Instructional Design Activity: Course Design
Your IDA was evaluated by: Lloyd Rieber Overall Instructor Rating: Satisfactory Ratings explanation:
Instructor's Overall Feedback: Your course was well thought out. Your overall course structure looks good, but it's difficult for me to give specific feedback because you did not seem to use the standard capability verbs (generate, demonstrate, identify, etc.) in each objective consistently to make it clear what learning outcome you are aiming for. You do use these verbs in places, but I'm not sure you used them according to how we defined them. For example, in your Unit 1 objective you indicate "identify and generate" which implies both concept learning and problem-solving in the same objective, which does not make sense according to the notion of a learning hierarchy (review the book for this). I think it is just a matter of using the right vocabulary and getting practice stating these things (it's not easy, I know). But, do me a favor and review carefully the rules for a learning hierarchy -- violations of this are not allowed.
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. |