Integrated Aligned Course Design: Determining Student Learning Outcomes—Working Guide This working guide was developed to assist you in the course design process. It parallels the information presented in the Student Learning Outcomes section of the CTL Course Design Tutorial. Enter information about your course in the spaces below. STEP 1: Thinking About the Big Picture What do you want students to know or be able to do at the end of your course? For example, a political science instructor may want her students to better understand how nations relate to one another so that her students can form intelligent opinions about U.S. foreign policy. What outcomes do you hope to realize? Record your responses to the following questions: As a result of my class, how will my students be different from those who haven’t taken the course? ______________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ Why have I chosen these outcomes and not others? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ Now, reflect on how the material in your course relates to environmental factors such as the knowledge students bring to your classroom and how they will use what they learn in your course in the future. Consider the following questions: What foundational knowledge do students need to be successful in my course? ______________________________________________________________________ University of Minnesota Center for Teaching and Learning 2011 ______________________________________________________________________ How can they apply what they know? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ What is the importance of this area of study to my students? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ What do they need to do to be successful learners in this field? How can I assist them? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ STEP 2: Drafting Learning Outcomes for Your Course Having considered the big picture along with “environmental” factors above, you can begin to draft your learning outcomes as statements of what students will know or do by the end of your course. The written outcomes should be student-oriented (that is, written in a way that indicates to students what performance is expected of them). They should also be measurable—that is, they should specify clearly what students are expected to know or do in terms that students can understand and that you can assess. You may find it useful to refer to Bloom’s taxonomy of learning objectives to help you identify the type of cognitive outcome you hope students achieve as well as appropriate verbs to describe those outcomes. (See the end of this guide for a version of Bloom’s taxonomy that you can use.) Note your learning outcomes below. Learning Outcome 1: ____________________________________________________ University of Minnesota Center for Teaching and Learning 2011 Learning Outcome 1: ____________________________________________________ Learning Outcome 1: ____________________________________________________ STEP 3: Clarifying and Communicating Your Learning Objectives Now is the time to revise your learning outcomes. To ensure that your outcomes are clear to students, consider the following questions. Use your answers to guide you in refining the presentation of your learning outcomes. What do my learning outcomes look like from a student’s perspective? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ What does a student DO to demonstrate achievement of these outcomes? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ How will I communicate the importance of these outcomes to students in the syllabus and in class? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ University of Minnesota Center for Teaching and Learning 2011 Resources The following course design resources were referenced in the Learning Outcomes section of the Course Design tutorial. Learning Outcomes U of MN Student Learning Outcomes: http://www.slo.umn.edu/ U of MN Student Development Outcomes: http://www.sdo.umn.edu/ Criteria for Liberal Education course outcomes: http://onestop.umn.edu/faculty/lib_eds/instructions.html#all_le Bloom’s revised taxonomy of learning outcomes: http://edorigami.wikispaces.com/Bloom%27s+Digital+Taxonomy Fink’s Taxonomy of Significant Learning: http://www.wcu.edu/WebFiles/PDFs/facultycenter_SignificantLearning.pdf University of Minnesota Center for Teaching and Learning 2011 Developing Course Learning Objectives for Higher Education Identify Student Link to Student Learning Draft Learning Learning Outcomes in Outcomes and Student Objectives for Your Bloom’s Taxonomy Development Outcomes Course Relevant to Your Course Remember Identify & recognize from longterm memory & multiple retrievals. Arrange / List Label / Associate Recall / State Reproduce / Chunk Map / Define Understand Construct Meaning from new and existing ideas/date. Describe / Distinguish Relate / Classify Recognize / Match Frame / Summarize Explain / Systematize Apply Use process/procedure to solve, complete, implement, develop. Explain / Interpret Order / Categorize Discuss / Model Simulate / Demonstrate Modify / Elaborate Page 1 University of Minnesota Center for Teaching and Learning 2011 Link Student Learning in Your Course to Aspects of Bloom’s Taxonomy Link to Student Learning Outcomes and Student Development Outcomes Draft Learning Objectives for Your Course Analyze Break content into meaningful parts, name links among these in relating parts to whole/overall. Differentiate / Attribute Measure / Collect Data Trace / Find Patterns Relate / Generate Interpret / Contextualize Debate / Extend Evaluate Make criterion-referenced assessments and judgments. Compare / Choose Weigh Evidence / Develop Standards Survey / Test Out Conclude / Critique Synthesize / Create Reorganize, build relationships and bring together parts to form new whole – pattern, structure, plan. Assemble / Propose Compose / Create Provide alternatives / Test cases & scenarios Organize / Publish Design / Produce Page 2 University of Minnesota Center for Teaching and Learning 2011