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Thiết kế đề cương môn học
Phương pháp giảng dạy
đại học theo học chế tín chỉ
Phần 5

Copyright © 2009 Trung tâm nghiên cứu cải tiến
phương pháp dạy và học đại học – ĐH KHTN TP HCM

Phương pháp giảng dạy đại học theo học chế tín chỉ Thiết kế đề cương chi tiết môn học

Copyright © 2008 TT Nghiên Cứu Cải Tiến Phương Pháp Dạy và Học Đại Học – ĐH KHTN TP HCM
www.cee.hcmuns.edu.vn
ĐỀ CƢƠNG
CHỦ ĐỀ: THIẾT KẾ ĐỀ CƢƠNG CHI TIẾT MÔN HỌC
 Giảng viên:
o TS. Phùng Thúy Phượng [email protected]
 Số tiết: 12 tiết (3 buổi)
 Mục tiêu:
Sau phần này, học viên có thể
o Xác định tầm quan trọng/ vai trò của đề cương
o Liệt kê những nội dung cần phải có trong một đề cương
o Thiết kế đề cương môn học
o Đánh giá một đề cương môn học
 Đánh giá:
o Thảo luận
o Bài tập
 Tài liệu tham khảo: Nội dung Hoạt động Thời lƣợng
Thiết kế đề cƣơng môn học

Các câu hỏi

- Tầm quan trọng của việc
thiết kế đề cương;
- Các nội dung chính của đề cương
- Làm thế nào để thiết kế một đề cương môn học

Giới thiệu 5’
Động não (Brainstorming) 2’
Làm việc theo cặp 3’
Bản đồ tư duy 10’
Trình bày bản đồ tư duy 30’
Đọc tài liệu
Preparing a course: course design

Preparing a course: building a
syllabus

Example course syllabus-guide for
course outlines in the Faculty of
Science

Syllabus components- What you

Đánh gía đề cƣơng môn học

Trình bày đề cương 25’
Trình tự thiết kế đề cương môn học 10’
Backward design
5’
Các tiêu chí đánh gía đề cương
10’
Đọc tài liệu
Fink’s Five Principles of good course
design

Evaluation Rubric for Peer Review of
Course syllabi
45’
Mục tiêu:
 Học viên xác định tầm quan trọng của việc thiết kế đề cương;
 Học viên liệt kê được các nội dung chính của đề cương
Mục tiêu:
 Học viên có thể thiết kế đề cương môn học
 Học viên có thể xây dựng các tiêu chí đánh gíá một đề cương môn
học - Sử dụng và quản lý thời gian trên lớp có hiệu quả.

Buổi 1:

Tổng kết các tiêu chí đánh giá 45’
Đánh giá chéo đề cương 30’
Hoàn chỉnh đề cương 45’
Trình bày 45’ Mục tiêu:
 Học viên có thể đánh giá đề cương môn học - Sử dụng và quản lý thời gian trên lớp có hiệu quả.

Buổi 3:
Phương pháp dạy và học theo học chế tín chỉ Thiết kế đề cương chi tiết môn học

PREPARING A COURSE: COURSE DESIGN

Course design involves the planning of curriculum, assessments, and opportunities for
learning which attempt to meet the goals of the course and evaluate whether those
goals are indeed being met. The designing of a course can be adeptly performed
through the use of backwards design, which is based on the principle of working first
from the material and concepts you want students to master, in order to plan how you
will assess whether this learning has occurred, and this information thus guides which
resources and methods of teaching are employed in order to enact learning of this

crucial to the course, rather than the course being driven by the teaching methodology
itself.
Resources: Wiggins, G. & McTighe, J. (1998). Understanding by Design. Merrill
Prentice Hall: Upper Saddle River, New Jersey

