In sum, genuine goal statements, as I have long stated – and as Tyler argued 70 years ago – are not written primarily in terms of the content by itself. They are written in terms of uses of the content, contexts for the evidence, and/or changes in the learner as a result of having encountered the content. Here are a few helpful goal-writing prompts to see how this can make a difference for the better in your goals:
Having learned ______________[the key content], what should students come away able to do with it?
By the end of the course, what should students be better able to see and do on their own?
How should learners be affected by this course? If I am successful, how will learners have grown or changed?
If those are the skills, what is their purpose? What complex abilities – the core performances – should they enable?
Regardless if details are forgotten, in the end the students should leave seeing…able to…
Having read these books, students should be better able to…
What questions should students realize are important, and know how to address more effectively and autonomously by the end of the course?