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Home » Resources » Scholarship on Teaching » Blueprint for Learning: Constructing College Courses to Facilitate, Assess, and Document Learning
Scholarship July 3, 2025

Blueprint for Learning: Constructing College Courses to Facilitate, Assess, and Document Learning

The Wabash Center

Author
Richlin, Laurie
Publisher
Stylus, Sterling, VA
ISBN
1579221432
Table of Contents
ch. 1 Scholarly teaching and the scholarship of teaching and learning
ch. 2 Scholarly design process
ch. 3 Professor
ch. 4 Students
ch. 5 Environment
ch. 6 Content
ch. 7 Biology of learning
ch. 8 Kolb experiential learning cycle
ch. 9 Gardner's multiple intelligences
ch. 10 Styles of learning and teaching
ch. 11 Cognitive development of college students
ch. 12 Bloom taxonomies
ch. 13 Motivation
ch. 14 Metaphors for the teaching
ch. 15 Ethics of teaching
ch. 16 Designing learning experiences
ch. 17 Grading schemes and policies
ch. 18 From goals to assessment
ch. 19 Building in feedback : classroom assessment techniques
ch. 20 Tests and blueprints
ch. 21 Assignments and rubrics
ch. 22 Syllabus
ch. 23 Attachments
ch. 24 Explanation of design choices

Seven principles for good practice in undergraduate education
Learner-centered psychological principles
Course portfolio design : syllabus, attachments, and explanation
An acclaimed educator presents hands-on advice on teaching that meets today's emphasis on learning outcomes and assessment. This book is informed by the most up-to-date research on how people learn. It is suitable for all instructors in higher education - as well as high school teachers. Laurie Richlin has been running a workshop on course design for higher education for over fifteen years, modifying and improving it progressively from the feedback of participants, and from what they in turn have taught her. Her goals are to enable participants to appropriately select teaching strategies, to design and create the conditions and experiences that will enable their students to learn; and in the process to develop the scholarly scaffold to document their ongoing course design and achievements. This book familiarizes readers with course design elements; enables them to understand themselves as individuals and teachers; know their students; adapt to the learning environment; design courses that promote deep learning; and assess the impact of the teaching practices and design choices they have made. She provides tools to create a full syllabus, offers guidance on such issues as framing questions that encourage discussion, developing assignments with rubrics, and creating tests. The book is packed with resources that will help readers structure their courses and constitute a rich reference of proven ideas. What Laurie Richlin offers is a intellectual framework, set of tools and best practices to enable readers to design and continually reassess their courses to better meet their teaching goals and the learning needs of their students. (From the Publisher)