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The Course Syllabus as an Effective Communication Tool

The Course Syllabus as an Effective Communication Tool. Dr. Pam Brown, College of Education Dr. Steve Damron , College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources. 7 purposes of a syllabus. Sets the tone for the course Motivates students to set goals

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The Course Syllabus as an Effective Communication Tool

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  1. The Course Syllabusas an Effective Communication Tool Dr. Pam Brown, College of Education Dr. Steve Damron, College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources

  2. 7 purposes of a syllabus • Sets the tone for the course • Motivates students to set goals • Serves as a planning tool for faculty • Structures students’ work over time • Helps faculty plan and meet goals • Serves as contract between faculty and students • Is a portfolio artifact for job application, tenure, promotion From: Slattery & Carlson, 2005

  3. Examples of syllabus language: Brown NETIQUETTE: I expect each class member to follow these basic rules of online conduct: • Keep discussions professional, not personal. Disagree with ideas (if needed), but donʼt denigrate another person. • Avoid profanity altogether. • Use standard English, not text-speak. • Design your online entries to stimulate further discussion rather than to serve as a “final word.” We are all learners. • Before posting to a discussion board, please read all questions and responses already posted on that topic in order to avoid repetition. I will take roll at each class meeting. Attendance includes not only physical presence, but also mental engagement.

  4. Examples of syllabus language: Damron GRADE VERIFICATION POLICY. There are no exceptions to the following policy. • Various student groups ask students to have instructors verify attendance and/or grades in their classes. • I will not do this. If you are asked to do this, then please show the asker this syllabus. • Grades will always be available on D2L. Share them with whomever you wish.

  5. The syllabus as a teaching tool • It can be more than a standard contract—perhaps a compact? A deal? A bargain? A covenant? • Think about including explanations imbedded in the syllabus about why you include various sections—give students a glimpse of your decision-making processes • Your syllabus could reflect principles you are teaching—for example, an art class may have an artistic format • If you use a standardized syllabus, consider adding a personal syllabus addendum to give the students some information about you, their instructor

  6. What to include in the syllabus: Basics • Course title, number, semester, meeting location, times • Instructor contact information—email, phone(s), office location, office hours, other (social media, blog, etc.) • Necessary information for online course components • Rationale • Goals and objectives • Required readings • Assignments • Evaluation/grading scheme • Academic policies: for example, academic integrity, student disability services (OSU Syllabus Attachment for current semester) • Class schedule—date(s)/assignments/readings/activities/topics

  7. You could also include: Extras(?) • Instructor beliefs, philosophy, assumptions • Specific assessment information—for example, rubrics or assessment methods • Teaching methods (life beyond the lecture) • Plans for feedback on student learning • Opportunities for students to provide course input (formative and summative) • Accreditation information

  8. Syllabus evaluation rubric

  9. Syllabus evaluation rubric

  10. Syllabus evaluation rubric

  11. Syllabus evaluation rubric

  12. Other considerations • How will students be able to reach you? • How will you use the Desire to Learn online platform? • How do you know students will read and use your syllabus? • Perhaps a quiz (Damron) • Perhaps a creative format (Brown) • Don’t be afraid to refer students to the syllabus as long as you are certain it answers their questions fully and clearly

  13. What questions do you have for us?

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