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Interservice
Procedures for Instructional Systems Development :
Executive Summary and Model (Continued...)
by Robert K. Branson, Gail T. Rayner and J. Lamarr Cox
Management Decisions
Management decisions in Block
II.1 will involve principally the inspection of the learning
analyses and the learning objectives developed. The learning objectives
should be properly stated, analyzed, and organized. The manager
must look for those objectives which do not conform. There are many
potential errors in the development of objectives including:
1. The student's mental process rather than observable behavior.
2. The standard is absent or deficient.
3. The statement of conditions is missing or poorly specified.
4. The objective is stated in instructor rather than learner
terms.
5. The behavior stated is too broad. It does not adequately describe
the specific outcomes.
In reviewing the learning objectives, the manager
must identify the relationship between the terminal learning objective
as stated and the job performance measure upon which it is based.
Learning objectives should be examined to insure that each subordinate
step is directly related to the terminal performance. Often, learning
objectives are written in such a way as to preserve existing instruction
rather than to conform to the requirements of the job performance
measure. It is the manager's job to insure that these relationships
are direct and clear.
continued...
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