a defining moment in the move from being an
    instruction-centered to learning-centered.
    Constructing good learning objectives places an
    emphasis on what the student learns as opposed to
    whether the teacher has "covered the material"
    and made good presentations. Consider the
    following table, from Huba and Freed's
    Learner-Centered Assessment on College Campuses,
    for other aspects of the shift from the
    information-centered to the learning-centered
    paradigm

Source 4Faculty.org
5
from Huba and Freed's Learner-Centered Assessment
on College Campuses, Learner Centered Course
Goals By Mark Ferrer
6
Reflection improves teaching.
  • Setting personal goals pushes us and our students
    to improve. For instance, a helpful personal goal
    would be one you set because you want to address
    issues raised by students from the previous term
    another personal goal about your own teaching
    might be that you improve your use of lecture by
    mastering the punctuated lecture approach.
    Whatever you choose, naming it and planning to
    work on it will result in growth.
  • The same is true for students. You (and/or your
    institution and department) identify the learning
    objectives the DO goals for the course so
    that your students will master the course
    material as they progress toward those goals.
    This is simple cybernetics goal-directed
    behavior is more likely to result in
    accomplishment of the objective than random
    behavior. Because this is the case, setting the
    goals and objectives in your course is a
    critically important activity.
  • First, a word about semantics. Educators
    sometimes distinguish between goal and
    objective.. The University of Arkansas
    Components of the Syllabus site
    (http//www.cast.uark.edu/local/tatew/5CourseGoals
    .html ) makes the distinction by saying that
    goals should be general statements of intended
    outcomes and that objectives should be specific
    statements including measurable and observable
    terms.
  • Perhaps more commonly, at least within the
    learning-centered paradigm, outcomes are stated
    as objectives because the concept of DO with the
    knowledge is a natural consequence of active
    learning and moves students higher on Blooms
    Taxonomy. To save confusion in this section,
    lets agree that goal is used to mean the
    benefits students derive from taking the course.
    Well use objective to mean the behaviors your
    students will be able to demonstrate at the end
    of the course or the end of a unit. This is a
    logical and learning-centered distinction
    students doing with the course content means
    they are working at the higher levels of Blooms
    Taxonomy compared to students knowing the course
    content, which is a Knowledge-level Taxonomy
    placement.  

Source 4Faculty.org
7
Heres a nutshell approach to course goals
setting
  • Find the benefits to the students as a result of
    taking the course and publicize them. This means
    youll have to elicit this information from
    current students in order to share it with future
    students.

Heres a nutshell approach to learning objectives
setting
As you plan your course (and subsequent to that,
your syllabus), think about what your students
should be able to do upon completion of the
course and how youre going to measure how well
they will be able to do those things. Keeping
these two guidelines in mind throughout your
course preparation will keep you on a
learning-centered track.
Source 4Faculty.org
8
Identify the purpose of the course
  • Reflect upon the course outline. Check with your
    department chair to learn about campus policies
    about how the course should be taught. Spend a
    good deal of time reflecting upon what you think
    is most important for students to learn and be
    able to do by the end of the course. Talk to
    others in your field, search the internet, e-mail
    faculty across the state who teach the course and
    ask for their syllabi. Now winnow down the ideas
    gained to those you believe will best serve your
    students.
  • Be careful to consider who your students are.
  • What do they need from the course?
  • What will they need to learn that will help them
    to continue learning in the discipline on their
    own or in formal classes?

Source 4Faculty.org
9
Identify the Purpose of the Course(Continued)
  • As mentioned in the previous slide, check with
    Dean and/or Department Chair concerning
    college-defined objectives for your course. Some
    institutions have course learning outcomes that
    must remain the same no matter who teaches the
    course. If that is the case, then you academic
    freedom means you decide how youll help students
    achieve those outcomes. You will decide on the
    enabling objectives, those things students learn
    to do toward reaching the learning outcomes. Your
    first step as you plan the course is to determine
    what students will be able to do upon successful
    completion of the course.

Source 4Faculty.org
10
Develop Learner-Centered Outcomes
  • It is critical to ask this question What do you
    want your students to be able to do as a result
    of taking this course? The answer to this
    question will provide you with your learning
    outcomes.

Source 4Faculty.org
11
General Guidelinesfor Writing Learning Outcomes
  • Here are some general guidelines for the wording,
    organization, and tone as you craft objectives
    (adapted from the Columbia Colleges website)
  • Goals and objectives should be stated as student
    outcomes (The student will.., or You will be
    able to ).
  • They may be organized according to the units of
    the course if appropriate, include projects and
    options.
  • They should correspond to the professional
    standards of the discipline and work environment
    the student is preparing to enter.

Source 4Faculty.org
12
Describe Learning Outcomes
  • Describe your learning objectives using active
    verbs that indicate what students will need to do
    as the semester progresses. For example, in a
    course on history, one instructor told students
    they would acquire the basic skills used by
    historians, which include the ability to
  • Critically analyze primary documents
  • Identify an authors thesis and evaluate how well
    it is supported
  • Write a logical and coherent argument of your own

13
What is a Learning Outcomes?
  • Learning outcomes often appear as a list of
    skills or abilities. They may also include the
    facts or skills that students should understand
    by the end of the course. Most faculty prepare
    learning outcome per lesson as follows
  • Learning outcomes Upon completion of this
    lesson you should be able to
  • Describe the _________
  • Analyze _____________
  • Explain how __________
  • Describe the different approaches to_______ and
    list some of the ______ that may be used to
    accomplish this goal.
  • Name the____________
  • Identify a _____________.

14
Using Blooms Learner Centered Outcomes
  • The importance of keeping Bloom in mind as you
    create/define your learning objectives for the
    course and unit is clear. The added benefit is
    that our process of syllabus/course planning and
    its order of activates help you
  • Determine objectives in terms of student-doing
  • Create assessments to measure achievement of
    objectives
  • Create assignments to facilitate student
    achievement of objectives
  • Working this way guides you constantly along the
    learning centered path. Planning the order of the
    steps keeps your focus on student learning and
    not solely on the presentation of material
  • one reason students do not learn may be related
    to the failure of many faculty to consider,
    articulte, and specify their expectations and
    objectives. Outcomes assessment forces academics
    to become student-centered.
  • from Successful College Teaching by Baiocco
  • Source 4Faculty.org, http//4faculty.org/includes
    /digdeeper/lc_learning_objecti.htm

15
Blooms Taxonomy
  • Blooms Taxonomy helps to clarify how to define
    and phrase objectives so that you are requiring
    students to work at higher levels of the
    Taxonomy. Integrating as an activity requires
    students to do something with the material.
    List on the other hand, requires only
    successful memorization and ability to say or
    write what has been memorized. Use Blooms table
    to locate your objectives. The level of demand on
    students abilities to think critically, solve,
    problems, make connections rises as the chart
    moves from knowledge (lowest demand) up to
    evaluation (highest demand). Keeping the level
    required to complete your objective commensurate
    with your students readiness to accomplish it
    means that you have set realistic, positive
    objectives one that will result in success
    rather than frustration and loss of engagement.

16
  • Cognitive Taxonomy Circle

17
How the Taxonomy Promotes Active Learning
  • Clark (2002) provided an adaptation of Bloom's
    work to facilitate active learning. Although
    originally the tool was developed by a class of
    teachers for use in curriculum building in the
    high school level, the suggestions would work for
    college level classes as well. The inner ring
    contains the original levels of Bloom's taxonomy.
    The middle ring offers synonyms for the various
    academic processes that comprise that taxonomic
    level. The outer ring links process to product.
    For example, if you wanted to increase
    application skills, you might ask students to
    construct diagrams of the key concepts involved
    in the content of the class. If you wish to
    improve evaluation skills, you might ask students
    to produce an editorial for the student newspaper
    in which they discuss the strengths and
    weaknesses of a particular side of a
    controversial issue. We have modernized the
    language of the original circle to reflect the
    latest version of Bloom's Taxonomy.

