We found 675 results that contain "course design"

Posted on: PREP Matrix
Friday, Aug 30, 2019
Designing A Course
Washington University in St. Louis provides an outline for designing a course that uses the principles of backwards design (meaning that it begins with goals and works backwards to content).
Posted by: Admin
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Posted on: PREP Matrix
Friday, Aug 30, 2019
Course Design
Boston College's Center for Teaching Excellence provides an outline for creating a course that uses the principles of backwards design (meaning that it begins with goals and works backwards to content).
Posted by: Admin
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Posted on: #iteachmsu
Friday, Dec 20, 2024
Interdisciplinary Course Design Resources from CIRCLE
In mid-November, CIRCLE hosted a workshop on interdisciplinary course design and teaching. It was a generative conversation that gave MSU educators interested in interdisciplinary teaching the chance to connect and share resources and tactics. We showcased 2 panelists with experience designing and teaching interdisciplinary courses: Erin Dreelin (Fisheries & Wildlife and Center for Water Studies) and Garth Sabo (Director of the Center for IAH). The panel discussed effective interdisciplinary course design, strategies to address potential challenges, and the potential benefits of interdisciplinary courses for instructors and students.This workshop's goal was for both new and seasoned interdisciplinary educators to move their own practices forward, from classroom strategies to evaluation of interdisciplinary teaching effectiveness. Participants had the opportunity to reflect on their own interdisciplinary teaching philosophies and work on individualized plans for interdisciplinary teaching.You can watch Garth Sabo's panel contribution video below, in which he describes some of his experiences plannign and teaching interdisciplinary courses. You can also access CIRCLE's interdisciplinary teaching resources at this link. Our resources include:



Harden's Ladder of Integration framework for interdisciplinary course design
a handout including the benefits, challenges, and institutional resources to support interdisciplinary teaching
a personalizable planning worksheet that you can print and complete



If you have any questions about interdisciplinary course design, you can contact Ellie Louson, CIRCLE's associate director of interdisciplinary teaching & learning (lousonel@msu.edu), or our panelists Erin Dreelin (dreelin@msu.edu) and Garth Sabo (sabogart@msu.edu). Save the date for our second interdisciplinary teaching & learning workshop, which will focus on co-teaching and collaboration on interdisciplinary teaching teams. It will be held February 14th 10AM-1PM (registration link TBA).If you are interested in further programming from CIRCLE, please apply to become one of our affiliates here: https://research.msu.edu/circle/affiliate-faculty-program  (we accept applications on a rolling basis).
Authored by: Ellie Louson
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Posted on: #iteachmsu
Friday, Nov 2, 2018
Designing Your Course “Backward”
Designing Your Course
The semester will begin soon, and we’re sure you’re busy prepping your course. This design work before the beginning of the semester is an essential part of overall student learning and provides a framework you can respond to as you gather assessment evidence across the semester. As you are designing this week, we want to provide some guidance by sharing “backward design” principles from our Preparing Future Faculty for the Assessment of Student Learning (PFF-ASL) Institute. We’ve found these principles extremely helpful for making sure student learning is always in focus and all elements of our courses are aligned toward our learning outcomes.
Designing Your Course “Backward”
Initially introduced by Wiggins and McTighe (1998), “backward design” for curriculum involves building your course from end-of-course learning outcomes, through evidence you’ll gather out of assessments, and finally to the instructional activities students will engage in to help them learn towards readiness for assessments and meeting learning outcomes. Below, Dr. Cori Fata-Hartley further outlines essential steps of backward design:

https://youtu.be/DTxnTNXPK3g
 
Using Dr. Fata-Hartley’s outlining of backward design principles as our guide, here are four questions to help you this week as you’re designing your course:
Four Questions for Designing Your Course “Backward”
1) What Do You Hope Students Know and Are Able to Do?
This question can help anchor your creation of learning outcomes. We’ve found “Students Will Be Able To” (SWBAT) as a helpful lead-in statement to direct the writing of our learning outcomes. And remember, your learning outcomes should be observable (and thus assessable), which leads to question # two.
2) What Assessment Evidence Will You Gather?
Answering this question allows you to think about how you’ll know if students have met course learning outcomes. Assessments provide the necessary evidence of learning out of which you can make decisions about where you and students are along the way to meeting learning outcomes. 
3) What Learning Experiences Will You Provide for Students?
The learning experiences you plan across your course builds towards the assessments students will do towards learning outcomes. What will students and you engage in at each step along the way? How do these steps lead towards assessments and learning outcomes?
4) Is Your Course Design Aligned?
Tracing across your answers to the previous three questions, you can begin to see whether your course design is aligned. This can allow you to make the necessary revisions towards best alignment and student learning, and keep elements that are already working. This alignment work is a constant process across–and even after–your course as students respond to your design.
 
We’d Like to Know: What are some of the ways you’ve linked learning outcomes, assessments, and learning experiences? How do you respond when you see that some elements of your design aren’t aligned?
 
Wiggins, G., & McTighe, J. (1998). Understanding by Design. Alexandria, Va: Association for Supervision & Curriculum Development.
 

