Consistency in the weekly pattern of course activities is useful to students to plan their time and succeed in their studies. This article explains how to develop a pattern for weekly activities and communicate to students what they can expect from week to week.

Overview

Weekly course patterns are the sequence of events for course modules that employ consistent due dates. While some modules may have unique content, it is useful to establish a pattern for most modules. Most courses, whether face-to-face or online, follow a similar weekly pattern each week like:

Some weeks may not follow the pattern, but overall courses usually have a consistent weekly structure. Developing a weekly course pattern can be a tool to help organize ideas and curriculum when developing an online course. Consistency from week to week generally helps students plan and focus on the content, not the structure, of the course.

How to Develop a Weekly Course Pattern

You may choose to draw out the pattern as a table, a list, or a format of your choosing. 

  1. For each day, list the activities that will take place in a typical week. This may include readings, recorded lectures, homework, quizzes, assignments, discussions, or any other form of interaction with the learning content, other students, and/or the instructor. 

  2. Establish regular due dates by choosing 2-3 days each week when assignments will be due, for example Wed/Sun or Tues/Thurs/Sun.

  3. Sort or group the activities by the due dates you have established.

  4. For each activity, indicate the interactions that will be taking place as one or more of the following: Learning-to-Content (L-C), Learner-to-Learner (L-L), Learner-to-Teacher (S-T).

  5. Note the amount of time you anticipate it will take a student to complete each activity. Add a time estimate at the day level or activity level, for example, Tuesday (4 hrs) or Reading (1 hr). This can help students plan their week and help you ensure the course meets the University Credit Hours Policy 4080.

  6. Use the information you listed to balance a typical week’s activities:

  7. Add or remove activities for atypical weeks. With the changes, reevaluate the interactions and time estimates.

Example (List Style)

Here is an example 3-credit, 15-week course. Tasks are due three times a week (Tues / Thurs / Sun). Ideally, this will keep students connected to the course content. It also provides a time with the structure to interact with each other in discussions on Thursday and Sunday. 

Due Tuesday (2.5-3.0 hours)
Module Introduction (5 min)
Reading and Quiz: Chapter 00 (120 min)
Reflective writing journal (30 min)

Due Thursday (2.5-3.0 hours)
Reading or video content (60 min)
Homework assignment (60-90+ min)
Group Discussion: Initial Post (30 min)

Due Sunday (2.5-3.0 hours)
Group Discussion: Reply Posts (60 min)
Exam Prep or Guided Independent Study (60-90+ min)
Reading Preview (30 min)
Module Self-Evaluation (10 min)

Example (Table Style)

Due Date

Course Activities

Interaction Type (S-C, S-T, S-S)

Time Estimate

Tuesday

Module Introduction

S-C

10 min

Reading and Quiz

S-C

150 min

Journal Reflection

S-C, S-T

45 min

Thursday

Video Lecture and articles

S-C, S-T

60 min

Homework assignment

S-C, S-T

90-120 min

Group Discussion: Initial Post

S-C, S-S, S-T

60 min

Saturday

Group Discussion: Reply Posts

S-C, S-S, S-T

90 min

Homework assignment submission

S-C, S-T

30 min

Module Self-Evaluation

S-T

10 min

Total

575 mins

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