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Making your Course Curriculum Effective

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Title: Making your Course Curriculum Effective


1
Making your Course Curriculum Effective
  • Linda S. Behar-Horenstein, Ph.D.
  • Distinguished Teaching Scholar and
  • Professor
  • Lsbhoren_at_ufl.edu
  • New Faculty Orientation at the University of
    Florida
  • August 17, 2007
  • ? 2007 Linda S. Behar-Horenstein

2
Introduction
3
Objectives for this Session
  • 1. Think about the learning environment that you
    want to create.
  • 2. Develop a mental framework that will promote
    active learning and contribute to the development
    of student competency.

4
Objectives for this Session
  • 3. Use evaluation techniques that correspond to
    the objectives, content, and learning experiences
    within your curriculum.
  • 4. Recognize the role of pre-planning in
    effective teaching.

5
Setting the Table
6
Framework for Developing Curriculum
  • 1. What competencies should students attain?
  • 2. What type of learning experiences will help
    students attain competencies?

7
Framework for Developing Curriculum
  • 3. What modifications will be necessary to
    accommodate students individual learning needs?
  • 4. What evidence will confirm that students have
    attained the desired competencies?

8
Initial Steps
  • Identify the central questions that delimit what
    is most fundamental to the course that you will
    teach.

9
Initial Steps
  • Ask yourself What do I want students to be able
    to do as a result of the teacher-student
    interactions that will occur in the classroom,
    the clinic, or the lab?

10
Delimit the Course Content
  • Design a course in consideration of what students
    need to know rather than what would be nice to
    know.

11
Consider the Students
  • Levels of Learning
  • Unconscious incompetent- I dont know what I
    dont know.
  • Conscious incompetent- I know what Im supposed
    to do but it does not feel natural and takes
    effort.
  • Conscious competent- I know what Im supposed to
    do and it feels natural.
  • Unconscious competent- Thought and action are
    fluid and consistent.

12
Consider the Progression of Learning
  • Novice - explicit directions and steps.
  • Beginner - some synthesis, apply learning across
    contexts.
  • Competent - independence, choice, self-control,
    modicum of judgment and repertoire of procedures.
  • Proficient - professional norms across contexts.
  • Expert - internalized, discipline-centered focus.
  • Chambers, DW, JDE, Vol. 61, No. 8, August 1997

13
Syllabus Components
  • Goals
  • Objectives/Competencies
  • Content
  • Learning Experiences
  • Evaluation Approaches

14
Goals
  • Goals are broad statements of purpose that are
    written to indicate a long term outcome that
    addresses the characteristics of learners who
    attain goals.
  • For example The educational goals of this course
    have been designed to prepare you to competently
    conduct a thorough history and appropriate
    clinical examination of an adult horse, make
    diagnostic decisions based on your data,
    formulate a problem list, and properly sequence
    and organize treatment modalities.

15
Objectives
  • Statements that indicate in specific and
    measurable terms the particular outcomes that are
    sought.
  • For example The student will be able to
    describe treatment plans for an adult cat who has
    developed diabetes.
  • Note that, whether or not students can describe
    treatment plans can be measured.

16
Objectives
  • Clearly stated objectives improve the student's
    expectancy for success and minimize the need to
    re-teach.

17
Hands-on Activity
  • A hand-out is being distributed to you now.
    Please read the directions and make the items as
    appropriate.
  • We will review the first 10 or so after you have
    had time to mark your responses.

18
Review of Statements from Understanding Objectives
19
Competency
  • The execution of student behaviors, skills and
    attitudes practiced independently and completed
    satisfactorily to set criteria.
  • Competencies are stated end point measures that
    are conceptually similar to objectives.
  • There should be alignment in goals, objectives
    and/or competencies.

20
Content
  • The material used for teaching.
  • Tell students This is material that you will
    read, observe, discuss, or analyze.
  • Provide information in a logical manner according
    to principles, concepts or facts.

21
Content
  • Select and sequence presentation logically.
  • Provide challenging problems that increase
    students curiosity.
  • Use varied presentations formats that capture
    their interest.

