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ITS NOT WHAT YOU TEACH, ITS WHAT THEY LEARN

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Shifting the Focus from Teaching to Learning: Learning Objectives for OR Course Design ... Appendix: Verbs to Use (Claus, in Gronlund) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ITS NOT WHAT YOU TEACH, ITS WHAT THEY LEARN


1
ITS NOT WHAT YOU TEACH, ITS WHAT THEY LEARN
2
Shifting 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

3
How Do You Design Your Course?
4
Challenges You Face in Course Design
5
Course 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)

6
Educational 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

7
Todays 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

8
What 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

9
Instructional 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

10
What 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

11
Effective 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!

12
Effective 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

13
Verbs 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

14
Verbs to Use
  • Explain
  • Create
  • Determine
  • Make
  • Predict
  • Describe
  • (See Appendix for more)

15
Effective 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
16
Towards Instructional Objectives for Your Course
  • Individually
  • Write down 3-6 Instructional Objectives that
    might be suitable for your Educational Objectives

17
In Theory
  • The best instructional objectives
  • connect to the final exam
  • can be measured without ambiguity

18
Putting 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.

19
Benefits 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

20
Homework
  • 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.

21
A 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

22
Appendix 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

23
Appendix 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!

24
References
  • 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

25
References
  • 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.

26
References
  • 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/
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