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Writing Objectives

Writing Objectives. Rationale and Strategies. Session Goals. Appreciate the value of writing clear and measurable behavioral objectives. Re-evaluate objectives they have written and work to enhance them.

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Writing Objectives

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  1. Writing Objectives Rationale and Strategies

  2. Session Goals • Appreciate the value of writing clear and measurable behavioral objectives. • Re-evaluate objectives they have written and work to enhance them. • Make additional efforts to enhance the congruency of: Objectives, Learning Activities, and Test Items.

  3. Session Objectives • State the definition of a behavioral objective. • List the three components of a behavioral objective. • List three purposes which behavioral objectives serve. • State a rationale for writing behavioral objectives. • Describe a strategy for writing behavioral objectives. • Describe how to increase the congruency among: objectives, learning activities, and evaluation

  4. Model for Designing Instruction Needs Assess Learner Characteristics Evaluation & Feedback Goals Support & Logistics & Revise Objectives T & L Activities Content Pre & Post Assessment

  5. Goals and Objectives Goals = Objectives

  6. Goals • Definition • A statement that describes in broadterms what the learner will do. • Example • Students will gain an appreciation and understanding of the value of applying family systems theory to the real world of patient care.

  7. Objectives • Definition • A statement in specificand measurable terms that describes what the learner will know or be able to do. • Example • Students will be able to construct a three generation genogram with a patient in the office setting within a 5 minute time frame and explain how the information potentially impacts on the patient’s care.

  8. Comparison • Goal • Students will gain an appreciation and understanding of the value of applying family systems theory to the real world of patient care. • Objective • Students will be able to construct a three generation genogram with a patient in the office setting within a 5 minute time frame and explain how the information potentially impacts on the patient’s care.

  9. Parts of an Objective • Measurable verb • Construct • Explain • Criteria • 3 generation genogram • Within 5 minutes • Conditions • In the office setting with patient

  10. Measurable Verbs • Know the purposes of behavioral Objectives. • State the purposes of behavioral objectives. • Understand the difference between goals and objectives. • Describe the difference between goals and objectives.

  11. Terms: Sources of Confusion • Behavioral Objectives • Instructional Objectives • Educational Objectives • Terminal Objectives • Outcomes • Objectives • Aims • Intents • Objections

  12. Rationale • Purposes • Guide for the teacher • Guide for learner • Basis for dialogue • Basis for evaluation • Makes curriculum explicit • Makes curriculum analysis/evaluation possible

  13. Domains • Cognitive (knowing) • Psychomotor (doing) • Affective (feeling)

  14. Evaluation • Knowledge Levels of Cognition • Bloom’s Taxonomy • Knowledge (verbal recall) • Comprehension • Application • Analysis • Synthesis • Evaluation

  15. Levels of Objectives • What is the level of this objective? • Participants will be able to name the three parts of a behavioral objective. • What is the level of this objective? • Participants will be able to write a behavioral objective that contains a measurable verb, condition, and criteria.

  16. Specificity and Level • No So Specific: • The learner will be able to: orally present a new patient's case • More Specific: • The learner will be able to: orally present a new patient's case in a logical sequence (SOAP), chronologically developing the present illness, summarizing the pertinent positive and negative findings as well as the differential diagnosis and plans for further testing and treatment.

  17. Writing Process • Start with the bigger goal in mind. • Write the objective in general but measurable terms. • Think about the learning context. • Think about how you want to measure it. • Rewrite to make the objective more specific and check it for measurable verb, meaningful conditions, and meaningful criteria. • Share it with a colleague for feedback. • Rewrite to further clarify.

  18. Creating the Magic Triangle Teaching/Learning Activities Evaluation Objectives

  19. Not So Magic Triangle Teaching/Learning Activities Objectives Evaluation

  20. The End

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