An RTO plays a pivotal role in shaping a career to drive industry growth. It means your dedication as an RTO must be transformative. One way to ensure this transformation is by writing clear and concise learning outcomes.
You are not a stranger to learning outcomes yourself. Every unit of competency and qualification your trainers train has set learning outcomes. Clearly stated learning goals or outcomes make it easy for students to understand what’s expected of them and what they need to learn. This can help them feel more confident and satisfied with their progress.
But how to write clearly stated and apt learning outcomes?
We will discuss all about it in this blog. So, let’s begin.
In the blog you will learn:
- Where RTOs need to write learning outcomes?
- What are learning outcomes?
- A list of useful verbs to design learning outcomes
- Tips for Writing Learning Outcomes
- Examples of Learning Outcomes
- Checklist to self-evaluate your learning outcomes
Where RTOs need to write learning outcomes?
Beyond the set learning outcomes for units of competency and qualifications, you also need to set learning outcomes in several other instances:
- Pre-training: Training packages have their goals, but sometimes you need to add more. This could be because your students need extra help in certain areas or they’re all different.
- Work Placements: When students get on-the-job experience, you need specific goals for what they should learn. These goals should match the overall qualification but focus on using skills in the real world.
- Short Courses: For quick training programs, you need clear, measurable goals that students can achieve in a short time.
- Upskilling/Reskilling: If you’re helping workers learn new skills, you need to know what their gaps are and set goals accordingly. These goals could be about specific parts of a qualification or entirely new skills.
- Assessment: When you test students, the questions should match their learning goals. This makes sure the tests measure what they’ve learned.
- Special Needs: For students with extra needs, you might need to change the tests or their learning goals. But these changes still need to meet the overall qualification requirements.
- Program Improvement: As you review your training programs, you might need to change the learning goals. This could be because of industry changes, student feedback, or new rules.
- New Programs: When you start a new training program, you need clear learning goals to measure its success and get feedback for future improvements.
- Industry Partners: If you work with companies to develop training, you might set the learning goals together.
We have summarised it in the following table.
Table: Circumstances Where RTOs Set Learning Outcome
When to Write Learning Outcomes | Why It’s Important |
Pre-training Needs Analysis | To bridge existing knowledge gaps or cater to learner diversity |
Work Placement and Workplace Learning | To focus on practical application and workplace skills |
Short Courses and Skills Sets | To set clear, measurable, and achievable goals within a short timeframe |
Upskilling and Reskilling Programs | To target specific knowledge and skills gaps for existing workers |
Developing Assessment Instruments | To ensure assessments accurately measure student achievement |
Reasonable Adjustments | To accommodate learners with disabilities or access needs |
Monitoring and Evaluation | To ensure training remains relevant and effective |
Pilot Programs and New Initiatives | To gather feedback and measure effectiveness |
Industry Collaboration | To jointly develop training programs that meet industry needs |
What are learning outcomes?
Learning outcomes are clear descriptions of what a learner will be able to do, know, or understand after completing a training program or course. They tell us what the learner will have gained by the end.
A relevant and comprehensive definition of learning outcomes can also be found in the Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF):
“The learning outcomes are constructed as a taxonomy of what graduates are expected to know, understand and be able to do as a result of learning. They are expressed in terms of the dimensions of knowledge, skills and the application of knowledge and skills.”
(The AQF Second Edition January 2013, p. 11)
A list of useful verbs to design learning outcomes
Learning taxonomies are a classification able to organise the knowledge, skills, values or behaviours that teachers aim to teach. Taxonomies are like roadmaps for learning. They help us figure out:
- What: What knowledge and skills do we want students to gain?
- Why: Why are these things important for them to learn?
- How: How can we check if they’ve actually learned it?
These tools tell us what students should be able to do, not just memorise. This means focusing on what they gain from learning, instead of just what the trainer teaches.
The following example illustrates the application of this taxonomy and provides helpful verbs for developing learning outcomes.
Type of Learning | Verbs To Be Used for Developing Learning Outcomes |
Knowledge
(recalling facts) |
State, identify, select, define, name, match, quote, cite, report, deliver, write, relate, perform, identify, indicate, list, name, recall,
recognise, select, state, recount, illustrate |
Comprehension
(Capacity to see and understand relationships) |
associate, convert, compare, outline,
translate, summarise, arrange, defend, discuss, describe, distinguish, estimate, explain, interpret, infer, demonstrate, outline, report, restate, review, suggest |
Application
(use of knowledge) |
apply, determine, illustrate, restructure, solve, use, change, develop, employ, construct, demonstrate, discover, dramatise,
employ, illustrate, interpret, investigate, conduct, modify, operate, organise, classify, practice, predict, prepare, produce, schedule, sketch, solve, translate |
Analysis
(Deconstruction and investigation of knowledge) |
analyse, examine, differentiate, examine, distinguish, categorise, question, summarise, research, categorise, differentiate, compare,
critique, relate, select, debate, determine, probe, structure, discriminate, experiment, distinguish, identify, question, solve, test |
Synthesis
(Combining information into a new connected unit of knowledge) |
combine, assemble, compose, create, unify, formulate, design, integrate, propose, synthesise, adapt, rearrange, compile, construct, devise, explain, generate, plan, restructure, collate, systematise, propose, rearrange, reconstruct, systemise, relate,
reorganise, revise |
Evaluation
(judging the value or appropriateness) |
evaluate, assess, critique, rate, score,
conclude, criticise, judge, defend, validate, prioritise, disprove, criticise, discriminate, estimate, contrast, revise, grade, justify, interpret, measure, calculate |