This course is a freshman experience course titled KSU 1101 Freshman Experience: Knowledge is Power! I expect enrollment of 20 - 25 students, all freshmen. The course will be delivered in person in a computer lab so students can get hands-on practice. These students are freshmen, and they are usually the same age (17-19). I could expect to get a few returning or older students in my course; however this is unlikely for this type of course. These students were born in the "digital" age, so they may feel they already know about information, about technology, and so on. However, they may have never been asked to critically evaluate information, or challenged to think about it in new ways. Their goals are probably to take the course, and get it over with -- it's often seen as a "blow off course" by students. Preferred learning styles are definitely working with technology, working with groups. My main goal is to teach transferable, life-long information literacy skills and concepts.
Your learning outcomes. These should be based on the needs and expectations of your environment. Are these outcomes appropriate for your learners? [from week 2]
A year (or more) after this course is over, I want and hope that students will apply skills and ideas learned in this course to their current coursework, and use these skills to solve real-world problems.
Here are three examples of learning outcomes for my course:
SWBAT...
1. Explain how information plays a role in their life in order to make decisions about how to use/create/consume information.
2. Classify various types of information in order to determine the authority and validity of a source.
3. Verify an information source in order to use the source to solve a problem.How will you assess your learners? What formative and summative assessments would best fit in your teaching scenario? Do they align with your outcomes? [from week 2]
Criteria 1 Students will be able to analyze social media reviews of apartment in order to decide where to live.
Aligns with outcomes 1 & 3
Standard 1 Student will show they eliminated fake, unhelpful, or inappropriate reviews from their search.
Standard 2 Student will show they used a variety of websites (social media, news, apartment sites) to make their decision.
Criteria 2 Students will be able to design a budget around maintaining an apartment and city lifestyle.
Aligns with outcome 1
Standard 1 Student will show they identified various factors that go into their monthly budget -- rent, rental insurance, utilities, fees, groceries, and so on.
Standard 2 Student will itemize their budget and show me a monthly breakdown of what it costs to live in their city of choice.Learning theories and other instructional approaches to implement. What learning theories best support your outcomes? How might you leverage these theories to develop content and assessments? [from week 3]
The learning theory that has always appealed to me is constructivism. This theory is particularly appropriate for the course I am designing because I want to teach my students higher order thinking skills via active learning strategies. I believe in the constructivist principle that states learning happens when students are able to create meaning from experiences. The Cooperstein and Kocevar-Weidinger article states "In order to make knowledge useful in a new situation, students must make a deliberate effort to make sense of the information that comes to them. [...] They must manipulate, discover, and create knowledge to fit their belief systems."
I will leverage this theory to develop content and assessments by designing activities in which students are put into the driver's seat of their own learning. I will try to eliminate passivity in the classroom to have students analyze, evaluate, and create information of their own.What tools will you use to deliver this content and have learners interact with your instruction? What might work best and why? [from week 4]
I really like the idea of using video and podcast tools (jing, iMovie, softchalk, voicethread) for student activities. Instead of the traditional paper writing, I will have students use multimedia tools to explain, analyze, and create products. I think this will work well because it forces the students to step out of their comfort zone, and for those who do not enjoy papers, it will get them to do something more active and collaborative.Reflect on what you have learned. What has been most useful? What do you feel you are still struggling with? How has this course changed how you approach instruction?
Thinking about a course holistically has been really helpful. It is challenging to design a course anyway, but I like to work through it backwards, like we did in this course. I think I will design a more effective course because I am putting the student in the center and working out from there. Keeping the student in mind means that I will focus on their needs and learning instead of my own teaching. This is changing how I approach instruction because it is taking me out of my comfort zone. I am super excited to take some risks when it comes to student learning. I've also come up with some good ideas on applying the new framework to my instruction. I think I am still struggling with feeling overwhelmed by putting together a course. It is such a big undertaking, and I want to make sure students are getting a lot out of it. But I think the old adage is true -- I have to put this into practice, assess, revise, and practice some more!Finally, did you find any of your coursemates' blogs particularly helpful? Link to any particularly useful posts or entire blogs from your peers. What have you learned from your peers?
My peers have been very helpful in offering helpful criticism of my activities. They challenge me to go deeper, and to remember crucial things about students. A few of my classmates' blogs have been particularly insightful including Amanda Burch's blog.
