Ch. 1 - The nature of curriculum
The types of curricula
1) Recommended 2) Written 3) Supported 4) Taught 5) Tested & 6) Learned
Unit of study
A segment of the curriculum that includes several lessons designed around a central theme or topic.
basic learnings
Basic learnings are those that, in the eyes of educators, are essential for all students
Mastery learnings
Both structured and basic. A teacher and student discuss specific next steps to gain a better foothold on the path to master
social and cultural variables
Cultural differences, gender bias, and individual socioeconomic circumstances often relate to student learning and academic performance
Organinational variables
Designate all those decisions about how teachers will be assigned and students grouped for instruction
curricular policies
Designates the set of rules, criteria, and guidelines intended to manage curriculum development and implementation
The Recommended Curriculum
Endorsed by individual scholars, professional associations, and reform commissions
Non-structured learning
Includes all those skills, knowledge, and attitudes that can be mastered without such careful sequencing, planning, testing, and delineation
structured learning
Involves sequencing, planning, measurable outcomes, and clearly delineated content
Enrichment learnings
Knowledge and skills that are interesting and enriching but are not considered essential; they are simply nice to know
Variables of the hidden curriculum
Organizational variables, social-system variables, and social/cultural variables
The written curriculum
The curriculum embodied in approved state and district curriculum guides (more specific and comprehensive than recommended)
Taught curriculum
The curriculum that is delivered by teachers once they make decisions about how to teach the explicit curriculum.
Organic learnings
Those that are basic, but do not require structuring. Learnings that develop day by day, rather naturally, as the result of numerous interactions and exchanges. Just as important as mastery outcomes, but do not require sequencing, pacing, and articulating
Descriptive Curriculum
What is REALLY happening in the classroom? (experiences). provides glimpses of the curriculum in action.
Learned Curriculum
What students actually learn in relationship to the goals of the explicit curriculum—which is not always the same as those goals.
which four components of Curriculum are intentional?
Written, supported, taught, and tested
lesson
a set of related learning experiences typically lasting 30-90 minutes
courses of study
a subset of both a program of study and a field of study. It is a set or organized learning experiences, within a field of study, offered over a specified period of time (year, semester, or quarter) (Macroeconomics, Educational psychology, etc.)
fields of study
organized and clearly demarcated set of learning experiences typically offered over a multiyear period (ELA, SS, mathematics, science, etc.)
Prescriptive Curricula
provide us with what ought to happen. Often takes the form of a plan, an intended program, or some kind of expert opinion
curriculum
set of plans made for guiding learning in schools and the actualization (execution) of those plans in the classroom
the supported curriculum
the curriculum as reflected in and shaped by the resources allocated to support and deliver it
hidden curriculum
the informal and unofficial aspects of culture that children are taught in school
social system variables
the various parts of a community's social system that interact and influence the health of a community
program of study
total set of learning experiences offered by a school for a particular group of learners, usually over a multiyear period and typically encompassing several fields of study (education program, exercise in sports science program, etc.)
tested curriculum
what is examined in standardized and graded testing materials