http://www.cte.ku.edu/teachingQuestions/preparingCourse/courseDesign.shtml
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PREPARING A COURSE: BUILDING A SYLLABUS
Start with the basic information of the course, including the year and semester of the
course, the course title and number, number of credits, and the meeting time/place.
Provide your name, office address (and a map if it’s hard to find), and your contact
information. Indicate whether students need to make appointments or may just stop in.
If you list a home number, be specific about any restrictions for its use. Next, clarify
what prerequisites, knowledge, skills, or experience you expect students to have or
courses they should have completed. Suggest ways they might refresh skills if they’re
uncertain about their readiness.
When discussing the course, outline the course purpose(s); what is the course about and
why would students want to learn the material? Outline the three to five general goals or
objectives for the course (see Course design for more information), and explain why
you’ve arranged topics in a given order and the logic of themes or concepts you’ve
selected. When discussing the course format and activities, tell students whether the
class involves fieldwork, research projects, lectures, and/or discussion, and indicate
which activities are optional, if any.
In regard to the textbooks & readings, include information about why the readings were
selected. Show the relationship between the readings and the course objectives. Let
students know whether they are required to read before class meetings. Also detail any
additional materials or equipment that will be needed.
Specify the nature and format of the assignments, and their deadlines. Give the exam
dates and indicate the nature of the tests (essay, short–answer, take–home, other).

Introduction
A typical, informative course outline will range anywhere from 3 to 6 pages, or
perhaps more in some cases, for example where week-by-week or lecture-by-lecture
descriptions are included.
Course outlines may be provided on the web (e.g., ACE) or in hard copy. Note that if
a course outline is made available only on-line and a student requests a hard copy, an
instructor is obliged to provide the hard copy.
A good course outline should include most or all of the following elements. Note that
some items below marked with an asterix (*) indicate that specific types of
information are mandatory – these are related to student assessment, discipline and
grievances.
Course description
Include an informative course description. Minimally, this could be the official
calendar description, or an enhanced version (preferred). Other details that might be
presented are where the course fits into a discipline, who the course might appeal to,
how or where knowledge gained from the course may be applied, or how the course
draws from and relates to other courses in the program/plan.
Also be sure to indicate how the course is delivered – lectures with chalkboard,
PowerPoint, or seminars, etc. If this course has a web presence, include relevant
details.
You might also consider indicating the nature of teaching and learning activities
students might expect – will there be small group discussions, collaborative labs, or
special projects? Is there anything else that is especially unique about your course?
Course learning objectives
Describe these from the students’ perspective – what will they learn, be able to do, or
better appreciate.
Learning objectives can be broad or they can be narrow and focused on course details.
A course may have several learning objectives that reflect one or more overarching
institutional philosophies like learning to think critically, communicating clearly or
looking at issues in a global context.

Resources
Include full details regarding course texts (required, recommended), course notes,
laboratory manuals, other materials required (e.g., clickers, calculators –
programmable or not), library reserves, relevant URLs, etc.
Course topics
Provide the full list of primary and secondary topics – more detailed outlines may do
this on a week-by-week or lecture-by-lecture basis.
Expectation of student commitment to the course
Estimate the number of hours, on average, that a student should devote to your course
each week. Consider all aspects – lectures, labs, tutorial, reading, assignments, etc.
and break them out individually if this might be useful. If there is an uneven work
load, indicate when those times are.
*Student assessment
Indicate clearly how grade assessment will be done – this information must be
included in any course outline (see section below for other mandatory statements).
What are the values of exams, assignments, essays and other tools used for grade
assessment? If there is a participation element, including attendance, to the grading
scheme, explain precisely the expectation.
Indicate unambiguously the penalties for late submissions and course policy for
missed course elements, including exams. Indicate if accommodations of any sort will
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Ph˱˯ng pháp d̩y và h͕c theo h͕c ch͇ tín ch͑ Thi͇t k͇ÿ͉ c˱˯ng chi ti͇t môn h͕c
be considered and whether this will occur only with verified Verification of Illness
Forms (VIF), counseling letters, etc. Indicate if there is opportunity to make up
missed grading elements, such as mid-terms, or whether the grading scheme will be
modified, for example the missing assignment or mid-term weight assigned to the
final exam instead. You might also include a statement encouraging students to bring
their VIFs to the Science Undergraduate Office for verification and filing.
Also be sure to include due dates for their assignments and essays, as well as the
scheduled dates for quizzes and mid-terms. Indicate that students are expected to

