Once someone in your audience becomes a student you’ll need to take them from where they are and point them in the right direction to where they need to be.

You can do this by creating “learning objectives” for your course - a critical component in helping people understand what they're learning.

We'll show you how to create them and what to keep in mind while doing so.

Simon
Founder, Coursome

After training thousands of people from all walks of life I have learnt how to simply create enjoyable experience to fill learning needs. Let's take the opportunity to create awesome online courses and make a positive impact on people's lives.

  • Set clear learning objectives to guide students towards achieving course goals.
  • Use Bloom's Taxonomy to define objective complexity, from "remember" to "create."
  • Tailor objectives based on student level; adjust teaching order as needed.
  • Define specific outcomes, helping students understand their progress through actionable goals.

What Are Learning Objectives?

Learning objectives are clear statements of what your students will achieve.

Basically saying ….at the end of this course or module you will be able to “do” something Now how “complex and specific” an objective is, will determine the wording to use. For example to “remember” a cake recipe, would be easier than to “create” a new cake recipe.

A useful tool to help you think through this is Blooms Taxonomy. It classifies learning objectives into steps from easy to difficult …and offers suggested verbs to use.

The steps increasing in complexity are remember, understand, apply, analyse, evaluate and
create.

So applying this to cake recipes. Remember…might be to recall a cake recipe.

  • Understand could be to explain why you need each ingredient and mix them in a certain way.
  • Apply is likely where they’ll make and bake a cake
  • Analyse could be to examine what happens to a cake with different ingredients and techniques.
  • Evaluate might mean to assess ‘why’ different ingredients change a cake.
  • Then create, which could be to develop an entirely new cake recipe

Applying this thinking will help you articulate what you ‘actually’ want your students to achieve.

Now even though there is an order of complexity it doesn’t mean you have to teach in that order. It may make sense to start with “apply” to set the context and then move down to “remember” and “understand”.

Putting it All Together

So coming back to wording learning objectives, atthe end of this course or module you will be able to “do” something. You can replace “do” with an appropriate verb to articulate the objective complexity.

So my cake recipe course learning objective might be: At the end of this course you will be able to “create” any cake that you can image.

Action For You

Take some time to consider what learning objectives you have for your students and we’ll apply this thinking in the next couple of modules when you name your students destination and map their journey to get there.

Refer back here as you create your course name and course outline over the next few modules.

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