Nov 25, 2024  
2024-2025 Graduate Academic Calendar 
    
2024-2025 Graduate Academic Calendar

Program Learning Outcomes - Education in the Digital Age, Graduate Diploma


By the end of the program, students graduating will be able to:

  • Distinguish, articulate and critically assess learning theories in education.
  • Articulate the nature of knowledge and the relationships between theory, evidence and practice.
  • Participate in a culture of disciplined inquiry demonstrating the skills and dispositions to critically assess and use research in education and digital technologies.
  • Advance inquiry into authentic, ill-defined educational problems, recognizing the complexities of multiple components of a problem / solution in relation to the whole.
  • Demonstrate abilities to effectively manage and coordinate academic projects, both individually and collaboratively.
  • Articulate, interrogate, and critically reflect on different educational standpoints, including one’s own.
  • Effectively use a wide range of appropriate media/technology tools for educational communication, data collection and analysis, and instructional design, development, implementation and evaluation.
  • Distinguish, articulate and critically assess the varied and sometimes contested values and impacts associated with digital technologies.
  • Make evidence-based, well-reasoned decisions about optimal uses of digital technologies (e.g., interfaces, online tools, languages) to support learning and development.
  • Design, produce and critically evaluate meaningful and useable digital artifacts, modes of communication, and / or environments.
  • Demonstrate an informed understanding of how and why learners of all ages interact in digital contexts.
  • Identify, articulate and critically analyze assumptions, values, biases, ideologies and evidence that underpin educational arguments, claims, policies, and data.
  • Identify, analyze, and apply discipline-specific theoretical or empirical arguments using discipline-specific criteria.
  • Articulate and critically evaluate potential ways that uses of digital technology inform and are informed by social context, community conditions, needs, wants and interests.
  • Use previous or developing knowledge of digital technologies to create, remix, adopt or apply solutions to educational and societal problems or questions.
  • Formulate and articulate meaningful questions, hypotheses, and arguments that build and advance knowledge in the field of education and digital technology.
  • Demonstrate fluency, accuracy, and clarity of thought using multiple literacies while engaging in critical conversations, which address philosophical, educational, and technological questions and problems.
  • Prepare educational materials that effectively address and engage a variety of audiences (academic, professional, and general) for a range of purposes, including presenting and synthesizing research, informing, instructing, and persuading.
  • Apply appropriate scholarly communicational conventions, including APA guidelines.
  • Demonstrate skillful and respectful educational collaboration, dialogue and negotiation.
  • Show skill in evidence-based reasoning and argumentation.
  • Articulate the tentativeness and under determination of knowledge, both theoretical and practical. Critically reflect upon and articulate personal and disciplinary limits of knowledge, both theoretical and praxis-based, and the resulting ambiguities in interpretation and analysis
  • Engage in ongoing reflection and debate on a wide range of critical issues in education, including the legitimacy of multiple ways of knowing and various uses of digital technologies.
  • Incorporate divergent, international perspectives when analyzing, evaluating, and articulating positions and solutions.
  • Recognize and articulate how societal structures, particularly privilege and oppression, operate in education policy, practice and outcomes.
  • Demonstrate autonomy in one’s own work processes and pursue inquiries in directions one has set out for oneself, routinely going ‘beyond the problem as given’.
  • Demonstrate an ability to arrive at decisions in complex situations, through mapping out the fullest possible set of actors, agents, conditions and challenges.
  • Cultivate effective practices that support consultative and (where possible) democratic decision-making.
  • Demonstrate personal, professional, and academic integrity in all aspects of scholarly work, including appropriate ethical behaviour for conducting research.