Questions to Ask about a Syllabus
Components of a Syllabus
Using the handout
"Components of a Course Syllabus," and a rating scale where 1 =
incipient, 2= proficient, and 3= exemplary, how well does the syllabus address each
of these components, as appropriate?
Basic Information
Course Description
Materials
Requirements
Policies
Schedule
Resources
Statement on
Accommodation
Rights
Evaluation of the
Course
Safety and
Emergency Preparedness
Disclaimer
Content of a Syllabus: Research Assignments
Questions about Research
Assignments/Projects
(adapted from Von Hoene, L. Syllabus Evaluation, Mellon Summer Institute, 2003)
- What research assignments are part of
the course? How well do the
assignments represent the sequence of steps in the research process?
- What are the objectives of the research
assignments both in terms of content and research skills development?
- What is the relationship of the
research assignments and their objectives to the overarching course goals?
- What skills do students need in order
to undertake these research assignments?
- To what extent do students possess
research skills prior to the start of the class? How is that known?
- What specific tools and assignments can
be put in place to help students develop skills through each step of the
research process?
- How does the syllabus represent the
steps involved in the research process?
- Are students given sufficient
information in the syllabus to prepare them effectively to complete the
research assignments?
Content of a Syllabus: General
General Questions
(adapted from Bain,
K. Teaching as Scholarship;
retrieved 6-01-04 from http://www.nyu.edu/cte/Scholars.html)
- How does the course begin? Why does it begin where it does?
- What do the students do as the course
unfolds?
- In what ways does the course teach
students how scholars work in the discipline (the methods and values that shape
how knowledge claims are made and adjudicated within the field)?
- In what ways does the course teach
students how scholars in the field reason from evidence?
- What big questions will the course help
students answer?
- What intellectual abilities (or
qualities) will the course help students develop?
- In what ways, if any, will this course
connect with experiences students have had in other courses?
- What will students find most engaging
or fascinating about the course?
- Where will students encounter their
greatest difficulties of either understanding or motivation?
- How does the course end? Why does it end as it does?
- At the end of the course what should students come away with? Or question?
Barbara Gross
Davis, UC Berkeley, 2005
Copyright © 2007 UC Regents (Last updated: June 20, 2006 )