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SMART Goals Writing Guide

This presentation provides an introduction to SMART goals, which are goals that are specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and time-bound. It explains what SMART goals are and why they are used. The presentation defines each component of a SMART goal and provides examples. It includes opportunities for the viewer to pause and practice writing their own SMART goals.

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Elaiza Herrera
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
469 views18 pages

SMART Goals Writing Guide

This presentation provides an introduction to SMART goals, which are goals that are specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and time-bound. It explains what SMART goals are and why they are used. The presentation defines each component of a SMART goal and provides examples. It includes opportunities for the viewer to pause and practice writing their own SMART goals.

Uploaded by

Elaiza Herrera
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Welcome to SMART Goals presentation.

This presentation provides an introduction


to SMART Goals and instructions for writing them. At times during the
presentation, you may want to pause to allow yourself time to write. Examples
included at the end of the presentation may or may not apply to your role
specifically, but will still help you to better understand how to create a SMART
Goal.

1
This presentation acts as an introduction to SMART Goal writing, explains what
SMART Goals are, why they are used, and finally allows time to practice writing
SMART Goals.

2
A SMART goal indicates a specific way to articulate and focus goals.

3
The acronym SMART identifies the areas of focus in goal-setting. It stands for
Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Results-oriented or relevant, and Time-bound.
Other terms have been associated with these letters, but the Ohio Department of
Education uses these.

4
A specific goal has a much greater chance of being accomplished than a general
goal. To set a specific goal answer the six “W” questions.

•Who is involved?
•What do I want to accomplish?
•Where will the action take place?
•When will the goal be achieved?
•Why is this goal important?

For educators, goal setting should consider the larger school community. Make sure
it meets your needs and is linked to the bigger picture of the school goals. Try to
avoid using words such as try, could, should or maybe as they indicate the goal is
not concrete.

5
Establish concrete criteria for measuring progress toward the attainment of each
goal. To determine if your goal is measurable, ask questions such as:
•How many?
•How much?
•To what degree?
•How will I know when it is accomplished?

This example has a clear measurability. The scale will indicate whether the goal
has been achieved.

6
Identify the most important goals, then determine how to attain them. Work to
develop attitudes, abilities, skills, and financial capacity to reach them. For
example, 5 pounds is an attainable weight loss within the time period stated.

7
A results-oriented or relevant goal represents a worthwhile objective. Goals should
be important to the work and focus on results. Weight loss is both relevant and
results-oriented.

8
Any effective goal must have a target date. A deadline set too far in the future
invites procrastination. A short term goal could be unrealistic and discouraging.

9
Long-term goals are different from SMART goals. Long-term goals describe future
aspirations such as getting a job or earning a masters degree. Without short-term
goals defining the steps to large scale achievements, long-term goals are too easily
dropped.

10
Let’s practice writing SMART goals. Pause the presentation after the sample is
given to allow time to write.

11
Consider these clarifications for each characterisitc of SMART goals.

12
13
Pause here to practice.

14
The revised goal includes
•A specific time span
•A specific skill outcome
•A defined method of measurement

15
Pause to allow time to work.

16
This goal was made more informative but lacked a method for determining success.

17
Create your own goal. Start by reviewing the appropriate set of standards or by
reflecting on your practice through a self-assessment or analysis of student work.

18

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