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Curriculum and Instructional Design
Lesson Plans and Learning Objectives
Education Textbooks Boundless Education Curriculum and Instructional Design Lesson Plans and Learning Objectives
Education Textbooks Boundless Education Curriculum and Instructional Design
Education Textbooks Boundless Education
Education Textbooks
Education
Concept Version 5
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Creating Learning Objectives

A learning objective is a short statement of the goals and objectives that students should know or be able to put into practice after a lesson.

Key Points

    • Large-scale learning objectives will be articulated in a teacher's curriculum guide, but it is up to each individual teacher to formulate learning objectives for individual lesson plans.
    • In the middle of the twentieth century, a committee chaired by Benjamin Bloom created a well-known taxonomy of learning objectives.
    • Benjamin Bloom's learning objectives are built on the following template: VERB [which refers to a particular cognitive process] + OBJECT [which refers to the knowledge students are expected to acquire or construct].

Term

  • learning objective

    Any fact, technique or other outcome that a student is expected to learn or achieve at the end of a specific course of instruction


Full Text

A learning objective is a short statement of the goals and objectives that students should know or be able to put into practice after a lesson. Focusing on what students should know is frequently called the "cognitive" approach, focusing on what students should be able to do the "behavioral" approach. While most teachers are, by temperament, drawn to one of the two approaches, in practices most teachers often combine the two, perhaps without knowing it.

Large-scale learning objectives will be articulated in a teacher's curriculum guide, but it is up to each individual teacher to formulate learning objectives for individual lesson plans. Teachers must find a way to disaggregate a large-scale learning objective (of the sort found in a curriculum guide) into a number of individual objectives.

In the middle of the twentieth century, a committee chaired by Benjamin Bloom created a well-known taxonomy of learning objectives. His learning objectives are built on the following template: VERB [which refers to a particular cognitive process] + OBJECT [which refers to the knowledge students are expected to acquire or construct]. The verbs themselves form a series which moves from relatively low-level cognitive processes like "remembering" toward high-level processes like "creating. " A low-order learning objective, then, would be formed by joining a verb associated with "remembering" to the content to be acquired: "identify [VERB] the five major steps of photosynthesis [OBJECT]. " A high-order learning objective, by contrast, would be formed by joining a verb associated with "creating" to the content to be acquired: "generate [VERB] a visual representation of photosynthesis within a plant cell [OBJECT]. "

As is evident from the above example, Bloom's taxonomy includes verbs associated with both the "cognitive" and "behavioral" approach. The committee Bloom chaired, in fact, created the taxonomy with the aim of designing a more holistic form of education.

Bloom's Rose

Bloom's wheel, according to the Bloom's verbs and matching assessment types. The verbs are intended to be feasible and measurable.

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