Transcript
Page 1: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Help Students Navigate your Courses and

Programs with Backward Design

Massachusetts PKAL Regional Network

2018 Winter MeetingThomas P. Kling

January 10, 2018

Page 2: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Session Objectives

•Backward Design: What Is It?•Apply Backward Design to a course

• Identify how a course fits into the arc of a student’s progression • Identify “pressure points” in meeting course learning outcomes

•Apply Backward Design to a Program

Page 3: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Student Success FrameworkBackward Design as an application of Inclusive Excellence

Page 4: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Our goals in higher education . . .

Page 5: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Approaches based on Equality

Page 6: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Approaches based on Equity

Page 7: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Backwards Design with Scaffolding:an equity based approach

Page 8: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Backward Design Applications

• An entire program• A single course• A single assignment

. . . all three

Page 9: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Course Level ConsiderationsLooking at how the end of a class influences the middle and the beginning.

Page 10: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Identify Role of the Course◦ Consider a single course where students’ learning is not what you want it to be. Ask:◦ Where is this a course in the student’s curriculum? How does it

stand in relation to other courses, as a foundation, middle or capstone experience?◦ What are the skills or ways of thinking developed in this

course, and how do those relate to a student’s development?◦ Given your course’s placement and the entry level of your

students, how does that impact your thinking about outcomes and assignments?

Page 11: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Course “Pressure Points”◦ Consider a single course where students’ learning is not what you want it to be. Ask:◦ In my experience, which learning outcome or objective do

students struggle with the most?◦ How have I asked students to demonstrate of mastery of this

outcome?◦ Given my course placement, and the pressure points in the

course, what will I do to enable their success?

Page 12: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Principles of Backward Design� Backward Design translates instructor’s

knowledge into course-level effectiveness.

� Look at the final end-point, and determine what students need to learn to get there.

� The quality of our assignments determines our effectiveness.

� Scaffold assignments to build student competency.

Page 13: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Backward Design

Fundamentally requires some changes in

� Technique

� Underlying Philosophy

Page 14: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Outcomes Pressure Points Redux

� Consider the outcomes you identified earlier.

Ask:◦ Where are my students taught these skills?◦ If in a previous class, what refreshers do they need?◦ If in my class, how to I integrate that skill and make its

use explicit in my assignments/class?◦ If they really aren’t taught it anywhere, why not? And

how do I add it to my assignments/class?

Page 15: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Reflection and Discussion

� With a partner, review/discuss the outcomes & pressure points you’ve identified in your course and the assignments you currently use to measure mastery.

� What strategies/revisions can you use to strengthen those outcomes?

Page 16: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Program Level ConsiderationsLooking at how classes fit together to meet overall objectives.

Page 17: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Program ObjectivesConsider your primary program in which you are involved. Ask:

◦ What are the primary objectives of my program?

or,

◦ What are the things students who graduate from my program are expected to know, or be able to do?

Page 18: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Program “Pressure Points”For you program, ask:

◦ In my experience, which objective do students struggle with the most?◦ How are students asked to demonstrate of mastery of this

outcome?◦ Where in the program is this objective addressed?

The critical question:

◦ If the problem is that one course isn’t doing its job, is the issue with that one course, or with some sequence culminating in that course?

Page 19: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Reflection and Discussion

� With a partner, review/discuss the outcomes & pressure points you’ve identified in your program, the courses where these are addressed, and the ways you currently measure mastery.

� At what level, or in what sequence can you best intervene?

� What strategies/revisions can you use to strengthen your program?

Page 20: Help Students Navigate your Courses and Programs with ... · Further Reading Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe.Understanding

Further Reading

� Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001.

� Wiggins, G., & J. McTighe. Understanding by Design. Expanded 2nd edition. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 2005. Web site: http://www.ascd.org.

� Nilson, Linda B. Teaching at Its Best: A Research-Based Resource for College Instructors. Third edition. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2010.


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