der_gadfly
SSOB-hatin', snarklet-writin'
Distinguished Senior Member
    
Posts: 1,844
oy vey
|
 |
« Reply #5 on: December 06, 2009, 10:54:30 AM » |
|
I went for an interview, and fully expecting to be asked "And how would you approach the Basketweaving of Local Region?" I took an old syllabus for a similar course (Regional Basketweaving), and changed the description to match the catalog description, adjusted my course objectives and goals, left in all of my fairly bulletproof policies (attendance, late work etc), and laid out the class schedule in 'learning units' rather than in 'weeks'. I made a separate sheet for some possible textbooks, sans specific reading assignments, and when the question came up, gave copies of the documents to the SC so they could review them with me.
Of course, in the limited timeframe of the interview, I simply pointed out my objectives, and a few other sections such as teaching/delivery methods, and the 'plan' for the order of the content. I invited them to review it at their leisure and they seemed quite pleased. The obvious downside is that I do not get the job, and someone there uses my work as a jump-off point, hence, this is why I did not put in specific reading assignments, OR the project description (I may be young and stupid, but I am not a fool).
As for course syllabi templates, I am very much in favor of these, especially when they have all institutional policies in place. For example, some places have a defined A=90+, A-=87-89, etc, or an institutional attendance/drop policy. This helps newbies and adjuncts alike NOT make glaring errors. Usually, when a course is approved by a curriculum committee, it has some initial objectives. These are helpful for newbies and adjuncts alike and do provide some direction for how the course was conceived.
I have also seen some courses that as a result of an assessment committee review, have a specific project that all instructors use. This is especially useful in foundation courses (or those in a sequence e.g. BW101, BW201, BW301) and provides demonstrable evidence to show that the degree program adds 'value' and it is a great way to show student growth over time. Some places like this, others do not, YMMV.
Advice to OP: yes, prepare something that shows that you can plan a semester, and have given some thought to the possibilities.
Good luck!
|