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Learning objectives are explicit statements that provide a
context for what will be learned. They are based
on measureable goals or outcomes. In
the absence of a test to measure what learning occurs during an
educational activity, providers of education cannot legitimately
claim that attendees will learn or understand
the information present.
There are discipline-specific (knowledge, skills, attitudes, and
behaviors) and non-discipline-specific (communication and
presentation skills, moral values, ethics) objectives.
Objectives can help students clarify their personal goals for a
course and give them a framework against which to measure their
success. Articulated objectives can reduce student anxiety
and improve a student's studying effectiveness. Objectives
need to be organized so they are useful to the students and the
instructor. To accomplish this, objectives need to be written as
student outcome statements.
Within the ADDIE model for professional development
(Analysis/Design/Development/Implementation/Evaluation) writing the
learning objectives is where the design and development of
educational program begins. Once the designer established the
desired outcomes, he or she can begin the development of a
meaningful educational experience.
According to Bob Diamond in Designing and Improving Courses and
Curricula in Higher Education (p. 131), objectives must be
written to answer the question, "What must the student do to prove
that she/he has succeeded?" or "What should a student be able to do
as a consequence of instruction"? This means writing
statements that are clear, concise, and concrete (open to limited
interpretation.)
When objectives are written in this way, they can be used to
evaluate whether student outcomes are met and whether the
instructor successfully taught the material.
Use Verb(s) that Describes an
Observable Action
A description of the conditions under which this action takes place
("When given x, you will be able to...")
The level of acceptable performance (i.e., what percentage of
correct answers will be considered acceptable, how many errors will
be permitted, how many and which examples must be included, and so
on)
Click here to find a page of sample
action verbs.
Writing the Learning
Objective
Based on Robert Magars behavioral objectives, write the
learning objective in outcome-based language:
- Performance to be completed (2)
- Under what condition (1)
- Against what criterion (3)
Preparing Instructional Objectives Fearon, 1961.
Sample Learning
Objective
Using1 the ANSI A108/A118/A136-1999 American National
Standard Specifications for the installation of ceramic tile, the
participant will be able to research, evaluate, and select
appropriate2 bonding and grouting materials for successful3 tile
installation.
Your
Turn! Write a Learning Objective
Performance to be completed:
Under what condition:
Against what criterion:
NEXT: Learn to write
more advanced learning objectives.
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