Instructional Design Activity: Course Design
Your IDA was evaluated by: Lindsay Wilson Overall Instructor Rating: Satisfactory Ratings explanation:
Instructor's Overall Feedback: Nikhat, You have done an excellent job with this IDA! You have picked a topic that is has a clear set of steps to guide the learner through the process. In your Course Design, you broke the course objective into meaningful and useful units. Your course ICM is designed perfectly following Dr. Rieber's 'top down' theory. You have the objective at the top and the first step at the bottom with each step, which builds on the previous step in the right order. To better follow the learning hierarchy, I would suggest trying to reword your unit 1 objective using the capability verb, 'demonstrate' (ex: SWBAT demonstrate how to create a linear graph...) For Unit 4, I would suggest using the capability verb, 'generate' in you objective (ex: SWBAT generate a graph representing the slope...) You want to make sure that the student is following the hierarchy by first identifying and classifying, demonstrate next and generate (or problem slove) as the last step in their learning. You followed suit with the Unit design. Once again, you have broken the unit down into logical steps and have designed the ICM in a way which shows that you must learn the process in a specific order. You did a great job at showing the prerequisite skills and the same for the verbal requirements. The only problem that I see is your lack of using the learning hierarchy. Recall from course material and according to Gagne, learning happens in a sequential order (identify ->classify ->demonstrate->generate). If you look at the verbs that you use within your obmjectives on your ICMs, you'll find that from beginning to end, your units and lessons do not use these verbs in the sequential order. Excellent work! 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. |