Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Template (Samantha Burd)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Confirming Student Learning: Using Assessment Techniques in the Classroom Douglas R. Davenport Dean, College of Arts and Sciences Truman State University.
Advertisements

Analyzing Student Work
The Framework for Teaching Charlotte Danielson
Daniel Peck January 28, SLOs versus Course Objectives Student Learning Outcomes for the classroom describe the knowledge, skills, abilities.
[Insert faculty Banner] Consistency of Assessment
Using the IDEA Student Ratings System: An Introduction University of Saint Thomas Fall
Consistency of Assessment
Assessing Student Learning
Tutorial of Instructional Design
AET/515 Instructional Plan Template Talisha Bunkley
CLASSROOM ASSESSMENT FOR STUDENT LEARNING
AET/515 Spanish 101 Instructional Plan SofiaDiaz
Accounting 264 Legal Environment of Business. Needs Assessment Problem- The North West Community College needs classes on ethics. What is offered at NWCC.
Copyright © 2009 On The Edge Software Consulting Advanced Enterprise Java Instructional Plan Presentation Tier Design using an Event Driven Design Methodology.
AET/515 Instructional Plan Template Linda Sauerbrun Instructional Plan Template | Slide #1.
Design and Development of Instruction Dr. Scott Fredrickson TE810 Suzan Priolo.
Using formative assessment. Aims of the session This session is intended to help us to consider: the reasons for assessment; the differences between formative.
Home, school & community partnerships Leadership & co-ordination Strategies & targets Monitoring & assessment Classroom teaching strategies Professional.
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Advanced Enterprise Java Platform Class and Lab Mark K. Reha.
School’s Cool in Kindergarten for the Kindergarten Teacher School’s Cool Makes a Difference!
SATAL Students Assessing Teaching and Learning
Overview of the Development of the Graphic Design Curriculum Units 1-3 © 2015 Richard Homa.
Lynn Thompson Center for Applied Linguistics Startalk Network for Program Excellence Chicago, Illinois October 16-18, 2009 Formative and Summative Assessment.
Unit Presentation Ruth Arce. “ A man paints with his brains and not with his hands” -Michelangelo.
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Misty Lunsford.
Integrating Differentiated Instruction & Understanding by Design: Connecting Content and Kids by Carol Ann Tomlinson and Jay McTighe.
* Research suggests that technology used in classrooms can be especially advantageous to at-risk, EL, and special ed students. (Means, Blando, Olson,
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Template Neil Harris.
Title of Training Module Design Plan
Lecture 7. The Questions: What is the role of alternative assessment in language learning? What are the Reasons.
South Western School District Differentiated Supervision Plan DRAFT 2010.
Instructional Plan | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan December 17, 2012 Kevin Houser.
AET/515 Instructional Plan Template Elizabeth Andrews
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Template Hafida Seddiki.
Guidance for Completing Interim Report I Evaluation Webinar Series 3 Dec 2013.
PROCESS STANDARDS FOR MATHEMATICS. PROBLEM SOLVING The Purpose of the Problem Solving Approach The problem solving approach fosters the development of.
 My philosophy is perseverance cannot be divorced from progress to success.  My goal is to use these tools that I have learnt and insight I have gained.
Instructional Plan | Slide 1 CIS 295 Network Security M. Sue Fuentes.
Fourth session of the NEPBE II in cycle Dirección de Educación Secundaria February 25th, 2013 Assessment Instruments.
AET/515 International Guest Services (Veronique Reaves) Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1.
Formative assessment and effective feedback at Manor Lakes College
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Cultural Diversity in Health Science Barry L. Rimpsey.
AET/515 American Music 1920’s to the Present Shaundra Gutierrez.
Intel ® Teach Program International Curriculum Roundtable Programs of the Intel ® Education Initiative are funded by the Intel Foundation and Intel Corporation.
Evidence-Based Teaching: Evaluative Strategies ED B MARCH 13, 2012 Dr. Anne Belcher, Dr. Linda Adamson, Instructors.
Syllabus Design and Resources, Part 1
AET/515 Instructional Plan Template Kyle Duncan Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1.
Patrik Hultberg Kalamazoo College
Georgia will lead the nation in improving student achievement. 1 Georgia Performance Standards Day 3: Assessment FOR Learning.
Stacy Keyte EDCI 538 Dr. Stetson. Rules and Procedures What I learned:  I learned the difference between rules and procedures as well as the way to effectively.
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Template (Ryan Zaro)
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Advanced Enterprise Java Platform Training Presentation Tier Design using an Event Driven.
Using Groups in Academic Advising Dr. Nancy S. King Kennesaw State University.
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Template Jami Anderson.
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Template Dohnyale Palmer.
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Template Sandra D. McBride.
Entrepreneurship 101 AET 515 Instructional Design Instructor: James Corkins By: Cyrian Reed.
W R I T I N G M A T T E R S A workshop of the Hoosier Writing Project a site of the National Writing Project at IUPUI Herb Budden, Co-director.
AET/515 Instructional Plan Cosmetology Services (F) Donna Harmon Cosmotology and Salon Services (F)
LST. Collective Responsibility Concentrated Instruction Convergent Assessment Certain Access RTI and Reading.
Introduction My class is a 7 th grade Science class which consist of 20 students total, 11 females-9 males, 4students are special needs and.
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Cultural Diversity in Health Science Barry L. Rimpsey.
Instructional Plan | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan For Associate’s Degree in Library Skills (Donna Roy)
Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Template (Tiffany Thurber)
AET/515 Instructional Plan Template Courtney McVay.
ED 690: Reflecting, Writing, and Reviewing the PDP
AET/515 Instructional Plan Template Courtney McVay
Topic Principles and Theories in Curriculum Development
AET/515 Instructional Plan Template (Shirmen McDonald)
Instructional Plan and Presentation Cindy Douglas Cur/516: Curriculum Theory and Instructional Design November 7, 2016 Professor Gary Weiss.
Presentation transcript:

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 1 AET/515 Instructional Plan Template (Samantha Burd)

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 2 Needs Assessment 1.What is the learning problem or opportunity? The learning Problem is not having a class at a community college that provides training toward Graphic Design. ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design will help achieving the learning problem and gives students an opportunity to learn about Graphic Design. 2.What is currently available? No Graphic Design classes are available at this time through Northwest Valley Community College but some basic art classes are. 3.What should be available? ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design

Needs Assessment (2) 4.Explain the gap analysis between what is available and what should be available. The gap analysis is that art classes are available though through Northwest Valley Community College but the potential of Graphic Design classes can become some new classes toward an Art degree. 5.What is your recommended solution for filling the gap? My recommended solution for filling the gap is to introduce ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design. Students can take another kind of art class and see if he or she is interested in Graphic Design as a career. Instructional Plan Template | Slide 3

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 4 Instructional Goal What should the learners be able to do after successfully completing this instructional plan? ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design will enable students to: –Learn that he or she can design book covers, illustrations, billboards, etc. –Learn the history of art from prehistoric art to present day. –Explore photography. –Teach students the business of media art. –Define the difference 2D and 3D art. –Be familiar that there are laws like copy write and trademark laws in Graphic Design. –See examples of people who are a Graphic Designer.

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 5 Performance-Based Objectives Students will create a 5 to 8 slide PowerPoint presentation of a famous Graphic Designer in American History. The audience is the students, the behavior is a famous Graphic Designer, the condition is a PowerPoint presentation, and the degree is creating 5 to 8 slides. Students will create a minimum 600 word essay of why he or she wants to have a career in Graphic Design. The audience is the students, the behavior is having a career in Graphic Design, the condition is writing an essay, and the degree is completing a minimum 600 words.

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 6 Summative Assessment and Learning Outcomes Survey- A survey will show if students would be interested in taking ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design and also show once he or she completes the class that he or she would like to have more advanced Graphic Design classes. Grades- Grades will show the outcome of each class. If a majority of the class has an A to B average it shows that ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design is a good class to keep. If a majority of students has a D to E average it shows ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design is not a good class to have available. Assignments- Assignments should reflect Graphic Design. They should be written and also show his or her creative side. Once a student will see that his or her creations are Graphic Design material then he or she will more likely obtain more Graphic Design classes. Teachers/Instructors- Teachers/instructors will also reflect the Graphic Design class. The teacher/instructor should be a Graphic Designer in his or her career life so the students get to know from first hand on what a Graphic Design career can be. A teacher/instructor with a Graphic Design background can also provided a new class with valuable insight on what the class should discuss about. He or she will also reflect on how students are learning within ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design.

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 7 Learner Characteristics ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design class will have both men and women within a classroom with different age groups and different cultural backgrounds. Work experience varies from no experience in Graphic Design to someone who has a career in Graphic Design. Students can take this class without taking other classes first. The majority of students will learn though his or her own creative experiences. What are the implications to your instructional plan based on these characteristics? An implication is “A suggestion that something such as a criticism or accusation is true although it has not been expressed directly” (Implication, 2007). Based on the characteristics above the implications of the instructional plan can have different students than described because the class have not been performed yet so the accusation cannot expressed directly.

