Identify The Learning Objectives: Characteristic Description
Identify The Learning Objectives: Characteristic Description
during the
class time. Then, you can design appropriate learning activities and develop strategies to obtain feedback on student
learning. Having a carefully constructed lesson plan for each 3-hour lesson allows you to enter the classroom with
more confidence and maximizes your chance of having a meaningful learning experience with your students.
A successful lesson plan addresses and integrates three key components:
Learning Objectives
Learning activities
Assessment to check for student understanding
A lesson plan provides you with a general outline of your teaching goals, learning objectives, and means to
accomplish them, and is by no means exhaustive. A productive lesson is not one in which everything goes exactly as
planned, but one in which both students and instructor learn from each other. You may refer to an example of a 3
hour lesson plan here.
Characteristic Description
Clearly stated tasks Free from jargon and complex vocabulary; describe specific and achievable tasks (such as ‘describe’, ‘analyse’ or ‘evaluate’) NOT
vague tasks (like ‘appreciate’, ‘understand’ or ‘explore’).
Important learning goals Describe the essential (rather than trivial) learning in the course which a student must achieve.
Achievable Can be achieved within the given period and sufficient resources are available.
Demonstrable and measurable Can be demonstrated in a tangible way; are assessable; achievement and quality of achievement can be observed.
Fair and equitable All students, including those with disabilities or constraints, have a fair chance of achieving them.
Linked to course and program Consider the broader goals - i.e. course, program and institutional goals.
objectives
The Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy of Educational Objectives (link) is a useful resource for crafting learning objectives
that are demonstrable and measurable.
Many activities can be used to engage learners. The activity types (i.e. what the student is doing) and their examples
provided below are by no means an exhaustive list, but will help you in thinking through how best to design and
deliver high impact learning experiences for your students in a typical lesson.
Interaction with content Drill and Problem/task is presented to students where they
practice are asked to provide the answer; may be timed or
untimed
Students are more likely to retain information presented in these ways if they are asked to interact
with the material in some way. Lecture Convey concepts verbally, often with visual aids
(e.g. presentation slides)
Interaction with others Debate Verbal activity in which two or more differing
viewpoints on a subject are presented and argued
Peer relationships, informal support structures, and teacher-student interactions/relationships
Discussion Formal/informal conversation on a given
topic/question where the instructor facilitates
student sharing of responses to the questions, and
building upon those responses
Problem solving and Critical thinking Case Study Detailed story (true or fictional) that students
analyse in detail to identify the underlying
Presenting students with a problem, scenario, case, challenge or design issue, which they are then principles, practices, or lessons it contains
asked to address or deal with provides students with opportunities to think about or use
knowledge and information in new and different ways Concept Graphical representation of related information in
Mapping which common or shared concepts are linked
together
Real-world Planned set of interrelated tasks to be executed
projects over a fixed period and within certain cost and
other limitations, either individually or
collaboratively
It is important that each learning activity in the lesson must be (1) aligned to the lesson’s learning objectives, (2)
meaningfully engage students in active, constructive, authentic, and collaborative ways, and (3) useful where the
student is able to take what they have learnt from engaging with the activity and use it in another context, or for
another purpose.
Estimate how much time each of the activities will take, then plan some extra time for each
When you prepare your lesson plan, next to each activity indicate how much time you expect it will take
Plan a few minutes at the end of class to answer any remaining questions and to sum up key points
Plan an extra activity or discussion question in case you have time left
Be flexible – be ready to adjust your lesson plan to students’ needs and focus on what seems to be more
productive rather than sticking to your original plan
Check for student understanding and inform subsequent instruction (adjust your teaching accordingly)
Emphasise key information
Tie up loose ends
Correct students’ misunderstandings
Preview upcoming topics
There are several ways in which you can put a closure to the lesson: