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Build a Syllabus for Learning January 20, 2005 Presenter : Tine Reimers, Director, Center for Effective Teaching and Learning Email: reimers@utep.edu
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The Box is your course: What’s the value added to students? Course Curriculum Students IN Students OUT How have they changed? Faculty Inputs:instruction, mentoring, advising, resources, etc. (Student inputs)
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Key Question How do you want students to be different at the end of your course than at the beginning? (The learning-centered syllabus should answer this question!)
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Course Design for Significant Learning Consideration of Situational Factors Backward Design Integration/alignment of Key Components Integration of Higher Level Learning goals
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Example: A Freshman Seminar Situational factors: Small course—25-30 Required curriculum aims = Critical Thinking and skills preparation for success in college All freshmen—straight out of high school or out of school for many years “Naïve” readers
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Faculty’s “ten year hence” goals (Backward Design, Higher Learning) I want my “students-citizens” to: be able to pick up a news article or a short story or an essay and see how it is written from a particular perspective be critical readers of any text
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Some Course Goals (Backward Design, Higher learning) I want my students to: read a text closely have confidence in their personal understanding of texts be able to identify perspective use evidence to argue a point of view
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For the assignment… (alignment with goals) Students have to Identify two texts Reread the texts several times Digest them for themselves Identify the different perspectives in the texts look for evidence to support their ideas Find an adequate definition or thesis to account for the different way the perspectives work Write a coherent argument that analyzes the two perspectives
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Steps to help students through this (aligned course structure) Close readings as a class, with in-class discussion Regular quizzes that test close understanding of texts First paper is a close reading of just one story or essay Second paper more complex by having them compare two new texts Third paper is a comparison of three texts—they have to add a text to paper #2. Fourth paper = new topic Portfolio approach with midterm and final reflection papers
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Steps to help them through this (support for assignment ) Each paper emailed to faculty member in rough form and reviewed by email Paper rewritten Peer review of papers with written feedback from 3 peers Paper rewritten in final form
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Relate your assignments to your course goals (does the assignment format lead students to do the kinds of activities that you list in your course goals?) Relate your assignments to your 10 year hence goals (are they relevant to the most important things you want students to learn?)
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Course Design Template Identify “situational factors” of the course (material, curriculum, students) Build backward What are long and short term goals? What will indicate success? (evaluated assignments) What teaching and learning activities? (experiences designed to induce change) Integrate All elements of a well-designed course point to long and short-term goals **Integration requires hard choices with regard to material and curriculum!!**
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A Syllabus for Effectively Designed Course… Communicates course goals in terms of what the students will do Describes assignments that are in line with the course goals Communicates the students’ and the teachers’ role and responsibilities within the course Establishes what the pattern of communication will be in the course Gives a semester calendar that shows course logistics, due dates, readings etc.
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