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Writing Learning Objectives Step 1: Reflect on the overarching goal(s) or ‘Dream’ of your instructional session/course. What is the big goal(s) - the big thing you want students to be able to do or know at the end of your instruction? Break down that large un-measurable goal into measurable chunks, or skills, or knowledge Write down some sub-goals – what will students need to do to be able to reach the dream for the course Step 2: Review your program/teaching session goals. Once you think about what you want your students to know, and be able to do, reflect on how that fits in with your program goals or accreditation standards, or the new ACRL framework. Accrediting bodies want to see that you are teaching courses that align with your program goals, and also that your program goals align to the university mission/vision. ACRL Framework: Authority is Constructed and Created; Information Creation as a Process; Information has Value; Research as Inquiry; Scholarship as a conversation; Searching as Strategic Exploration LEAP Outcomes: Inquiry and Analysis; Critical and Creative Thinking; Written and Oral Communication; Quantitative Literacy; Information Literacy; Teamwork and Problem Solving Step 3: Write learning objectives/outcomes that you can add to your course syllabus. See the about the L. Dee Fink Learning Taxonomy Outcomes handout that may give you ideas for different types of objectives you can incorporate into your course o o o o o Objectives must be measurable - this is how you will know the students have learned what they should have learned. Objectives usually start with an "action verb"; that explicitly describes what students will do. Do not use vague words like understand and know. Use this document to find appropriate action verbs for your objectives (another resource for action verbs) Objectives are a single sentence statement. Start off with: At the end of this course, students will be able to: ..... Objectives should focus on what the STUDENT WILL DO, not what the instructor does. Objectives should focus on different levels of learning, not just on acquiring content knowledge. For example, one of the objectives for my course is that by the end of this course you will have: "Defined a personal philosophy about online teaching". The objective does not state that I will: "Teach you how to write an online teaching statement". You (the student) will "define" your philosophy by reviewing examples of philosophies, reflecting on your own values and actually writing an online teaching statement about what you believe about learning and teaching online. The statement will be graded so that I know you understand what a teaching statement is and that you can articulate what you believe about teaching online.