22
Content
  • Always relate what you are teaching to something
    that has relevance outside the classroom, or can
    be observed in practice.
  • Demonstrate the relevance of the content and
    probe students by asking them to tell you what
    they saw, heard, or understand.

23
May I, please, have five volunteers come up to
these seats?
24
Learning Activities
  • The opportunities provided for learning.
  • Tell students Here are the kinds
    content-based, psychomotor-based activities you
    are going to engage in during my course.

25
Learning Activities
  • Explicitly tell the students what they will need
    to do and what they are expected to learn.
  • Explain what role, you as the instructor, will
    play.
  • For example, tell them whether the course will
    consist primarily of instructor-led
    presentations, roundtable discussions, analyzing
    case-based patient scenarios, interviewing a
    patient, presenting a treatment plan. Give them
    a breakdown of how much time will be spent in
    specific activities.

26
Learning Activities
  • Select or develop activities that are likely to
    result in desired outcomes.

27
Learning Activities
  • Optimal instruction occurs when students have
    learning experiences that promote learning how to
    think, not when they are told what to think.

28
Teaching Strategies
  • Give students opportunities to explain aloud,
    tell how they how, or justify what they know, so
    that they develop ownership for their learning.

29
Teaching Strategies
  • Students must have opportunities to demonstrate
    their ability to think critically about their
    actions or plans, and to explain aloud the
    reasons for their decisions and/or strategies.

30
Teaching Strategies
  • Seek to make students thinking processes
    explicitly known to them and to you.
  • Model your thinking skills aloud as well.

31
Teaching Strategies
  • Take the time to assess student thinking
    processes.
  • Have students write a one-minute paper to reflect
    upon what they learned and/or what they dont
    understand.

32
Example
  • Rather than provide students with the correct
    answer right away, question them to determine
    their thought processes and application of
    knowledge, or provide them with additional
    prompts.

33
Teaching Strategies
  • Encourage students to try, or to think about
    using different strategies or approaches.

34
Evaluation
  • Mechanisms used to assess student comprehension
    or to make final judgments about what students
    have learned.
  • Evaluation also can provide formative and
    summative feedback to the professor about
    teaching behavior, the curriculum, and the
    materials used.

35
Evaluation
  • Tell students how you will evaluate their
    learning.
  • Offer timely and relevant feedback.

36
Evaluation
  • Offer feedback that is instructive and formative.
    Tell students here is what you are doing well,
    here are some ideas where you need to provide
    justification, or further explanation.
  • Say You reasoning is erroneous. Do you know
    why?
  • Feedback should be constructive, not punitive or
    judgmental. One objective of evaluation is to
    teach students how to reason, not tell them how
    much you know..

37
Evaluation
  • Provide students with a variety of evaluation
    approaches that consider their varied learning
    styles.

38
Evaluation
  • Focus on building students capacity for critical
    thinking and for demonstrating how and what they
    think.
  • A variety of assessment mechanisms can be used
    quizzes, written or oral examinations, written
    reports, online or in class discussions, class
    presentations, role-play, case-based scenarios,
    and open-ended questions that require critical
    thinking skills.
  • Avoid the use of multiple choice tests because
    their focus tends to be on rote memorization,
    attainment of declarative knowledge, and low
    level cognitive skills, rather than evaluation
    and synthesis.

39
Types of Evaluation
  • Formative - Interim assessments that provide
    feedback about How well am I doing?
  • Occurs at specified times.
  • Summative - Final assessments that do not permit
    change.

40
  • TEACH TO DEVELOP STUDENTS THREE Cs.

41
Competence (Psychomotor domains, technical skills)
  • Confidence
  • (affective domain, self-esteem)

Capability (critical thinking, application of
knowledge and skills)
42
Teach to Develop Students Three Cs
  • Some much of teaching time is spent on building
    students competence. Becoming competent is not
    enough.
  • Model and teach in ways that enhance students
    confidence and capability.
  • Provide learning activities that permit students
    to understand not only what and how, but why and
    what if.