18
How do you begin the process?
  • ...by looking at the course description, looking
    at similar courses on the internet, reviewing in
    their minds what they expect the student to be
    able to do with the course information once
    completed.
  • It might take a few drafts to accomplish the best
    statement but the Learner Outcome statement
    should be an overview, and what the student can
    DO with the course knowledge.
  • Then what?...Summarize the student activities
    into one, two, or three Performance Objectives.
    Performance objectives are what you, as the
    instructor, expect to observe, hear or read what
    a student doing to demonstrate knowledge of the
    subject.
  • That leaves Measures of student mastery of
    learner outcomes. How do you or will you measure
    their performance and what level of mastery is
    required to pass the course? It must tie back to
    the Learner Outcome.
  • You can have more than is required (based on your
    subject and your departmental mandates) or your
    policies might be a bit more stringent than
    expected by the college. Implement those
    differences on your syllabus to meet your course
    needs.

19
Questions to Guide Course Design Decisions
  • Determine and understand the student audience.
  • Who is likely to enroll in the course?
  • What are their academic backgrounds?
  • What are their initial interests likely to be?
  • If you are in a position to determine who can
    enroll, what audience are you designing the
    course for?
  • Identify course goals and learning objectives.
  • What do you expect your students to be able to do
    as a result of the course?
  • What prerequisite knowledge do students need to
    begin the course?
  • Are there skills or attitudes which students
    should develop to achieve these goals?
  • How will students be able to demonstrate that
    they have achieved the course objectives?
  • What are your areas of interest and expertise
    related to the course?
  • Defining and limiting the course content.
  • What do all students in the course need to
    master?
  • What should students seeking a good knowledge
    learn?
  • What optional material will be provided for
    students with special skills or interests?
  • What resources are available to assist your
    teaching?

20
Questions to Guide Course Design
Decisions(Continued)
  • Organizing the course content.
  • What order of course content will aid students'
    understanding of the course?
  • What pace will both address the course objectives
    and accommodate variations in students' learning?
  • Planning learning activities to enable students
    to achieve the objectives.
  • What learning activities will students do in
    class?
  • What learning activities will students need to do
    outside of class, for example, to get sufficient
    practice using new concepts or skills?
  • How will out-of-class learning activities be
    related to or integrated with in-class
    activities?
  • How will the learning objectives fit with
    students' individual interests and objectives?
  • What kind of feedback will students receive about
    the learning activities?
  • Planning methods of evaluating student learning
    and providing feedback.
  • What type of evaluation methods are consistent
    with the course objectives?
  • For what type of evaluation methods can you
    provide sufficient feedback to students?
  • How many assignments constitute a reasonable
    workload for an N unit course?
  • Which learning activities will be graded?

21
Example From the Syllabus
  • Course Content
  • requirements for becoming a teacher in Texas
     Some of these could be Performance Objectives
  • characteristics of effective teachers
  • effective teaching methods
  • the four domains of the Pedagogy and Professional
    Responsibilities Standards
  • issues and challenges surrounding teaching as a
    profession
  • social challenges that impact students and
    schools
  • the importance of diversity, equality, and social
    justice in delivering high-quality education for
    all students teaching practices that are
    culturally relevant
  • organizational structure of schools, from the
    local level to the federal level
  • key sources of funding for public schools and
    issues related to over-reliance on any one of
    these sources.
  • Catalog Description
  • Education 1301 is designed for students who are
    considering teaching as a career. The course
    offers students an opportunity to examine their
    motives for becoming a teacher and learn what is
    required to become a certified teacher in the
    state of Texas. Students will also explore and
    discuss the current culture of schooling and
    classrooms, as well as the governance and funding
    structure of American schools. A 16 hour field
    experience in the public school setting is
    required. (can be part of a measure?)

