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Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

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Page 1: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments

Heather Macdonald

What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish

in your courses?

Page 2: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

What makes an activity or assignment successful?

Page 3: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

How Do Students Learn 1?

• They learn by actively participating– Observing, speaking, writing, listening,

thinking, drawing, doing

• They must be engaged to learn– Learning is enhanced when students see

potential implications, applications, and benefits to others

• Learning builds on current understanding

How People Learn (NRC, 1999)

Page 4: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Learning Styles

How does the person prefer to process information?

• Actively – through engagement in physical activity or discussion

• Reflectively – through introspection

Questionnaire - Barbara Soloman & Richard Felder

http://www.engr.ncsu.edu/learningstyles/ilsweb.html

Thanks to Robyn Dunbar and Jeremy Sobel, Stanford University Center for Teaching and Learning

Page 5: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Your Learning Styles (n=49)

For comparison: Active 60%; Reflective 40%

-11 -9 -7 -5 -3 -1 1 3 5 7 9 11

Active Reflective

Page 6: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Learning Styles

What type of information does the person preferentially perceive?

• Sensory – sights, sounds, physical sensations, data …

• Intuitive – memories, ideas, models, abstract…

Page 7: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Your Learning Styles

For comparison: Sensing 65%; Intuitive 35%

-11 -9 -7 -5 -3 -1 1 3 5 7 9 11

Sensing Intuitive

Page 8: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Learning Styles

Through which modality is sensory information most effectively perceived?

• Visual – pictures, diagrams, graphs, demonstrations, field trips

• Verbal – sounds, written and spoken words, formulas

Page 9: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Your Learning Styles

For comparison: Visual 80%; Verbal 20%

-11 -9 -7 -5 -3 -1 1 3 5 7 9 11

Visual Verbal

Page 10: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Learning Styles

How does the person progress toward understanding?

• Sequentially – in logical progression of small incremental steps

• Globally – in large jumps, holistically

Page 11: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Your Learning Styles

For comparison: Sequential 60%; Global 40%

-11 -9 -7 -5 -3 -1 1 3 5 7 9 11

Sequential Global

Page 12: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

How Do Students Learn 2?

• Different people are most comfortable learning in different ways

• Multiple representations enhance the learning of all students

Page 13: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Context for Today’s Sessions

• Consider your teaching goals in designing courses• Active engagement is important for learning• Students have different learning styles

Expand your “toolbox” of teaching strategies

Most students most students passive active

Page 14: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Developing a Course: Different Strategies

• Content-centered– What will I cover?

• Learner-centered– What will they learn?

Page 15: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

One Course Design Process

• Consider course context and audience• Articulate your goals and objectives• Evaluate content options• Select teaching strategies and design

assignments/class activities/labs• Develop assessments

Cutting Edge Course Design Tutorial – Barb Tewksbury

http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/coursedesign/tutorial/index.html

Page 16: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Consider Course Context and Audience

• Context of course? – Pre-requisites?– General education course? – Course for majors?– Required course? Elective

course? • Characteristics of course?• What are your students

like?

Page 17: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Articulate Your Goals I: Overarching Goals

• What do you want students to be able to do as a result of having taken your course? – What kinds of problems do you want them to

be able to tackle? – How might students apply what they have

learned in the future?

Page 18: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Focus on goals that involve higher-order thinking skills

Bloom’s Taxonomy

Taxonomy of Educational Objectives (1956)

KnowledgeComprehension

Application

AnalysisSynthesis

Evaluation

Page 19: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Writing Goals

• Use verbs that indicate your goals extend beyond recalling, reciting, or explaining what was covered in class– Interpret, construct, formulate, solve, analyze, predict

• “recognizing plate boundaries” vs.

“being able to interpret tectonic setting based on information on physiography, seismicity, and volcanic activity”

Page 20: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Two Comments• Translate fuzzy language into skills –

observable/measurable Students will learn to appreciate their natural surroundings. What does that mean? What could students do to show they have mastered this objective?

• Focus on higher-order learning skills: analyze, synthesize, interpret

Some examples

Page 21: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Some Examples of Goals

I want students to be able to:

• use characteristics of rocks and surficial features in an area to analyze the geologic history

• interpret unfamiliar geologic maps and construct cross sections

• analyze unfamiliar areas and assess geologic hazards (different than recalling those done in class)

• predict the weather given appropriate meteorological data

• design computer models of geologic processes

Page 22: Teaching Goals, Learning Styles, and Activities/Assignments Heather Macdonald What are your teaching goals? What do you hope to accomplish in your courses?

Consider A Course That You Will Be Teaching

• What are your goals? – When students have completed

my course, I want them to be able to: