planning goals and learning outcome (aims, goals, and objectives)
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what is aim? what is objective? how to write aims, goals, and objectives)TRANSCRIPT
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Planning Goals and Learning Outcomes
DIDIK HARIANTO (11211210465)POPON SITI FATIMAH (11211210123)
Key Assumptions About Goals
People are usually motivated to pursue certain goals.
The goals in teaching improve the effectiveness of teaching and learning.
A program will be effective that its goals are sound and clearly described.
GOAL
Aim Objectives
Describes
In order to appreciate how value systems shape
decision about what school should teach and the
outcomes they seek to achieve, we will begin our
discussion of goals by considering five curriculum
ideologies (borrowing Eisner’s term) that shape the
nature of the language curriculum and the practices
of language teaching in different ways.
The Ideology of the
Curriculum
Five Curriculum Ideologies: Eisner, 1992
1. Academic rationalism
2. Social and economic efficiency
3. Learner-centeredness
4. Social reconstructionism
5. Cultural pluralism
1. Academic Rationalism
Curriculum stresses the intrinsic value of the subject
matter and its role in developing the learner’s
intellect, humanistic values, and rationality.
Academic rationalism is sometimes used to justify
certain foreign language in school curriculum where
they are taught as social studies.
2. Social and Economic Efficiency
It emphasizes the practical needs of learners
and society and the role of an educational
program in producing learners who are
economically productive.
3. Learner-centeredness
This term group together educational philosophies that stress:1. the individual need of learners, 2. the role of individual experience, 3. and the need to develop awareness, self-
reflection, critical thinking, learner strategies, and other qualities and skills that are believed to be important for learners to develop.
Marsh (1986, 201) points out that the issue of child centered or learner centered curricula reappears every decade or so and can refer to any of the following : Individualized teaching Learning through practical operation or doing Laissez faire no organized curricula at all but
based n the momentary interest of children.
4. Social Reconstructionism
It stresses the roles of schools and learners can
should play in addressing social injustices and
inequality.
5. Cultural Pluralism
This philosophy argues that school should
prepare students to participate in several
different cultures, not just the dominant one
which means none culture group is superior to
others.
Stating Curriculum Outcomes
The term goal and aim are used interchangeable
to refer to a description of the general purposes of a
curriculum and objective to refer to more specific and
concrete description of purposes.
.
Aims
It refers to a statement of a general change
which a program seeks to bring about in
learners.
It is the ideology of the curriculum and show
how the curriculum will seek to realize it
Aims
The example of aims: Students will learn how to write effective
business letters for use in the hotel and tourism industries.
Students will learn how to listen effectively in conversational interactions how to develop better listening startegies.
And so on. . . (Richards, 2001: 102)
Objectives
It is a statement which have more specific purposes.
It refers to a statement of specific changes, a program seeks to bring about and results from an analysis of the aim.
The Characteristics of The Objectives
Describe what the aims seek to achieve in terms of smaller units of learning.
Provide a basis for the organization of teaching activities.
Describe learning in term of observable behavior and performance.
The example aim and objectives:
Aim
Students will learn how to understand lectures given in English
Objectives
• Students will be able to follow an argument, theme, or thesis of a lecturer
• Students will learn how to recognize the following aspects of a lecture:
cause-and-effect relationshipcomparisons and contrastspremises used in persuasive argumentssupporting details used in persuasive arguments
Criticisms of The Use of Objectives
1. Objectives turn teaching into a technology. (meaningful and worthwhile may be lost)
2. Objectives trivialize teaching and are product-oriented. (every purpose in teaching can be described as an objective)
3. Objectives are unsuited to many aspects of language use. (e.g: critical thinking)
Competency-based Program Outcomes
An alternative to the use of objectives in program planning is to describe learning outcomes in terms of competencies, an approach associated with Competence-based Language Teaching (CBLT)
The Nature of Competencies
They refer to observable behaviors that are necessary for the successful completion of real-world activities.
These activities may be related to the field of work and social survival in a new environment.
Criticisms of The Use of The Competencies
1. Definition of the competencies: no valid procedures are available for competency specifications.
2. Hidden values underlying competency specifications.
3. A refugee resettlement training program in Philippines: it encourages refugees to consider themselves fortunate to find minimum-wage employment.
Nonlanguage outcomes and process objectives
Because such outcomes go beyond the content of a linguistically
oriented syllabus, they are sometimes referred to as nonl
anguage outcomes. Those that describe learning experiences
rather than learning outcomes are also known as process
objectives
Eight broad categories of nonlanguage outcomes in teaching:
Social, psychological, and emotional support in the new living
environment, Confidence, and so on. (Richards. 2001: 133-4)
Thank You For Attention