Title: CUA Syllabus Guidelines and Planning for Instruction:
1CUA Syllabus Guidelines and Planning for
Instruction
Syllabus 101
- A Brief Guide to Writing Instructional Objectives
The Benjamin T. Rome School of Music - Michael V. Smith, Ph.D.
2Syllabus and Instructional Planning Why?
- Because it is mandated!
- Because it encourages us to think carefully about
what students should know and be able to do and,
in turn, can promote greater teaching creativity
and satisfaction. - Because thoughtful instructional planning is more
likely to attract and maintain student attention
and to facilitate learning satisfaction. - Because it is common and best practice.
- Instructional planning is the process teachers
use to decide how to best to select, organize,
and deliver a learning experience to maximize
both teacher and student achievement and
satisfaction. - Cruickshank, Bainer,Metcalf (1999)
3Syllabus and Instructional Planning What?
- There are three strong factors that influence
curriculum. Filtered through the instructional
lens, these three factors shape and create the
curriculum content of any course of study.
The following page contains a diagram that looks
at these components of instruction and their
constituent parts more closely.
4 Society
Standards, Protocols, Expectations What should
students know and be able to do?
Professor
Learner
Curriculum
Knowledge Skills Dispositions
Goals Objectives Methods Outcomes/Assessment
Subject
Music Sing, Play, Read, Create (Compose,
Improvise), Listen/Analyze, Move
5Curriculum
- Goals
- Objectives
- Methods
- Outcomes
- There are four components, then, to planning
curriculum. The focus here will be on the first
writing behavioral objectives.
6The Four Aspects of Instructional Planning Each
Defined
- Goal a statement of general purpose and
direction. The goal is the accomplishment toward
which all curricular effort is directed. A goal
is often broad, overarching, and big picture. - Instructional Objective a statement (strictly
speaking, one sentence) that indicates what
students should be represent, demonstrate, or
produce as a result of what they learn. It
describes an intended result of instruction,
rather than the process of instruction itself.
The objective is student-centered, specific and
observable. - Methods the process of instruction (e.g.
lecture, rehearsal, project-based, etc.) - Outcome Assessment the process of collecting
information that will indicate whether
instruction is having the desired impact upon
learning.
7An instructional objective should be
- Specific
- Observable
- Measurable
- Attainable/achievable
- Realistic
- Time-bound
8When writing goals for student learning
- Avoid verbs difficult to measure objectively.
- The following verbs could be difficult to assess
know comprehend understand appreciate
familiarize study become aware of/acquainted
with cover learn realize opine be exposed
to etc. If you use them, be aware that you need
to know how they can be demonstrated. Remember
that the demonstration of the goal assists in
determining if/to what extent the student has
mastered the material of your course. The
learning objective must arise out of a course
goal/objective. It has to be observable and
measurable it must focus on student behavior.
Each course goal should be specific to one aspect
of the course.
- (At the conclusion of this course, the student
will be able to)
9Here are four steps to writing an Instructional
Objective
- Audience
- Behavior
- Condition
- Degree (Criteria)
A B C D Instructional Objective
10Four Easy Steps to Writing an Instructional
(Behavioral) Objective
- Audience The who. The student will be able
to - Behavior What a student is expected to be able
to do or the product or result of the doing. The
behavior or product must be observable. - Condition The important conditions under which
the performance is to occur. - Degree (Criteria) The criterion of acceptable
performance.
A B C D Instructional Objective
11Examples of Behavioral Objective Action Verbs
The student will be able to -
- Sing
- Chant
- Solfege
- Sight read
- Sight sing
- Play
- Perform
- Harmonize
- Compose
- Improvise
- Analyze
- Realize
- Identify
- Conduct
- Move to
- Dance
- Describe
- Evaluate
- Synthesize
12Here is an example of how to build an
instructional objective
- A (Audience) The student will be able to
- B (Behavior) perform a musical selection
- C (Condition) from Grade IV piano literature
on a solo jury recital - D (Degree/Criteria) with acceptable
performance technique and musical style as
determined by the provided rubric.
13Here is another example
- A (Audience) The student will be able to
- B (Behavior) analyze
- C (Condition) the musical form of Sing
Joyfully Unto God, by William Byrd - D (Degree/Criteria) with acceptable musical
understanding and writing style, as determined by
the provided rubric.
14Question Are the following three statements
acceptable instructional objectives?
- The student will know the four families of
orchestral instruments. - The student will appreciate the contributions of
great composers in music history - The student will be shown the proper way to
restring a french horn rotary valve. - Answer No, none are acceptable instructional
objectives because none contain an observable
student behavior as a result of instruction.
Soto, V.J., Writing Instructional Objectives.
(http//www.efc.dcccd.edu/Core/SLO-MVS.pdf)
Retrieved 12/5/11
15Use concrete action verbs in writing behavioral
objectives, since they are observable and
measurable. There are hundreds of them. Here
are yet more examplesTO KNOW articulate,
define, indicate, name, order, recognize, relate,
recall, reproduce, list, tell, describe,
identify, show, label, tabulate, quote, etc. TO
UNDERSTAND AND INTERPRET classify, describe,
discuss, explain, express, interpret, contrast,
associate, differentiate, extend, translate,
review, etc. TO APPLY CONCEPTS apply, compute,
give examples, investigate, experiment, solve,
choose, predict, translate, employ, operate,
practice, schedule, etc. TO ANALYZE analyze,
appraise, calculate, categorize, compare,
contrast, criticize, differentiate, distinguish,
examine, investigate, interpret, etc. TO
SYNTHESIZE arrange, assemble, collect, compose,
construct, create, design, formulate, manage,
organize, plan, prepare, propose, set up,
etc. TO EVALUATE appraise, assess, defend,
judge, predict, rate, support, evaluate,
recommend, convince, conclude, compare,
summarize, etc.
16A few final words of guidance
- For assistance in creating/writing assessment
rubrics (the next step in the instructional
design process) , see Conway, C. and Smith, M.V.
(2010). Handbook for the Music Mentor. Chicago
GIA Publications. (An additional Powerpoint on
this topic assessment rubrics - to be created
soon.) - A classic and complete instructional objective
contains four components 1) audience, 2)
behavior, 3) conditions, and 4) degree
(criterion) in one single sentence. It may be
helpful (and acceptable) to account for all of
these components in the larger context of the
entire syllabus. - For further assistance, email smithmv_at_cua.edu.