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Course Design and Learning Outcomes

Course Learning Outcomes: Examples

Chemistry 103

Below are a list of original and revised Course Learning Outcomes for Chemistry 103.

As you click though the differences between the revised and unrevised CLO’s, note the presence of verbs, measurability, and student-centered language.

Example:

Before After
Gain understanding in a breadth of basic chemical concepts and principles. Describe fundamental chemical concepts and principles, including: measurement, characterization of the phases of matter, properties of atoms and ions, stoichiometry and thermochemistry of chemical reactions, kinetic molecular theory, the nature of energy, chemical bonding and molecular geometry, and intermolecular forces.

 

Specific and Measurable

Uses clear, action-oriented, and measurable language
 Gives a framework for how the work will be evaluated

Course Content

Provides an overview of the course subject matter
Illuminates why the course is relevant
Differentiate this course from other similar courses

Active and Inclusive

Defines expectations for the primary skills of that discipline (eg. design thinking, statistical analysis, lab safety, speculative writing, artifact creation)
Provides clear expectations for interactions, integrity, respect, and responsibility for learning
Encourages student interactions that exemplify empathy and humility

Learning Sciences in the 21st century

Explains how students will engage in purposeful action and inquiry in that discipline
Encourages intellectual confidence through authentic learning practices (i.e. self-reflection, self-direction, personalization, collaboration, independence, integration, interdisciplinary)
Supports development of relentless curiosity through experimentation, critical thinking, innovation, risk-taking, and knowledge creationStudent and Instructor Interests

Student and Instructor Interests

Reflects the instructors’ priorities
Provides opportunity for students to address their interests and priorities
Intersects the instructor, student, and content priorities

University Standards

Begin with a verb (exclude any introductory text and the phrase “Students will…”, as this is assumed)
Limit the length of each learning outcome to 400 characters
Exclude special characters (e.g., accents, umlats, ampersands, etc.)
Exclude special formatting (e.g., bullets, dashes, numbering, etc.)

 

Action

Based on the above checklist, evaluate the extent to which the learning outcomes meet criteria for each category \ (on a scale from 1-3):

 1   2   3  CLOs are specific and measurable
 1   2   3  CLOs address course content
 1   2   3  CLOs encourage active and inclusive learning practices
 1   2   3  CLOs integrate learning sciences in the 21st century
 1   2   3  CLOs incorporate student and instructor interests
 1
 2
 3
CLOs meet University standards

License

REACH at UW–Madison Copyright © by Daniel Pell; Kathleen O'Connell; Margene Anderson; Sarah Miller; and Theresa Pesavento. All Rights Reserved.

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