site |
---|
sandpaper::sandpaper_site |
{ alt='The Carpentries Collaborative Lesson Development Training' style='padding: 2%'}
This is a training curriculum teaching good practices in lesson design and development, and open source collaboration skills, using [The Carpentries Workbench][workbench]. The curriculum was designed to be taught over three full days or six half-days. The target audience is Carpentries Instructors with an idea for a new lesson they would like to create, especially if that lesson is intended for short-format training (e.g. part or all of a two-day workshop).
We believe that lesson development is easier and more successful when it is a joint effort among collaborators, so the activities and examples used in this training are best suited to groups of trainees who want to collaborate on a lesson project. Efforts have been made to also cater to lesson developers working alone.
After attending this training, participants will be able to:
- collaboratively develop and publish lessons using The Carpentries lesson infrastructure (aka [The Carpentries Workbench][workbench]): lesson template, GitHub, GitHub Pages, etc.
- identify and characterise the target audience for a lesson.
- define SMART learning objectives.
- explain the pedagogical value of authentic tasks.
- create exercises for formative assessment.
- explain how considerations of cognitive load can influence the pacing, length, and organisation of a lesson.
- configure and maintain accessible and usable lesson repositories using best practices, readily available for collaboration.
- identify and correct accessibility issues in a Carpentries lesson.
- update and improve lesson material guided by feedback and reflection from teaching.
- review and provide constructive feedback on lessons.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: prereq
Before joining Collaborative Lesson Development Training, participants should be able to:
- write formatted text - bold and italic, headings, links, bullet point and numbered lists - with Markdown.
- log into GitHub.com and create and edit files using the GitHub web interface.
See A Primer on Markdown and GitHub for resources to help learn these skills.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::