Good Reads: Designing Your Courses around Student Learning Goals
Planning your winter term courses over the break? Hoping your students will turn in stronger final essays and exams than the ones you just finished grading? Much research on learning and teaching suggests you can start getting them on the right path now, by designing your syllabus around student learning goals. Here are a couple of online resources about applying the principles of "Backward Design" to the planning of college courses.
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In this ProfHacker blog post from The Chronicle of Higher Education, literature professor Mark Sample offers a short, simple introduction to Backward Design, discussing his shift from asking the conventional question "what should my students read this term?" to considering instead, "what do I want them to learn?" - Vanderbilt University's Center for Teaching provides this overview of Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe's influential book Understanding by Design and provides links to resources that assist instructors in applying the book's principles in their course planning. (The full book is available electronically through the U-M library system to authenticated users.)
CRLT also offers a range of resources to help you build your syllabus on our Course Design and Planning page.
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