 
Originally posted at “Inside Teaching MSU” (site no longer live): Skogsberg, E. Designing Your Course “Backward”. inside teaching.grad.msu.edu
Posted by: Maddie Shellgren
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Posted on: Teaching Toolkit Tailgate
Thursday, Jul 30, 2020
Designing Your Course “Backward”
Designing Your Course
 
The semester will begin soon, and we’re sure you’re busy prepping your course. This design work before the beginning of the semester is an essential part of overall student learning and provides a framework you can respond to as you gather assessment evidence across the semester. As you are designing this week, we want to provide some guidance by sharing “backward design” principles from our Preparing Future Faculty for the Assessment of Student Learning (PFF-ASL) Institute. We’ve found these principles extremely helpful for making sure student learning is always in focus and all elements of our courses are aligned toward our learning outcomes.
 
Designing Your Course “Backward”
 
Initially introduced by Wiggins and McTighe (1998), “backward design” for curriculum involves building your course from end-of-course learning outcomes, through evidence you’ll gather out of assessments, and finally to the instructional activities students will engage in to help them learn towards readiness for assessments and meeting learning outcomes. In this video, Dr. Cori Fata-Hartley further outlines essential steps of backward design
 

 
Using Dr. Fata-Hartley’s outlining of backward design principles as our guide, here are four questions to help you this week as you’re designing your course:
 
1) What Do You Hope Students Know and Are Able to Do?: This question can help anchor your creation of learning outcomes. We’ve found “Students Will Be Able To” (SWBAT) as a helpful lead-in statement to direct the writing of our learning outcomes. And remember, your learning outcomes should be observable (and thus assessable), which leads to question # two.
 
2) What Assessment Evidence Will You Gather?: Answering this question allows you to think about how you’ll know if students have met course learning outcomes. Assessments provide the necessary evidence of learning out of which you can make decisions about where you and students are along the way to meeting learning outcomes. 
3) What Learning Experiences Will You Provide for Students?: The learning experiences you plan across your course builds towards the assessments students will do towards learning outcomes. What will students and you engage in at each step along the way? How do these steps lead towards assessments and learning outcomes?
 
4) Is Your Course Design Aligned?: Tracing across your answers to the previous three questions, you can begin to see whether your course design is aligned. This can allow you to make the necessary revisions towards best alignment and student learning, and keep elements that are already working. This alignment work is a constant process across–and even after–your course as students respond to your design.
 
Resources
Wiggins, G., & McTighe, J. (1998). Understanding by Design. Alexandria, Va: Association for Supervision & Curriculum Development.
 
Authored by: Erik Skogsberg
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Posted on: PREP Matrix
Friday, Aug 30, 2019
Teaching and Course Design in Higher Education
The Open University provides a free course that focuses on developing teaching skills, managing the demands of academic life, and assessing student learning.
Posted by: Admin
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Posted on: Spring Conference on Teaching & Learning
Friday, Jul 14, 2023
Hyflex Course Design: Creating Accessible Learning Spaces
Title: Hyflex Course Design: Creating Accessible Learning SpacesPresenters: Casey McArdle; Imari Cheyne Tetu (WRAC ); Liza PottsOriginally presented on May 11th, 2023Description:Under “equity” in MSU’s strategic plan, it notes, “We will eliminate barriers to access and success.” If MSU is to uphold this plan and create accessible spaces on campus, it must embrace new pedagogical approaches towards education. One approach that this panel will explore is the hyflex model, where part of a class attends in-person, while another part of the class can attend via remote technologies such as Zoom or Teams. This panel will discuss three courses that have utilized the hyflex model over the past few years to eliminate barriers for student success. These courses are in the Experience Architecture (XA) program, an undergraduate UX degree housed in the College of Arts and Letters. XA has three core principles: usability, accessibility, and sustainability. Our alumni work all over the world as UX designers, UX researchers, project managers, accessibility specialists, product designers, and software developers for companies such as Ford, Rivian, Google, Meta, and Adobe. Upon graduation, many will work in hyflex environments. This course design models best practices for how hyflex interactions might occur in the workplace and lays a foundation of empathy in our students upon graduation. Knowing what it is like to work remotely as well as in the office can give students unique experiences that they can take with them to inform their professional spaces. This panel will directly address how we created accessible hyflex classrooms that are engaging and support student learning. We will explore the practices behind the hyflex model, see various deployments of the model via hardware, software, and pedagogy grounded in accessibility. Attendees will be able to see classroom activities and practices that they can take with them, along with a model of how to deploy the hyflex model in their own classrooms.



Click here to view on MediaSpace
Authored by: Casey McArdle, Imari Cheyne Tetu & Liza Potts
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Posted on: #iteachmsu
Friday, Nov 15, 2019
Online Course Design Case Studies
Earlier this year, I posted on the Hub blog about our experience working with faculty to put their courses online. I shared an infographic of two case studies of how faculty had decided to build their online courses. 
 
Authored by: Breana Yaklin
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