A Guide to Curriculum Mapping synthesizes teaching, learning, and assessment research with an innovative, inclusive, and comprehensive approach to effective curriculum design that centers student learning and evidence-informed continuous improvement.
It offers adaptable tools, resources, and templates that readers can customize to their own institutions and programs. The authors offer ways to document, synthesize, integrate, and visually represent how learning opportunities work together--whether within courses, across degree programs, or throughout an entire college or university. The authors have presented their integrated mapping approach to acclaim at conferences for close to a decade and have tested their use in programs large and small across the US, beyond systematically applying them at their home institution, the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC).
This volume enables educators--whether faculty, chairs, deans, administrators, educational developers, staff, or assessment leaders, concerned with student learning and success--to think through the clarity, organization, and alignment of their programs for improving learning using learner-centered research.
About the Author: Jennifer M. Harrison has worked in higher education for over 30 years and is currently UMBC's Associate Director for Assessment in the Faculty Development Center. Dr. Harrison has expertise in accreditation, institutional effectiveness, student learning assessment, critical pedagogy, curriculum development, educational technology, and online and face-to-face active learning. Dr. Harrison's research and teaching centers on intersectional social justice education.
Vickie Williams, an educational psychologist and learning scientist, has worked in a variety of clinical settings, including hospitals and K-12 schools. In addition to teaching education courses to future educators, she serves as a featured professor of cognitive psychology in UMBC's Psychology degree program, and a mentor and leader in the First-Year Seminar program at UMBC.