Instructional Design Activity: Course Design
Your IDA was evaluated by: Lindsay Wilson Overall Instructor Rating: Satisfactory Ratings explanation:
Instructor's Overall Feedback: Titus, Your course ICM looks great, but I am not sure if it correlates with the order in which you have written the objectives in ths IDA. The top-down style that Dr. Rieber advocates basically means that the Course objective is at the top with the first unit to be learned at the bottom. Above the first unit, you should have unit 2 and above unit 2 you should have the box for unit 3. The last unit should be above the first few units with an arrow pointing from it to the course objective. (If that does not make sense, draw it out) Make sure you are using the standard capability verbs that Dr. Rieber suggests (identify, classify, demonstrate, generate...) You do not use one in your Unit 1 objective (you do a good job with this elsewhere). On the ICM the unit that it in the Unit 4 place is Unit 1 in your ICM. Since you have placed Units 2 and 3 so that neither needs to be learned before the other, all you need to do is swap the locations on the ICM of Unit 1 and Unit 4. (I feel that I did not do a good job typing that out - it may be confusing to you when you read it - if so, email me so I can attempt to explain it again) I could consider re-wording your lesson 3 objective using the standard capability verbs. I am not sure that 'evaluate' is the best verb to use here. Although you did a good job with your prerequisite and verbal skills required for each step in you unit design, you have the same problem with placement of each lesson as you did with the placement of each unit above. Apply the same advice that I gave you for the course design to your unit design and you'll be in good shape. Again, email me if you have questions! Lindsay
This activity builds on the needs assessment IDA. This IDA is divided into two parts. First, you will design a rough outline of a course. In this context, "course" is defined as an instructional entity, which has both a recognizable start and finish point, and has an organized set of content. It is the most general instructional solution to a problem identified in needs assessment. Second, you will choose one of the units from your course design and design a rough outline of that unit (of course, in the 'real world', you would do this for all of your units). The activity is designed to give you hands-on practice with course- and unit-level task analysis. |