Align Your Course for Adaptability
Purpose: After working through this checklist, instructors will have thought through the design for their course(s) regardless of delivery mode.
Start here:
Ask: five years from now, what do I want my students to remember and use that they learned in my course? This is your overall goal.
Objectives:
Example as follows:
Starter objective: By the end of this course, students will understand the importance of primary research in written work.
Polished objective: By the end of this course, students will be able to conduct primary research and use it appropriately in their written work.
TIP: If you need suggestions for phrasing look up a taxonomy such as Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives; SOLO; 6 Facets of Understanding; or Fink’s Taxonomy of Significant Learning.
TIP: Students may need to reach certain levels of your objectives as well. So a student may need to show differing levels of achieving outcomes such as beginning, developing, or excelling.
Assessments:
TIP: Assessments don’t have to be high-stakes large exams for students to practice retrieving the information that they need to have learned and be able to use. Even low-stakes objectives can tell you what your students know and have learned.
Examples as follows:
Prompt (many more instructions included, but eliminated here for brevity):
Summary of “Sleep deprivation and the development of leadership and need for cognition during the college years.”
Skills assessed (course objectives 1 & 2): Identifying the 11 article parts; summarizing in your own words.
Assignments:
For each assignment, ask yourself the following questions:
At this point, the course objectives, assessments, and assignments should align through rubrics, much like peas align in a pod.
Activities:
As you plan class activities, ask yourself the following questions:
Designing Class Sessions/Modules/Weeks:
As you design each course session/module/week, focus on four activities for each session/module/week. Prepare for adaptability. Consider what students will do with you and away from you.
AWAY: Readings. Make these short if possible. Ensure that they are accessible. Use Open Educational Resources or materials that students can retrieve virtually from the SU Libraries. If you need support, contact your library liaison.
Practices: problems, written assignments or reflections, diagrams, drawings, etc.
WITH OR AWAY: Something to view/hear. Make these short if possible also. Online attention span is about 10-15 minutes.
TIP: If you need to show a film clip in class, be sure that you provide your away students with the timing marks so that they can watch the video on their own devices.
TIP: Use Classroom Assessment Techniques or CATs. Sample techniques are available on Answers under the Summer Online Course Checklist.
WITH OR AWAY: Something to discuss. When students use new information or skills, they are more likely to encode that new information in their minds and to remember it. Discussion can help them to do exactly that. As you set up discussions, keep in mind the following best practices:
TIP: If you allow students to discuss using chat or discussion boards, set thresholds for the kinds of writing you will accept. Will you allow text abbreviations, for example? Gifs? Emojis?
WITH OR AWAY: Something to do. Help students know how to use the information that you’re giving them along the way. Consider some of these ideas as a way to see how students are processing the information:
Suggestions and directions for some techniques can be found here.
Running Class Sessions:
These class sessions will be demanding on your mental bandwidth, so try to have a plan for each class session.
The beginning of the semester will be your golden moment. You get it once.
TIP: Once you establish how your course works, do NOT change it unless you have total student revolt for where to find the materials and activities.
TIP: Have students make suggestions regarding what they believe you need to cover in the class session. If possible, incorporate these suggestions in your agenda.
Bonus TIP: If possible, group students by threes for note-taking. These notes can be shared between group members in order to ensure that students have accurate knowledge of the content and skills covered.