are made to non-grading elements of the outline, the new outline should draw
attention to these changes. If changes are made, an instructor has to be able to show
an archive of the outline from the time it was first made available to students at the
beginning of a course.
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Ph˱˯ng pháp d̩y và h͕c theo h͕c ch͇ tín ch͑ Thi͇t k͇ÿ͉ c˱˯ng chi ti͇t môn h͕c
Other special considerations or rules
If there are other rules or policies that you want your students to know about (e.g.,
protocols for participating in course chat rooms or e-submission of assignments),
explain clearly what they need to know. If a student has a concern related to how a lab
assignment was graded, who should be contacted – the TA? Lab instructor? Course
instructor? If you have a policy about recording (audio, video) lectures, indicate it. If
there you have a preference for a particular citation style for assignments or essays,
this should also be conveyed, and perhaps you could point to a source of guidance for
this information.
Also consider how you wish to handle unclaimed student submissions (e.g.,
assignments, quizzes). You must hold on to these for a year, unless you notify
students otherwise that you intend to keep them only for a shorter length of time and
after that time the material in question will be securely destroyed.
*Expectation of Academic Integrity
Instructors should be very clear about their expectation of Academic Integrity in their
courses. You are encouraged to include the following optional statement in your
course outline:
“To create and promote a culture of academic integrity, the behaviour of all
members of the University of Waterloo should be based on honesty, trust,
fairness, respect and responsibility.”
The statement below regarding Academic Integrity must be included in course
outlines.
“Note on avoidance of academic offences:
All students registered in the courses of the Faculty of Science are expected to

Student Appeals
Although not mandatory, another useful statement to include in light of earlier
statements on Policy 70 and Policy 71 is the following:
“Concerning a decision made under Policy 33 (Ethical Behaviour), Policy 70
(Student Petitions and Grieveances) or Policy 71 (Student Discipline), a
student may appeal the finding, the penalty, or both.
Students who believe that
they have grounds for an appeal should refer to Policy 72 (Student Appeals)
http://www.adm.uwaterloo.ca/infosec/Policies/policy72.htm.”
March 3, 2008
Mario Coniglio, Ph.D.
Associate Dean of Science, Undergraduate Studies
Faculty of Science
University of Waterloo
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SYLLABUS COMPONENTS
WHAT YOU MIGHT INCLUDE IN YOUR SYLLABI
Basic Identifying Information
x Course title and number, section number, crn, number of units
x Term (e.g., Fall 2001)
x Meeting time and location
x Your name, office address, telephone number, fax number, email address
x URLs for course and faculty member
x Your office hours
x Teaching assistant and hours
Prerequisites
x Prerequisite courses, knowledge, skills, etc.
x Suggestions for refreshing knowledge, skills, etc.
Course Purpose and Objectives

x Test make-ups
x Requesting extensions
x Reporting illnesses
x Academic honesty: cheating and plagiarism [see college catalog or schedule of
classes]
x Student and faculty responsibilities in the learning process
x Accommodations for physical or learning disabilities
x Classroom civility guidelines
Course Calendar
x Topics
x Readings
x Assignment deadlines
x Important drop dates
Supplementary Information
x Estimated student workload
x Study hints or guides
x Glossary
x References, recommended readings or URLs, library materials on reserve
x Campus resources (e.g., tutors)
x Handouts, lecture outlines, etc.
Campus Expectations for Syllabi
The University Handbook (Section 303.1) states that:
Faculty members shall provide a course syllabus to students in each of their
classes which, in addition to standard information (e.g., instructor name, course
name, date, etc.) contains at least the following information:
a) course objectives
b) assignment and exam due dates
c) grading policy
d) campus policy on academic dishonesty
e) other - in accordance with departmental guidelines.


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