University of Rhode Island EDC 452.  “A statement of what students ought to be able to do as a consequence of instruction”. (Goodlad)”

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Writing Student Learning Outcomes
Advertisements

WRITING INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES A Workshop Experience Sponsored by National Commission on O&P Education (NCOPE) at the Academy’s Annual Meeting Orlando,
Learning Objectives, Performance Tasks and Rubrics: Demonstrating Understanding and Defining What Good Is Brenda Lyseng Minnesota State Colleges.
The PSYCHOMOTOR Domain. PERCEPTION The ability to use sensory cues to guide motor activity. This ranges from sensory stimulation, through cue selection,
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT
Nancy Pares, RN, MSN Nurs 2210 Roles II Metro Community College.
Instructional Design - Objectives Why bother? 1 - To guide the design of instruction 2 - To set a framework for assessment 3 - To help the learner understand.
Identifying Content and Specifying Behaviors
Learning Objectives for CIT Reference
Principles of High Quality Assessment
Writing Instructional Objectives
Introduction to Bloom’s Taxonomy. The Idea Purpose ◦ Organize and classify educational goals ◦ Provide a systematized approach to course design Guided.
Section VI: Comprehension Teaching Reading Sourcebook 2 nd edition.
Presented By Muhammad Asif Nadeem (M.Phil) Lecturer Department of Education The Islamia University of Bahawalpur Bloom’s Taxonomy Illustrated.
Educational Psychology
7 By: Kelly Atwaroo Class: Infant II Topic: Caring of pets Subject Area: General Science Curriculum Area: Living things Previous Knowledge: Basic knowledge.
Goals and Objectives.
© E. G. Kowch iDevelopment 675 Instructional Development (EDER675) March 3 writing Performance Objectives,
Learning Objectives. Objectives Objectives: By the conclusion to this session each participant should be able to… Differentiate between a goal and objectives.
Bloom’s Cognitive and Affective Taxonomies Cognitive and Affective Taxonomies.
What Is Learning? Learning is a relatively permanent change in human capabilities that is not a result of growth processes. These capabilities are related.
…Important Meeting…  Ag Ed Seniors pursuing the Teaching Option...  Will meet Tuesday, September 28 in AGH, Room 201 at 6:00 p.m....  To Discuss Requirements.
What Our Students Need Most The 7 Fundamental Conditions of Learning.
Chapter Eleven Approaches to Instruction. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved Overview Devising and using objectives The behavioral.
Educational Psychology and the Learning of Science Bloom’s Taxonomy Involvement in Science Activities.
Session 2 Learning Outcomes: articulating our expectations Active Learning Initiative Patrick A. Frantom, Ph.D. Department of Chemistry Adapted from Driscoll,
Behavioral Objective After a 5 minute therapy session, the client will be able to completely eliminate her presenting problem.
Educational Objectives
Writing Student-Centered Learning Objectives Please see Reference Document for references used in this presentation.
 Cognitive objectives ◦ Describe the knowledge that learners are to acquire  Affective objectives ◦ Describe the attitudes, feelings, and dispositions.
1 Module F1 Modular Training Cycle and Integrated Curriculum.
Organizing and Implementing the Curriculum Chapter 9.
LEARNING DOMAINS & OBJECTIVES Southern Illinois University Carbondale Instructor Workshop.
What Do Students Need?  Each student needs to be like all others and at the same time, different from all others.  Students need unconditional acceptance.
Teaching- Learning Process. Client Education Client education has become one of the more important roles for nurses. With shorter hospital stays, increased.
Social and Emotional Development Presented by: Rose Owens Kathleen Lee November 17, 2011 Room 412.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBEJECTIVES PURPOSE OF IO IO DOMAINS HOW TO WRITE SMART OBJECTIVE 1.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching, and Assessing Exploring Student Learning Outcomes Bloom’s Taxonomy Contributions to Wikispaces are licensed under a.
Prepared by Mrs. Mona al khalaf.  Cognitive : mental skills ( knowledge )  Affective : growth in feeling or emotional areas( attitude)  Psychomotor.
Assessment Workshop 2 Developing Student Learning Outcomes.
1 Why Three is Better Than One: Assessing Across Knowledge, Attitudes and Behaviors Scott W. Brown and Anthony Artino, Jr. Educational Psychology Department.
Antar Abdellah 1430  Desired outcome of learning expressed in terms of observable behavior or performance of the learners.
Theories and Program Design
Writing Instructional Objectives. What is an objective? l A statement describing a proposed change of what the learner can do when (s)he has successfully.
The Taxonomy of Educational Objectives Implementation in Teaching and Learning Activities at Faculty of Electrical Engineering UTeM.
SIUC Instructor Workshop Learning Domains and Objectives.
Learning Objectives Write the Objective Teach Based on the Objective
TAXONOMY OF EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES
Approaches to Instruction
Learning Theory AED 341 F09.
Developing Goals and Objectives
EDU704 – Assessment and Evaluation
By: Quonias Hudson & Nicole Godfrey
Objectives EDUC 3100.
BLOOM’S Assessment & Evaluation in Language Testing
IN THE NAME OF “ALLAH” THE MOST BENIFICENT AND THE MOST MERCIFUL
به نام خدا.
Mosby items and derived items © 2005 by Mosby, Inc.
Writing Objectives in Blooms Taxonomy
Bloom's Taxonomy ©2001 Umang Sawhney :00 AM.
Bloom's Taxonomy Prepared by: Maridalys López Melissa Torres
Writing Good Objectives for e-learning Material
Helps to classify educational learning objectives.
Section VI: Comprehension
Behavioral Objective After a 5 minute therapy session, the client will be able to completely eliminate her presenting problem. TWO WORDS.
Basic concepts curriculum Curriculum development Curriculum analysis Curriculum evaluation Elements of curriculum Educational objectives content.
Learning Objectives Write the Objective Teach Based on the Objective
Presentation transcript:

University of Rhode Island EDC 452

 “A statement of what students ought to be able to do as a consequence of instruction”. (Goodlad)”

 “What the students should be able to do at the end of a learning period that they could not do beforehand. An objective is a description of a performance you want learners to be able to exhibit before you consider them competent. An objective describes an intended result of instruction, rather than the process of instruction itself." (Mager)

 “Properly constructed education objectives represent relatively specific statements about what students should be able to do following instruction.” (Gallagher and Smith)

1. Cognitive Domain ◦ Refers to intellectual learning and problem solving ◦ Cognitive levels of learning include: knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation.

2. Affective Domain ◦ Refers to the emotions and value system of a person ◦ Affective levels of learning include: receiving, responding, valuing, organizing, and characterizing by a value.

3. Psychomotor Domain ◦ Refers to physical movement characteristics and motor skill capabilities that involve behaviors requiring certain levels of physical dexterity and coordination. These skills are developed through repetitive practice and measured in terms of speed, precision, distance, procedures, or execution techniques. ◦ Psychomotor levels include: perception, set, guided response, mechanism, complex overt response, adaptation, and origination.

 1a: Students will correctly use future tense in writing.

 1a: Students will correctly use future tense in writing by re-writing a given a sentence (in the past or present tense) in future tense with no errors in tense or tense contradiction.

 2a: Students will demonstrate social understanding skills.

 2a: Students will demonstrate social understanding skills by raising their hand and waiting to be called on before talking aloud in group settings; working cooperatively with peers in small group settings; developing an understanding of the relationship between his/her verbalizations and actions/effect on others; and engaging in appropriate cooperative social play interactions initiated by others.

 Students will compare and contrast two or more versions of the same story (e.g., Cinderella stories) by different authors or from different cultures.  Common Core Reading Standards for Literature K–5 (2 nd Grade)