Blended Learning Activity Planning
Blended Learning Activity Planning
Blended Learning Activity Planning
(i) Reflect on the way that the course has been traditionally taught and the strengths and
weaknesses of this approach.
What are the opportunities for developing more student-focused activity outside the
classroom?
How might the learning outcomes for the course be better addressed through online
learning activities?
How much self-study time is available for structured learning outside the classroom?
The first part of the template involves the completion of a statement of purpose, setting out the
objectives and current way that the course is delivered. If you are planning a new course, you may
wish to highlight here the programme objectives and the pre-established requirements for your
course (how it fits in within the study programme).
(ii) Think about the rationale for a blended design approach and the interrelationship between the
online and face-to-face components of your course
How will the objectives and targeted learning outcomes for the course be addressed through
online and class-based activities?
How will these two dimensions of the course be joined up? Will online activities feed in
directly to class-based learning (e.g. as preparation for a seminar session), or follow in
parallel to the teaching that is taking place (e.g. as part of an ongoing research project)?
The template invites you to set out the objectives for the online and class-based learning and
identify the relationship between these components of the course.
(iii) Identify the learning activities that students will perform online.
The range of activities and type of learning behaviour that you are seeking to foster online will
inform the choice of tools for your online course.
The template invites you to set out the learning activities for the online component of the course,
starting from the left with the targeted learning behaviour (e.g. referencing, researching, knowledge
sharing etc.), followed by the task (e.g. exchanging reports, reviewing documents etc.), ending up
with the choice of tool to support this activity.
(iv) Map out the online and class-based activities within an overall course plan, determining when
activities will take place and the task and delivery methods that will be used.
The template invites you to present your course plan, addressing the timetable, activities and study
methods that will be employed.
To illustrate how the template can be used to map out a blended learning course, please view the
World Politics example, which addresses steps (ii) – (iv) of the planning process.
Statement of Purpose
Objectives:
Structure of Course
Online learning
Objectives:
Activities:
Class-based learning
Objectives:
Activities:
Weekly plan
Course week Activity Method (online / class-
based)
Week 0
Week 1
Week 2
Week 3
Week 4
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
Week 9
Week 10
Online learning
Objectives: To encourage students to explore institutions and the practice of contemporary politics
through the analysis of diverse cases from different regions. To promote independent learning and
research skills, as well as discussion and collaborative group learning on themes of world politics.
Activities:
Individual reading
Group research and case writing, contributing to the upload of weekly case reports to the
module site
Class-based learning
To engage students in seminar discussion and debate on key issues in contemporary world politics
based on evidence rather than opinion.
Activities:
Delivery of weekly lectures, which provide outlines of the major theoretical approaches to the
week's topic, with illustrations of political frameworks.
8 weekly seminars in which students discuss the broader themes arising from the lectures,
weekly group reports, relating the case studies to different theoretical approaches
Figure 1: Learning objectives and activities for the World Politics module
Collaborative writing of group Uploading and downloading Group work space including
reports. Ideas-sharing and resources. Posting comments file exchange directory and
interaction on group research on group research activity. discussion board
task.
Knowledge sharing Enable exchange and reading Seminar work space including
of case reports prior to file exchange directory and
seminars discussion board.
Week 2 Introduction
Introductory lectures on
course design / case-study Plenary lectures
approach
Seminar session
Class-based
completion
Table 2: Structure of the World Politics course: a complementary model of online and class-based
learning