Title: ITS NOT WHAT YOU TEACH, ITS WHAT THEY LEARN
1ITS NOT WHAT YOU TEACH, ITS WHAT THEY LEARN
2Shifting the Focus from Teaching to Learning
Learning Objectives for OR Course Design
- Thomas A. Grossman
- Masagung School of Management
- University of San Francisco
- tagrossman_at_usfca.edu
3How Do You Design Your Course?
4Challenges You Face in Course Design
5Course Design Approaches
- Bottom-Up
- Start with components
- Add/Subtract components until full
- Top-Down
- Educational Objectives What student success
looks like. (Goals) - Instructional Objectives Observable student
performance. (Components of Goals)
6Educational Objectives
- High level goals in general terms
- Think of this as the elevator story that
captures the essence of your course - Each written as student behavior topic
- Definition
- An intended outcome of instruction that has been
stated in general enough terms to encompass a
domain of student performance (Gronlund) - Examples (Anderson et al)
- The ability to read a musical score
- The ability to interpret various types of social
data
7Todays Educational Objective
- Educational Objective of this session (which
includes the homework) - You will think about objectives when designing a
course - You will be able to use Learning Objectives as a
tool for course design
8What Are the Educational Objectives of Your
Course?
- Turn to your neighbor and discuss
- Generate 2-5 Educational Objectives that might be
suitable for each of you
9Instructional Objectives
- Intermediate level
- More specific than Educational Objectives
- More general than low-level outcomes
- In aggregate, Instructional Objectives define
Educational Objectives - Examples (with Educational Objective the ability
to interpret various types of social data) - Recognize different types of social data
- Perform appropriate analyses
- Articulate results in plain English
10What are the Instructional Objectives of Your
Course?
- Turn to your neighbor and discuss
- Generate 3-6 Instructional Objectives that might
be suitable for your Educational Objectives
11Effective Instructional Objectives
- Student Focused
- What is to be learned
- Not Instructor Focused
- How it is to be taught
- Do not constrain your teaching options in your
Objectives!
12Effective Instructional Objectives
- Concentrate on
- the product of instruction
- not the process of instruction
- Example
- Product
- Applies basic principles to new situations
- Process
- Gains knowledge of basic principles
13Verbs to Avoid (at least for now)
- Understand
- Key question for an instructor WHY do I want
them to understand? - Appreciate
- Increase
- Gain
- Acquire
- Develop
- Learn
- Realize
14Verbs to Use
- Explain
- Create
- Determine
- Make
- Predict
- Describe
- (See Appendix for more)
15Effective Instructional Objectives
- Too Narrow
- Lists of specific learning tasks students can do
(learning outcomes)
- Ideal
- Descriptions of expected student performance at
the end of instruction
Too Broad Statements of general goal
16Towards Instructional Objectives for Your Course
- Individually
- Write down 3-6 Instructional Objectives that
might be suitable for your Educational Objectives
17In Theory
- The best instructional objectives
- connect to the final exam
- can be measured without ambiguity
18Putting Learning Objectives to Work
- Course Design
- Class session planning
- Provide (lower level) Learning Objectives for
each class session - Assessment
- Assessment should evaluate the Learning
Objectives - If you assess anything that is not a Learning
Objective, reflect on why - Communication with students
- Start of Course
- Present the Learning Objectives to students
- Conclusion of Course
- Evaluate how well you achieved the Learning
Objectives. - Can have a dialogue with your students.
19Benefits of Learning Objectives
- Clarity on purpose of course
- Alignment with goals of the program
- Better communication to students, colleagues,
deans - Eases process of removing beloved content
- Identifies content areas where new materials
needed - (Personally) More effective course
- Grateful students
- Multiple students use course content within a few
months
20Homework
- Write down the Learning Objectives of your
course. - List of Educational Objectives
- List of Instructional Objectives
- Challenge Dont anchor on what youre doing now.
Instead, focus on what you want your students to
be able to do.
21A Final Thought
- Learning objectives
- Are a tool to make you a better teacher
- Are not an end in themselves
- The goal is effective learning
- Think hard about goals in terms of what students
can actually do - Think hard about the components needed to achieve
those goals - Dont agonize over structure
22Appendix Verbs to Use (Claus, in Gronlund)
- Analyze, Apply, Appreciate, Comprehend, Compute,
Create, Demonstrate, Evaluate, Interpret, Know,
Listen, Locate, Perform, Recognize, Speak, Think,
Translate, Understand, Use, Write
23Appendix Caveats
- There is no standardized terminology
- There are no useful definitions
- Most of the action is K-12, where there are
external standards. In higher ed, we set our own
standards. - Conceptually, there is a continuum of Objectives
of increasing specificity. - Objectives can be structured hierarchically
- Educational Objectives Statements of general
goals - Instructional Objectives Statements about
observable student performance - Class Session Objectives Statements about
low-level learning outcomes - Choose a hierarchy that works for you!
24References
- N. E. Gronlund, How to Write and Use
Instructional Objectives, MacMillan Publishing
Company - Simple, clearly written
- Good introduction
- Tendency to focus at the level of class sessions
25References
- Anderson et al, A Taxonomy for Learning,
Teaching, and Assessing A Revision of Blooms
Taxonomy of Educational Objectives, Addison
Wesley Longman - Much information on a taxonomy of different
cognitive processes Remember, Understand, Apply,
Analyze, Evaluate, Create - Useful for thinking about what you want your
students to be able to do, and how to get them
there.
26References
- Judith S. Liebman, Omega Rho Plenary, Teaching
for Learning Past Present and Future, INFORMS
2003, Atlanta. - Summary
- http//omegarho.informs.org/lectures/liebman.pdf
- Copy available from INFORM-ED,
- http//education.forum.informs.org
- Grossman, T.A. (2001), Causes of the Decline of
the Business School Management Science Course,
INFORMS Transactions on Education, Vol. 1, No. 2,
http//ite.informs.org/Vol1No2/Grossman/