43
Analyzing the Curriculum
44
Analyzing the Curriculum
  • Correspondence/Logic
  • Student Learning Needs/Responsiveness
  • Evaluation

45
Assess Correspondence and Logic
  • Look at the similarities anddifferences between
    the taught and written curriculum.
  • Ask yourself Did I teach what I wrote on the
    syllabus? Is the content presented in a logical
    order?

46
Assess Correspondence and Logic
  • Are the objectives, content, experiences, and
    evaluation approaches aligned?
  • Ask yourself Am I teaching content that permits
    students to achieve the intended learning
    objectives? Am I offering the type of learning
    experiences that will allow them to achieve the
    learning objectives?
  • Is the approach to evaluation assessing what
    students were taught or supposed to learn, and is
    it aligned with the learning experiences?

47
Students Learning Needs/ Responsiveness
  • Is there adequate diversity in the learning
    activities to encourage learners to stretch and
    grow?
  • Did students have learning experiences that
    promoted critical thinking skills and
    problem-solving?

48
Evaluation
  • Does this test mirror what I have taught
    students, or the learning experiences that they
    have had?

49
Methods of Evaluation
50
Evaluating Student Outcomes
  • Multiple choice
  • Advantages
  • Easy to write and score.
  • Disadvantages
  • Tend to measure retention of material and low
    level learning.
  • How to improve use
  • Write questions that predict outcomes rather than
    label phenomena.

51
Psychomotor skills
  • Advantages
  • Active learning
  • Hones practice and fine motor skills
  • How to improve
  • Use a rubric for grading
  • Present unacceptable and acceptable models
  • Give students the rubric ahead of time

52
Short Answer Essays
  • Advantages
  • Not difficult to judge whether expected
    information is there.
  • Doesnt ask for details only small amount of
    space provided.
  • Disadvantages
  • Typically tests only factual recall.

53
Short Answer Essays
  • How to improve
  • Present case or problem, then ask students what
    questions they would ask.
  • Ask students to solve problem and to propose a
    treatment plan, or a hypothesis that is relevant
    to information they have learned.

54
Evaluating Student Outcomes
  • ESSAY QUESTIONS
  • Give at least one essay question
  • Pass out several questions one week ahead of time
    and tell students that these are the sorts of
    questions that you will use.
  • Select varied question types that target course
    objectives.

55
Grading Essays
  • Read a random sample, identify different levels
    of excellence and determine distinguishing
    features.
  • Develop codes for writing comments to minimize
    your feedback.
  • NFD - needs further development
  • WDSA- Well-developed and supported argument

56
Learn from Reading Essays
  • Diagnose students weaknesses and identify where
    teaching has not achieved its purpose.
  • Review item analysis discrimination scores and
    re-teach unclear areas.
  • Let students review their exams scores and meet
    with faculty to discuss their questions.

57
Working with Disgruntled Students
  • How to handle
  • students
  • complaints about grading.

58
Dealing with Complainers
  • Ask students who have complaints about test
    grades to write and submit a written paragraph
    describing why they think their answer is correct
    and why their grade should be changed.
  • Ensure students of a response. Indicate that you
    will respond to all complaints submitted in
    writing within a week to ten days.
  • If necessary write these statements into your
    syllabus as course policies.

59
Concluding Remarks
  • Good instructors plan for teaching ahead of time,
    reflect about instructional approaches, and how
    to refine them.
  • Teaching is a learned science and art, that
    requires practice.
  • Consider students attitudes, abilities, and
    learning needs as well as your own preferences
    while designing the curriculum.

60
Concluding Remarks
  • Use strategies that promote critical thinking.
  • Good teaching occurs when deliberative and
    thorough planning takes place before instruction.

61
Concluding Remarks
  • Remember that the onus for providing quality
    instruction and appropriate learning experiences
    to support successful outcomes is the
    instructors job.
  • However, remind yourselves that the onus for
    learning rests with the student, not the
    instructor.
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