5.1 Understanding by Design
Why use Backward Design?
“Our lessons, units, and courses should be logically inferred from the results sought, not derived from the methods, books, and activities with which we are most comfortable. Curriculum should lay out the most effective ways of achieving specific results… in short, the best designs derive backward from the learnings sought.”
In Understanding by Design
, Wiggins and McTighe argue that backward design is focused primarily on student learning and understanding. When teachers are designing lessons, units, or courses, they often focus on the activities and instruction rather than the outputs of the instruction.
In other words, teachers often focus more on teaching rather than learning. This perspective can lead to the misconception that learning is the activity when,
in fact, learning is derived from a careful consideration of the meaning of the activity.
Check out these benefits of backward design:
Instructional Design TipThe above resource is an H5P Image Slider. To add an H5P activity to a Moodle Book or Page, first find or create the H5P activity elsewhere. (For example, you can create the activity on your course's main Moodle page.) Download the H5P file to your computer by clicking "Reuse" underneath the H5P activity, and then upload it to the Moodle Book or Page using the H5P button in the toolbar. |
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