I’ve been thinking a great deal about course objectives lately, partly because we just began a new semester, and partly because my current institution is working to implement some new standards for our syllabi – they’re now encouraging us to include the relevant general education and/or program outcomes on the syllabus, not just the outcomes for the individual course. One of the things that I noticed in looking at the various outcomes (my own, my department’s, and my institutions) is that there’s quite a different approach in the general education outcomes and my own department’s outcomes for literature courses. The institution’s outcomes focus on content (albeit in a rather broad way), but the department’s primary goals for graduates focus instead on skills, like being able to read critically and write clearly.
My own course outcomes – whether for an introduction to literature course or an upper division course – probably split the difference: I provide outcomes that link skills to the specific content of the course.
I’ve been trying to link this back to one of the major maxims of the Foundation for Critical Thinking, as I look over my notes from their recent conference: they suggest that, in fact, content is a way of thinking. The two do not have to be separate. Content is not simply something to memorize, but content in a course is a problem to be solved.
So what does that really mean? Especially for a literature class? Continue reading “Course Outcomes and Reading Skills”