Purpose of Student Learning Outcomes
Integrating student learning goals and outcomes at the course and program levels serve
the following purposes:
- Increased student awareness of their own learning
Explicitly stated student learning goals give students a way to think and talk about
what they have learned. They make it easier for students to “know what they know”
and give students a language to communicate what they know to others. Such awareness
is considered central to learning that lasts.
- Frameworks for course design and redesign
Faculty often find that it is much easier to plan a course when they begin with where
they hope their students will end. Another place to begin planning or revising a course
is where faculty know students will face difficulty in the course. Identifying student
learning goals helps faculty structure their courses, identify pedagogical strategies,
and design assignments, tests, projects, class discussion, and other course elements
to help students meet those goals.
Course-based student learning goals also serve as criteria that faculty can use both
to assess students’ progress and to direct course revision, helping faculty to incorporate
the skills, methodology, and thinking that the major values into their classes. Finally,
course-based learning goals also identify for programs the values and practices of
the faculty delivering the program curricula. In so doing, course-based goals inform
program learning goals.
- A method for program planning
Program learning goals help faculty plan the curriculum, assess coherence and sequencing,
and evaluate the learning of majors. In addition, they signal the program’s disciplinary
identity and provide a common language that students, faculty, and staff share. This
common language can facilitate communication and build bridges among various program
services for students, such as advising and instruction.
- A map for curricular assessment and change
Use of student learning goals helps programs think about curriculum. When learning
goals are defined, programs can determine the courses that address each goal. Curricular
maps can reveal desired and undesired redundancies, overlaps, and gaps in programs
for majors.
- A method for institutional assessment
Course-based and program learning goals and their assessment demonstrate how learning
goals are translated through the lenses and curricula of the disciplines those units
represent. Furthermore, they can show larger units within the institution how the
parts relate to the whole.
- Improved academic advising
Learning goals for each course are an important first step toward clearly communicating
expectations to students, assisting them, and their advisors, in matching courses
and majors with student interests and capabilities.
- Evidence for accreditation
Accrediting agencies have modified their requirements to include student learning
goals and evidence that assessment of student learning relative to those goals is
used in curricular improvement.