By Sandra Caceres, SAC
22
From the internet....
  • Introduction to Teaching and Learning
  • This course provides an introduction to teaching
    and learning in a variety of K-12 settings.
    Through visits to schools, classroom discussions,
    selected readings, and hands-on activities, we
    explore the challenges and opportunities of
    teaching. Topics of study include educational
    technology, design and experimentation, student
    learning, and careers in education.
  • Course Rationale and Overview
  • This course is designed as the first semester of
    a two course sequence that introduces MIT
    students to K-12 teaching and learning. This
    sequence may be followed by an additional three
    course sequence involving student teaching that
    leads to state licensure.
  • Many factors have shaped this course to date,
    primary among them have been
  • Time in Student Schedules
  • Students do not major in education, but add these
    on as additional courses
  • Learning Styles of MIT Students
  • Most MIT students have had math and science come
    to them easily, have learned well from lectures,
    and succeeded on multiple choice tests
  • Battle Against Efficiency
  • Many students feel that lectures are the most
    efficient way to deliver information to students,
    and should therefore be the primary mode of
    teaching
  • Lack of Breadth in Student Experience
  • Most MIT students have experienced limited
    teaching modalities, and have primarily had
    classes with other students who did well in
    science and math
  • Waste of an MIT Degree. Students are influenced
    by their peers, parents and professors who often
    tell them that going to teach would be a waste of
    their degrees
  • (continues)

23
From the internet....
Course Rationale and Overview (continued) As a
result these courses are designed to provide
students with maximum exposure to different
teaching and learning styles, and provide them
with encouragement and support as they pursuing
their interests in teaching. The course
emphasizes the benefits of a constructivist
approach, and the merits of hands-on,
project-based, collaborative work. All too many
traditional education courses lecture to the
students about the virtues of such hands-on
constructivist approaches. Instead this course in
turn takes a hands-on constructivist approach so
that students may experience these methods while
they learn about them. Lecturing by the professor
takes up only about 10 of class time, with the
remainder occupied by class/group discussions,
hands-on activities, and student-lead exercises.
This approach sometimes confuses students who are
not used to such methods. The second semester
explicitly addresses these issues, and students
consistently demonstrate understanding of this
material in their own practice teaching.
By Sandra Caceres, SAC
24
The Final Result...
25
Benefits of Stating Course Objectives
  • They communicate your intentions clearly to
    students and to colleagues.
  • They provide a framework for selecting and
    organizing course content.
  • They provide a framework for selecting
    appropriate teaching and learning activities.
  • They guide you in decisions about assessment and
    evaluation methods.
  • They give students information for directing
    their learning efforts and monitoring their own
    progress.

26
Strategies for Common Difficulties in Planning
Courses
How can I obtain enough helpful information about
my students knowledge and skills to ensure I
cover the appropriate material, keep a good pace
and provide enough feedback and support?
  • Obtain assessments of particular student
    cohorts from senior faculty.
  • Build in mechanisms in case your initial
    assumptions about your students are inaccurate.
    For example, identify material to potentially add
    to or drop from the course as needed, and reserve
    one or two classes per semester to catch up or
    add special topics as needed.
  • Administer simple diagnostic tests in the first
    week of class or use standard assignments to
    benchmark and compare across several years.
  • Because of the wide range of student
    backgrounds in any class, you might want to
    consider including supplemental instruction like
    review sessions, flexible office hours,
    additional reference material, sample problems
    and solutions, and models of outstanding student
    works.

27
Strategies for Common Difficulties in Planning
Courses
How can well-written objectives enhance student
learning?
  • Our objectives often focus on what we will do
    in a course instead of what we want students to
    achieve. Write student-centered objectives in
    terms that are observable and measurable (for
    example, whether students can provide examples of
    concepts or solve a particular class of
    problems).
  • Consider a broad spectrum of learning
    activities (such as case studies, interactive
    multi-media, project courses, simulations, small
    group discussions and student presentations ) to
    help students more effectively practice and
    efficiently achieve course goals.
  • Be sure the variety of learning activities
    included in the course matches the range of
    objectives. For example, consider the types of
    thinking involved in each of your objectives
    (e.g., comprehension, application, analysis) and
    check how well the learning activities can
    accomplish those.
  • Consider talking with students about how to use
    objectives to monitor their own learning.

