Skip to content

šŸŽÆ From Verbs to Vision: Evaluating Learning Outcomes with Fink’s Framework and AI

3 min read
Moving beyond ā€œunderstandā€ and ā€œanalyzeā€ to design outcomes that actually transform learning

šŸŒ… Introduction

Let’s be honest — most learning outcomes sound like they were written by a committee that couldn’t agree on lunch. ā€œStudents will understandā€¦ā€ Understand what? How deeply? Why does it matter?

This week, we’re diving into the art (and science) of evaluating and improving Program and Course Learning Outcomes (PLOs/CLOs). Using Fink’s Framework for Significant Learning and a little AI muscle (think LLM-powered feedback loops), we’ll explore how to transform vague verbs into vivid visions of learning. Whether you’re an assessment coordinator, a curriculum committee chair, or a first-year instructor just trying to decode Bloom’s Taxonomy — this one’s for you.


🧠 Best Practices & Tips: Designing Outcomes That Stick

Focus AreaWhat It MeansPractical Tip
1ļøāƒ£ Begin with the End in MindOutcomes should describe enduring understanding — what sticks after the test is forgotten.šŸŽÆ Ask: ā€œIf students forget everything else, what must they still be able to do?ā€
2ļøāƒ£ Use Fink’s Six DimensionsMove beyond Bloom’s cognitive verbs to Fink’s holistic learning: Foundational Knowledge, Application, Integration, Human Dimension, Caring, and Learning How to Learn.🌐 Ensure each program has outcomes across at least three of Fink’s six areas for balanced learning.
3ļøāƒ£ Audit Your VerbsWeak verbs = weak outcomes. ā€œUnderstand,ā€ ā€œknow,ā€ and ā€œappreciateā€ are invisible verbs — impossible to measure.šŸ” Replace them with observable actions: apply, evaluate, propose, synthesize, reflect.
4ļøāƒ£ Let AI Be Your Co-ReviewerLLMs like ChatGPT can evaluate outcome clarity, cognitive level, and alignment consistency.šŸ¤– Prompt idea: ā€œEvaluate this CLO using Fink’s Framework and Bloom’s Taxonomy; suggest revisions for clarity and measurability.ā€
5ļøāƒ£ Think in Systems, Not SilosOutcomes should align vertically (CLO → PLO → ILO) and horizontally (across courses).🧩 Visualize alignment maps to ensure progression and reduce redundancy.

Quick Check: If an outcome doesn’t suggest a clear artifact of learning (something observable like a project, reflection, or performance), it’s time for a rewrite.


🧩 Case Illustration: ā€œWhen Outcomes Grow Upā€

At a mid-sized public university, the Communication Department realized that their course outcomes weren’t driving the type of learning they intended. For years, they relied on outcomes like:

  • Students will understand key communication theories.
  • Students will know how to present effectively.

After an internal audit using Fink’s Framework, they discovered three key issues: outcomes focused narrowly on knowledge, ignored human and integration dimensions, and used verbs that couldn’t be assessed reliably.

The redesign process started with faculty workshops where participants rewrote outcomes collaboratively, guided by Fink’s six categories. Here’s one transformation:

Old CLORevised CLO (Fink-aligned)
ā€œStudents will understand communication theories.ā€ā€œStudents will apply communication theories to analyze real-world issues and evaluate their impact on public discourse.ā€
ā€œStudents will know how to present effectively.ā€ā€œStudents will design and deliver presentations that adapt to diverse audiences, demonstrating self-awareness and audience empathy.ā€

The team then used an LLM-based review assistant trained on Bloom and Fink frameworks to test each revised CLO for clarity, actionability, and alignment with program-level goals.

Results? Over one assessment cycle:

  • Faculty-reported outcome alignment improved by 38%.
  • Student reflections showed a 25% increase in self-reported understanding of why their learning mattered.
  • External reviewers noted clearer evidence of higher-order and integrative learning.

In short — when outcomes grow up, learning does too.


🌻 Closing Thoughts

Strong outcomes are the backbone of meaningful learning. They drive assessment design, clarify expectations, and set the stage for transformative experiences. When crafted intentionally — and refined with AI support — they become more than paperwork; they’re a blueprint for educational purpose.

Next week, we’ll tackle ā€œData-Driven Strategies for Student Success & Retention: Aligning AI with Pedagogy and Equity.ā€ Expect practical analytics, mentoring insights, and examples of how institutions are using predictive models ethically to empower—not profile—students.


šŸ’¬ Question of the Week

If you could rewrite one of your program’s learning outcomes today, which Fink dimension would you add — and what would that look like in your students’ experience?

Subscribe To Our Newsletter
Enter your email to receive a weekly round-up of our best posts.
icon
Dr. Alaa Alsarhan

Dr. Alaa Alsarhan is a higher education leader and analytics expert specializing in assessment, learning outcomes, and data-informed decision-making. He is CEO & Co-Founder of Horizons Analytics, a consultancy advancing AI-powered assessment and strategic planning in education and business. Dr. Alsarhan has authored multiple publications, delivered national keynotes, and led innovative research on high-impact practices, student success, and AI in higher education. He is a founding member of the GenAI in Higher Education Assessment Community of Practice and a fellow with the NWCCU Mission Fulfillment and Sustainability program.

View All Articles

Leave a Reply