Instructional Design Activity: Course Design
Your IDA was evaluated by: Lindsay Wilson Overall Instructor Rating: Satisfactory Ratings explanation:
Instructor's Overall Feedback: Rachel, You seem to understand this part of the instructional design process very well. Your ICMs are clear and concise. Remember to use the "SWBAT" model for your objectives (it's a good habit and it helps maintain consistency) - see your Unit 1 and 2 objectives and lesson 1-3 objectives. A suggestion for Unit 4 objective: use the word, ‘demonstrate’ instead of ‘execute.’ I say this because the students will only be graded on a demonstration of an interview and not a 'real' interview. In a ‘real’ interview, they will be 'executing' what they had learned in the course. It seems that in order to follow the learning hierarchy, it would best to use the capability verb, 'identify' in place of generate for your Unit 1 objective. 'Generate' means that some problem solving has taken place and I don't think that is the case at this point in the course. Course ICM - I am not the one designing the course, and I think, depending on how the information is presented, it could be done correctly either way but consider the following: You have designed your ICM in a way which states that you MUST complete Unit 1 before moving on to Unit 2. In other words, the skills used in Unit 1 will be built upon in Unit 2 and the skills in Unit 2 will be built upon in Unit 3. I feel that each of these units is independent of each other. You could learn interview attire before learning about questions to be asked at an interview. The way to show in your ICM so that there is no particular order in which the units are learned is to arrange them in a horizontal fashion with each unit pointing upwards toward the course objective. Unit ICM - You have listed the same objective for lesson 2 and 3. Another minor note: we typically identify the entry level behaviors by drawing a horizontal line and placing those behaviors below the line. Were you going to include and attitudinal domain to the right of the unit objective? That box is blank. Great job on this one!
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. |