Instructional Design

The systematic and organized process by which to develop courses, trainings, and other educational materials

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What Makes Up An Effective Lesson Plan: Part 03 Writing Objectives

Course Objec­tives

Course objec­tives answers the “why.” It tells us why the stu­dents are tak­ing the class; it spec­i­fied the out­comes the train­ing is sup­posed to achieve. A good les­son plan will have a gen­eral goal, main goal or metagoal. This is the big pic­ture, and then it will break the big goal into smaller parts.

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What Makes Up An Effective Lesson Plan: Part 02 Preparing

Prepar­ing

There are three con­sid­er­a­tions when deal­ing with the prepar­ing of train­ing: travel, class­room setup, and show prep.

 Travel

This may or may not be included in the les­son plan. It is sug­gested that if it is not included in the les­son plan then it is pre­sented some­place else. In some com­pa­nies this could be part of a trainer’s manual.

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What Makes Up An Effective Lesson Plan: Part 01 Introduction

Intro­duc­tion:

A les­son plan is the expres­sion of the course design. It allows the teacher/trainer/professor/facilitator a way to ensure that the les­son is deliv­ered as effec­tively and effi­ciently as pos­si­ble. It offers the per­son respon­si­ble for the deliv­ery of the les­son a roadmap on how best to accom­plish the objective(s) of the lesson.

While it would be com­fort­ing to state that there is one right way to develop a les­son plan, the real­ity is that teach­ing is as much of an art as it is a sci­ence. This paper will present some of the gen­er­ally agreed upon steps and com­po­nents of good lessons plans.

Side Note: teacher, trainer, pro­fes­sor, facil­i­ta­tor there are so many words for the var­i­ous pro­fes­sion­als that impart knowl­edge to oth­ers. For the sake of con­ve­nience to both the reader and the author, the term “trainer” will be used to rep­re­sent all these noble professions.

TMI: The development and execution of effective lesson plans are widely held to be the primary factor in the quality of a lesson. Sadly in many educational situations a lesson plans seldom consists of more than a list of activities (Shen, Cui, & Fan, 2007)

 

Depend­ing on the envi­ron­ment of the train­ing the les­son plan could be devel­oped after the course has been designed, dur­ing the course design, or the les­son plan could BE the course design. More often than not in a K-12 school set­ting the les­son plan serves as the course design, while in the train­ing envi­ron­ment a les­son plan serves as a doc­u­ment deliv­ered to a client at the con­clu­sion of the devel­op­ment of a course. At the col­le­giate level, well no one cares…thank you tenure.

There are three main stages that the les­son plan should address: prepar­ing, deliv­ery, and con­clu­sion. Depend­ing on the envi­ron­ment that the train­ing will occur in there could be more or less steps within the stages. For exam­ple, when a trainer must travel to a train­ing site there are the con­sid­er­a­tions of travel. If train­ing is local, some parts of the stages could be omitted.

There are three main stages that the lesson plan should address: preparing, delivery, and conclusion.

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