Assessment
Primer: Curriculum Mapping
Plan for designing and delivering learning outcomes:
In designing course outcomes
- Start first with the broad outcomes expected of all students
- Then work backward to design academic program outcomes
- Finally design course outcomes that will lead to the achievement
of both program and institutional outcomes
When the program is delivered, students experience the system
in reverse
- Students first participate in experiences that address lesson
outcomes
- The learning that results from these experiences accumulates
as students proceed through the courses and other experiences
in the program
- The curriculum is designed so that it provides a coherent set
of experiences leading to the development of desired knowledge
and skills – students show increasing levels of sophistication
and integration of skills as they progress through the program
(Learner-Centered Assessment on College Campuses: shifting
the focus from teaching to learning by Huba and Freed 2000)

Curriculum mapping makes it possible to identify where
within the curriculum learning objectives are addressed. In
other words, it provides a means to determine whether your objectives
are aligned with the curriculum.
Alignment – the curricula must be systematically
aligned with the program objectives. Alignment involves clarifying
the relationship between what students do in their courses and what
faculty expect them to learn. Analyzing the alignment of
the curricula with program objectives allows for the identification
of gaps which can then lead to curricular changes to improve student
learning opportunities.
Approach to determining the alignment of courses with the program
objectives – create a matrix:
Curriculum
Alignment Matrix
(Assessing Academic Programs in Higher Education by
Allen 2004)
|
| Course |
Program
Objective 1 |
Program
Objective 2 |
Etc. |
| 100 |
I |
|
|
| 101 |
|
P |
|
| 102 |
D |
P |
|
| 103 |
I |
D |
|
| Etc. |
|
|
|
|
I = introduced, P =
practiced, D = demonstrated |
Aligning course objectives to program objectives may be accomplished
by a curriculum alignment matrix which maps each onto
the other; a checkmark indicating coverage or an indication of
the level of coverage can be used.
|