How redesigning your syllabus can transform your teaching, your
classroom, and the way your students learn
Generations of teachers have built their classes around the course
syllabus, a semester-long contract that spells out what each class
meeting will focus on (readings, problem sets, case studies,
experiments), and what the student has to turn in by a given date. But
what does that way of thinking about the syllabus leave out--about our
teaching and, more importantly, about our students' learning?
In Syllabus, William Germano and Kit Nicholls take a fresh look at
this essential but almost invisible bureaucratic document and use it as
a starting point for rethinking what students--and teachers--do. What if
a teacher built a semester's worth of teaching and learning
backward--starting from what students need to learn to do by the end
of the term, and only then selecting and arranging the material students
need to study?
Thinking through the lived moments of classroom engagement--what the
authors call "coursetime"--becomes a way of striking a balance between
improv and order. With fresh insights and concrete suggestions,
Syllabus shifts the focus away from the teacher to the work and growth
of students, moving the classroom closer to the genuinely collaborative
learning community we all want to create.