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Intensive Courses—Requirements and Design

Posted on January 23, 2014 by Ryan Torma

A number of seminaries, such as Luther Seminary and Bethel Seminary, are developing intensive courses, which bring students on-campus for face-to-face learning for one to two weeks at a time. Instead of 3 hours per week for fifteen weeks, an intensive course might meet up-to 8 hours per day over the course of 5 days.

Designing and teaching courses in this format presents a number of significant challenges….

 

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Filed Under: SemTech, SemTrends Tagged With: accreditation, Association of Theological Schools, ATS, Bethel Seminary, course design, distance learning, Educational and Degree Program Standards, FDCR, Higher Learning Commission, hybrid, Intensives, learning outcomes, Luther Seminary, Masters of Divinity, MDiv, Ryan Torma, seminary

More Backward Course Design: Getting Learning Done!

Posted on August 1, 2013 by A+ Brooke Lester, Curator

Imagine yourself at term’s end, talking with a sympathetic faculty colleague, or with a partner or family member. Your head is full of final papers or exams, ranging from exceptional to disappointing, and you cry out, “Argh! I just want them to ‘get’ that…(your rant here)!”

If you can complete that sentence, then you have all you need for a start on “backward course design,” an idea fundamental to the widely-used framework Understanding by Design (book by McTighe and Wiggins), and having some similarity to David Allen’s Getting Things Done system of task management. Jane S. Webster blogged here at Seminarium on her own experience with “backward course design,” inspiring in me the same impulse I get when I meet someone with whom I share a love of some obscure musician: an urge to shout “Me, too!” and then talk everybody’s ear off on the subject….

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Filed Under: Curator, SemClass, SemTrends Tagged With: assessment rubrics, backwards course design, Bloom's taxonomy, David Allen, Getting Things Done, GTD, learning outcomes, syllabus

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