28
Strategies for Common Difficulties in Planning
Courses
What types of feedback mechanisms are both
efficient and effective?
  • Determine the nature of the feedback students
    will need to master the concepts and skills for
    each assignment. For example, feedback may be
    individual or group, more or less detailed,
    descriptive or evaluative as well as oriented
    toward short-term or long-term change. Based on
    the form of feedback you choose and the resources
    you have (e.g., graders), estimate the time
    required to provide the feedback and, if needed,
    adjust your plans for the nature or number of
    learning activities.
  • Select some assignments that will be turned in
    but not graded. For example, ask students to
    categorize rather than solve problems, generate
    an example of a concept or application, or
    summarize an authors argument. A quick read can
    enable instructors to identify common themes or
    errors and provide prompt feedback to the class
    as a whole. These assignments can provide an
    opportunity for students to be creative and
    receive feedback without the risk of a low grade.
  • In courses with studios or presentations,
    consider providing immediate feedback to groups
    rather than individuals. After observing several
    students work, instructors might comment on both
    the common strengths and weaknesses so students
    see shared difficulties and dont feel the
    awkwardness of being critiqued in front of a
    group.
  • Provide more detailed solution sets to reveal
    the appropriate underlying reasoning, to identify
    potentially misunderstood concepts or principles,
    and to elaborate how common student errors
    followed from these misunderstandings.

29
Strategies for Common Difficulties in Planning
Courses
How can I cope with the limited time available
for teaching complex subjects?
  • Review the learning activities planned in the
    course to determine how efficient various
    activities are likely to be in achieving
    particular objectives. Both class time and
    students time out of class are limited, so we
    want students to devote their time to the most
    productive activities. Often we teach concepts in
    class that would be learned more effectively in
    another medium for example, assigned reading is
    sometimes the best choice for conveying detailed
    explanations because students can control the
    pace and reread as needed. You could then use
    strategies to make students accountable for the
    reading.
  • You might consider different combinations of
    familiar learning modes. Lectures can complement
    reading assignments by elaborating or providing
    alternative views, especially when students have
    read strategically. You might use brief writing
    assignments to prepare students so that
    discussions are more productive.
  • Give students some explicit directions for
    combining their learning strategies effectively.
    For example, lectures can sometimes introduce
    complex readings that students should study
    further. Or you might tell students that careful
    reading in advance is necessary to provide
    background information for in-class applications.
  • Based on course objectives and the students in
    the class, distinguish between different levels
    of material and their importance for different
    groups of students. The core elements of the
    course should be taught so that they can be
    mastered by everyone. Provide additional material
    to promote deeper understanding if time permits,
    especially for students with special aptitudes or
    plans to continue in the field. Use supplemental
    readings, projects and other resources to
    challenge highly motivated, interested students.

30
References
  • Anderson, L.W., Krathwohl, D.R. (Eds.) (2001).A
    taxonomy of learning, teaching, and assessment A
    revision of Bloom's taxonomy of educational
    objectives. New York Longman. http//www.apa.org/
    ed/new_blooms.html
  • Caceres, S., Example Syllabi SAC Faculty Have
    Modified, http//www.accd.edu/sac/iic/STAFF/scacer
    es/Syllabi/Modified20Syllabi/ModifiedSyllabi.htm
  • Ferrer, M., Learner Centered Course Goals,
    4Faculty.org,web site http//www.4faculty.org/inc
    ludes/digdeeper/lc_coursegoals.htm
  • Ferrer, M., Learner Centered Course Goals,
    4Faculty.org, web site http//www.4faculty.org/in
    cludes/105r2.jsp
  • Nilson, L.B., Teaching At Its Best A
    Research-Based Resource for College Instructors,
    Anker Publishing Company, Inc., Vanderbilt
    University
  • Smythe, K. and Halonen, J., Using the New Bloom's
    Taxonomy to Design Meaningful Learning
    Assessmentshttp//www.apa.org/ed/new_blooms.html
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