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 8 ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design class will be in a traditional classroom setting. Each class will be 3 hours a week for 15 weeks. There will be only one class available but may progress into more than one class during a semester after review. Students will explore the web to research assignments but it will not be mandatory. Students will use Macintosh computers and programs of adobe to design an assignment. Students will have field trips and people who are Graphic Designers to show him or her who a Graphic Designer is and does as a career. Learning Context

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 9 Delivery Modality The most effective method delivery of ART/105 will be an instructor-led course. With an instructor-led course an instructor can see how the student is designing a Graphic Design. An instructor can also show students the direct way of designing a particular piece and the students can ask directly any questions that he or she may have. A study was done in 2011 at a college and “The results of the archived quantitative data from 82 online and 97 face-to-face instructor led students indicated that there is a statistically significant difference in the number of students who successfully completed the developmental reading course based on the instructional method, with 69.4% of those students in the face-to-face group successfully completing the course compared to only 38.8% of students within the online group” (Lattimore, 2012, p. 112). This study shows that the best delivery is having a traditional classroom for this class with an instructor-led course.

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 10 Instructional Strategies The overall plan governing the instructional content will be having the students understand of who and what a Graphic Designer is and does in the workforce. The information that will be taught is by local Graphic Designers, textbooks, and of the instructor. Local Graphic Designers will come in and explain his or her job to the classroom and provide valuable explanations of what he or she does. The textbooks will show students the variety of designs that he or she can make within a Graphic Design career. Instructors can give valuable insight of what may to come in there Graphic Design studies of later on courses. An instructional strategies that will be used to facilitate instruction is discussion. “Discussion is an appropriate strategy for improving student thinking; promoting engagement in academic content; and learning communication and thinking skills in a social environment” (Guthrie, 2002, p. 1184). Discussions will show his or her opinions of Graphic Design and others can listen, observe, and discuss those opinions. Students will be learning from each other in an discussion. The teacher can start with asking a question to the class where the students can discuss each answers. Each student will understand each views or opinions of Graphic Design and can learn of what is means to be a Graphic Designer from different viewpoints.

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 11 Plan for Implementation This course will be available one day a week for a three hour session. This course will also have a break time of ten minutes after the first hour and a half session. This break time is not included for the three hour session. Students will be able to go to the restrooms, grab a snack or drink, or do whatever they desire within those ten minutes. Once those then minutes are done each student is required to be back in class or they will be considered absent for a half a day. Each assignment will be due on the next day before the course is in session. Instructors, students, Graphic Designers, and once in awhile instructional designers will be involved within the course. Materials such as textbooks, syllabus, examples of designs will be involved within the classroom for students to learn outside the classroom. Students and instructors will be part of the implementation. Resources such as Graphic Designers from a local area will be included in the implementation. The instruction will be implemented within the classroom and on the syllabus. Each instruction will be implemented weekly on the day of the class. The plan will be addressed by the instructor to the students. To build interest and commitment of implementation of a plan, students can make suggestions or have opinions on each assignment he or she does.

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 12 Instructional Resources (After reading the information below, delete and insert your information.) There will be any materials that will be necessary for the course. Textbooks will be necessary for the course for students to learn in and outside of the classroom. Computers will be necessary for this course so students can design some designs and instructors can create PowerPoint presentations. With computers a necessary, many programs will be necessary to use. For designing a design the students will use Adobe based programs, such as Adobe Illustrator and Adobe Photoshop. For instructors he or she will need Microsoft programs, such as Microsoft Word and Microsoft PowerPoint to instruct students of their assignments or of a learning material. A white screen and projector will be needed for the PowerPoint to be visible for everyone in the classroom. Printers will also need to be provided so instructors can print material out such a syllabus, and students can print the design that he or she created. White boards will also be a necessary material for instructors and students to use within the classroom.

