Instructional Design Activity: Course Design
Your IDA was evaluated by: Craig Shepherd Overall Instructor Rating: Satisfactory Ratings explanation:
Instructor's Overall Feedback: Overall, your second IDA looks good. I have a few suggestions though so carefully read the notes below.
Your terminal objective is excellent.
I wonder if placing "links" in your first unit objective defeats some of the purpose of the second objective. You may want to combine hyperlink construction into the second unit and leave unit one for simple web page construction including pictures and text.
Your unit 3 objective seems too similar to your terminal objective. It appears that you want students to think about real-life uses for a site and construct one to meet these uses. While this is a noble goal, I think it can be addressed during lessons in the other units. I therefore don't think it is necessary (look at your ICM without it).
Good looking ICM by the way.
While I'm glad to see that you are thinking of prerequisite skills, you are jumping ahead of the process by placing them here. This IDA is concerned with the unit level objectives. Entry level skills are placed in the next IDA where you will indicate entry level and subordinate skills for one unit objective.
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. |