Generate a Course Learning Objectives Framework
Create learning objectives for a course on [subject]. Include beginner, intermediate, and advanced outcomes. Ensure objectives are measurable.
Bloom's Taxonomy improves learning progression and assessment quality.
If you're an educator developing a new course or curriculum, creating clear learning objectives can feel overwhelming. This Claude prompt automates that process by generating a comprehensive framework of learning objectives organized by difficulty level. Whether you're teaching mathematics, history, programming, or professional development, this prompt helps you establish measurable outcomes that guide both your instruction and your students' progress. It's particularly valuable for instructors who want to align their courses with educational standards while saving hours of planning time.
Using this prompt is straightforward. You simply replace the [subject] placeholder with whatever topic you're teaching. For example, if you're designing a course on digital marketing, you would input "Generate a learning objectives for a course on digital marketing." Claude will then create outcomes spanning three levels: beginner objectives might include understanding basic marketing terminology and identifying different digital channels, intermediate objectives could involve analyzing campaign performance metrics, and advanced objectives might focus on designing integrated marketing strategies. Each objective is written in measurable terms, making it easy to assess whether students actually achieve them.
When you submit this prompt to Claude, expect to receive a well-structured framework that typically includes three to five objectives per difficulty level. Each objective follows the SMART criteria—they're specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound. The output is immediately usable in your syllabus, course materials, or assessment rubrics. Claude often provides context about why each objective matters and how it connects to the next level, giving you educational grounding for your course structure.
For better results, be specific about your student population and course context. Instead of just "[subject]," try adding details like "Introduction to Data Science for non-technical business students" or "Advanced Calculus for engineering majors." This additional context helps Claude tailor the objectives to your actual learners' needs, resulting in more relevant and realistic learning outcomes that truly reflect what your students should accomplish.