5. Definitions and underlying concepts Outcomes are the achieved results of what was learned. They are the evidence that learning has taken place. Outcomes are the abilities or products students have shown after instruction. Outcomes are what teachers will assess .
6. Definitions and underlying concepts A student learning outcome is “a specific statement that describes the knowledge, skills/abilities, or attitudes that students are expected to learn upon successful completion of a course of study, such as a course, seminar, or certification program.” (Wood, 2008)
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9. TESOL presentation rubric The proposal abstract is well written and provides an explicit statement of participant outcomes and how they will be achieved. Excellent The proposal abstract is clearly written and provides a general statement of participant outcomes and how they will be achieved. Good The proposal abstract is adequately written and includes a statement of participant outcomes, but needs more detail Satisfactory The abstract gives some ideas about outcomes, but needs to specify how they will be reached during the presentation Fair The proposal abstract needs work on sentence structure and fails to give outcomes Poor Clarity of proposal and participant outcomes Evaluation criteria
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13. What does a good student learning outcome look like? S M A R T tudent-centered easurable ction-oriented esults-driven ailored to specific programs
14. What does a good student learning outcome look like? Not too broad
15. What does a good student learning outcome look like? Not too narrow
16. Uses strong, clear, concrete verbs such as those found in Bloom’s Taxonomy. What does a good student learning outcome look like?
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20. What does a good student learning outcome look like? Uses parallel language
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23. What does a good student learning outcome look like? Makes it clear: by when? End of course or program vs. beginning placement
24. What does a good student learning outcome look like? Make sure that the outcome is measurable.
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29. The process of developing learning outcomes Dealing with resistance
33. Download copies of the handout and PowerPoint slides at www.joemcveigh.org/resources Thank you !
Notes de l'éditeur
Think first of the final outcome. What do you want students to be able to do? Decide what ACCEPTABLE EVIDENCE will be that they reach the outcome.NEXT think of what they will need to learn. What GAPS in knowledge do they have? What do I need to teach them? How will I teach. PLAN the learning experiences. British Council--clear explanation