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2. Shifting the Focus from Teaching to Learning: Learning Objectives for OR Course Design. Thomas A. GrossmanMasagung School of ManagementUniversity of San Franciscotagrossman@usfca.edu. 3. How Do You Design Your Course?. . 4. Challenges You Face in Course Design. . 5. Course Design Approaches.
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1. 1 IT’S NOT WHAT YOU TEACH, IT’S WHAT THEY LEARN
2. 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@usfca.edu Much of the argument over spreadsheets in the 1990’s was really arguments over Educational Objectives
AACSB is pushing “assessment” which is based on achievement of Educational ObjectivesMuch of the argument over spreadsheets in the 1990’s was really arguments over Educational Objectives
AACSB is pushing “assessment” which is based on achievement of Educational Objectives
3. 3 How Do You Design Your Course?
4. 4 Challenges You Face in Course Design Feeling of “how can I squeeze everything into this course?”
Focus on what is coming out of the syllabus, rather than what is going in.
Prioritizing among topics
Depth/breadth tradeoffs
…OthersFeeling of “how can I squeeze everything into this course?”
Focus on what is coming out of the syllabus, rather than what is going in.
Prioritizing among topics
Depth/breadth tradeoffs
…Others
5. 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. 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. 7 Today’s 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. 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 Goal here is to get practice at effective expression of Educational Objectives
Do not need to be complete nor correct at this time
Goal here is to get practice at effective expression of Educational Objectives
Do not need to be complete nor correct at this time
9. 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 Forces decomposition into subsidiary abilities—minimize false assumptions
Forces focus on what student can actually doForces decomposition into subsidiary abilities—minimize false assumptions
Forces focus on what student can actually do
10. 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 Goal here is to get practice at effective expression of Instructional Objectives
Do not need to be complete nor correct at this time
AT END: For many, this is a surprisingly difficult task.
Goal here is to get practice at effective expression of Instructional Objectives
Do not need to be complete nor correct at this time
AT END: For many, this is a surprisingly difficult task.
11. 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. 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. 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. 14 Verbs to Use Explain
Create
Determine
Make
Predict
Describe
(See Appendix for more)
15. 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