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 13 Formative Assessment “A-B-C Summary-Students think of a word related to the topic of study for each letter of the alphabet. Students can also think of a lesson-related word for each letter of a unit vocabulary word” (Greenstein, 2010, p. 172). Students can each have a letter and design with only using that letter. For example, a student has the letter “o.” He or she can design the “o” to look like an orange (because orange starts with the letter “o”) but still be able to see the letter “o” within the design. “Color-Coding-Students use color tags to label objects or ideas that belong together” (Greenstein, 2010, p. 172). Students will work with colors everyday in Graphic design. Within this strategy he or she will learn what colors go well together and what colors do not go well together for future use. “Critiques-Students analyze, interpret, or evaluate the work of experts, peers, or self. Critiques can be formal or informal, written or oral, but are most effective when based on a common rubric and when feedback is descriptive of process and product” (Greenstein, 2010, p. 172). Students will look at different designs and evaluate the work done and discuss within the classroom of his or her opinions on the design. This strategy will help students learn that all deigns will have a least one flaw within a person’s point of view and that no design is perfect but satisfactory to the public.

Formative Assessment (2) “Gallery/Graffiti Wall -Students make a display of their knowledge or beliefs. They can create these individually or make a common display, or graffiti wall” (Greenstein, 2010, p. 172). This strategy will start students to design. A passion in something will help him or her design something that they enjoy doing. A passion can be anything, wither it can be from bike riding or believing he or she can fly. Once a student starts designing something that they are passionate about, he or she will see that him or her can be a Graphic Designer. “One Word-Students write one word that summarizes their learning and then explain why they chose that word” (Greenstein, 2010, p. 172). Students will pick one word that they like about the course or what they learned from the course. For example, a student picked “colorful” as there word for the course and explained that they learned about colors and used many different colors within the design that he or she created. Instructional Plan Template | Slide 14

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 15 Evaluation Strategies Strategies that would be used within ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design would be to “follow-up” upon students and instructors. A data that an instructional designer creates and collects for the instructional plan would be from the students and instructors voices and actions. He or she would ask the students on what or how they feel toward this new course. Also collect the data by seeing the student’s grades. If the student’s grades are low than the course needs to change to get the students to have an average grade of a higher grading, such as “A’s” or “B’s.” An instructional designer can also ask the teacher instructing the course on how he or she feels toward the new course. He or she would also ask if the students seem to be “catching on” to the things that need to be taught. With collecting all these data’s the instructional plan can change by the necessary problems shown from the data provided.

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 16 Outcome Review _________________________________________ Poor Below average Average Above average Excellent” (Brown & Green, 2006, Ch. 11) How to identify criteria for determining that design goals, performance-based objectives, and learning outcomes are achieved for this course is to use a rating scale. A rating scale would be for the students and instructors. Various questions will be asked toward the students. For example, on a scale from 1 to 5 how would you rate your instructor of this course? Another question may be, on a scale from 1 to 10 how to you rate the course? For the instructor the questions would be, on a scale from 1 to 15 how well did the students speak-up in class? Another question may be, on a scale from 1 to 20 what was did the average student grades? An example of a rating scale is a follows. “The following rating scale is an example of aLikert-type scale (a scale with five options):

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 17 Recommendations The data that the instructional designer gained from the students and the instructors will help offer new changes in the instructional design that needs to be addressed. If a majority of students rated the teacher as “average” then there may be something to be done with the instructor teachings to make the rate be “excellent” in the future. With the instructor rating there could be a change of how students participate. If a rating was done by a teacher stating that student’s participation in class is “below average” than the instructional designer will try to change the course a little to make students “speak-up” more in the class. Gathering data of ART/105-Introduction to Graphic Design will make the class a success for students, instructors, and for Northwest Valley Community College. “ The findings provide critical information for management decision making to assist universities to translate the resources at their disposal into learning outcomes” (Moses, 2005, p. 1).

Instructional Plan Template | Slide 18 References Brown, A., & Green, T. (2006). The essentials of instructional design: Connecting fundamental principles with process and practice. Prentice Hall, Inc. Greenstein, L. (2010). What teachers really need to know about formative assessment. Alexandria, VA: ASCD. Guthrie, J. W. (2002). Encyclopedia of education. (2 ed., Vol. 6). New York, NY: Macmillan Reference USA.

References (2) "Implication." Dictionary of Law. London: A&C Black, Credo Reference. 10 Mar Web. 8 July Lattimore, T. N. (2012). Reading online: Comparing the student completion frequencies in an instructor-led face-to-face versus online developmental reading course. (Order No , Capella University). ProQuest Dissertations and Theses,, 135. Retrieved from (prod.academic_MSTAR_ ). Moses, W. N., & Ndirangu, M. (2005). An improvement in instructional quality: Can evaluation of teaching effectiveness make a difference? Quality Assurance in Education, 13(3), Retrieved from Instructional Plan Template | Slide 19