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When planning my courses, I usually try to establish a variety of objectives, beyond the primary objective described in the course description, and layer many minor objectives into the lessons. Courses for freshmen tend to have more objectives, as they are often learning about the requirements of being a student at college.

DuringAs an example, in a particular course called "History of New Orleans", students need to develop various aspectsI would focus on these objectives:

  • content (e.g. know major events in New Orleans' history)
  • cultural understanding (e.g. develop affinity/understanding of the perspective of different peoples in New Orleans)
  • vocabulary (e.g. academic meta-vocabulary, terms specific to the content)
  • research skills (e.g. assessing bias in sources, writing a works cited)
  • practice with technological tools to assist (e.g. software for accessing historical records)
  • group work skills (e.g. effectively combining work)
  • academic behavior (e.g. learn that plagiarism is not welcome in college)

I have seen tools such as Bloom's Taxonomy, however, that seems too narrowly focused on the course topic and does not seem to broadly cover many of the skills I've listed above. I want to find some table/system/taxonomy to help me to identify and organize the objectives.

Is there a system to assist course instructors in selecting course objectives?

When planning my courses, I usually try to establish a variety of objectives, beyond the primary objective described in the course description, and layer many minor objectives into the lessons. Courses for freshmen tend to have more objectives, as they are often learning about the requirements of being a student at college.

During a particular course, students need to develop various aspects:

  • content (e.g. know major events in New Orleans' history)
  • cultural understanding (e.g. develop affinity/understanding of the perspective of different peoples in New Orleans)
  • vocabulary (e.g. academic meta-vocabulary, terms specific to the content)
  • research skills (e.g. assessing bias in sources, writing a works cited)
  • practice with technological tools to assist (e.g. software for accessing historical records)
  • group work skills (e.g. effectively combining work)
  • academic behavior (e.g. learn that plagiarism is not welcome in college)

I have seen tools such as Bloom's Taxonomy, however, that seems too narrowly focused on the course topic and does not seem to broadly cover many of the skills I've listed above. I want to find some table/system/taxonomy to help me to identify and organize the objectives.

Is there a system to assist course instructors in selecting course objectives?

When planning my courses, I usually try to establish a variety of objectives, beyond the primary objective described in the course description, and layer many minor objectives into the lessons. Courses for freshmen tend to have more objectives, as they are often learning about the requirements of being a student at college.

As an example, in a course called "History of New Orleans", I would focus on these objectives:

  • content (e.g. know major events in New Orleans' history)
  • cultural understanding (e.g. develop affinity/understanding of the perspective of different peoples in New Orleans)
  • vocabulary (e.g. academic meta-vocabulary, terms specific to the content)
  • research skills (e.g. assessing bias in sources, writing a works cited)
  • practice with technological tools to assist (e.g. software for accessing historical records)
  • group work skills (e.g. effectively combining work)
  • academic behavior (e.g. learn that plagiarism is not welcome in college)

I have seen tools such as Bloom's Taxonomy, however, that seems too narrowly focused on the course topic and does not seem to broadly cover many of the skills I've listed above. I want to find some table/system/taxonomy to help me to identify and organize the objectives.

Is there a system to assist course instructors in selecting course objectives?

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Village
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  • 12
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  • 125

Is there a comprehensive taxonomysystem for identifying course objectives?

Source Link
Village
  • 12.6k
  • 12
  • 77
  • 125

Is there a comprehensive taxonomy for identifying course objectives?

When planning my courses, I usually try to establish a variety of objectives, beyond the primary objective described in the course description, and layer many minor objectives into the lessons. Courses for freshmen tend to have more objectives, as they are often learning about the requirements of being a student at college.

During a particular course, students need to develop various aspects:

  • content (e.g. know major events in New Orleans' history)
  • cultural understanding (e.g. develop affinity/understanding of the perspective of different peoples in New Orleans)
  • vocabulary (e.g. academic meta-vocabulary, terms specific to the content)
  • research skills (e.g. assessing bias in sources, writing a works cited)
  • practice with technological tools to assist (e.g. software for accessing historical records)
  • group work skills (e.g. effectively combining work)
  • academic behavior (e.g. learn that plagiarism is not welcome in college)

I have seen tools such as Bloom's Taxonomy, however, that seems too narrowly focused on the course topic and does not seem to broadly cover many of the skills I've listed above. I want to find some table/system/taxonomy to help me to identify and organize the objectives.

Is there a system to assist course instructors in selecting course objectives?