Curriculum Design and Implementation

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self-actualization

- acceptance and expression of the inner core of self, - minimal presence of ill health, neurosis, psychosis, or loss or diminution of basic human and personal capacities

Two ways curriculum guides are used

- provides suggestions to teachers who wish to use it for developing their own instructional units and lesson plans, in less structured situations -In more structured situations, specifies standards or objectives to be mastered within a grade or subject area; provides a sequence of instruction for a time period or which ones to cluster together

Ways of sequencing

1. From the simplest to the most complex 2. In chronological order 3. By theme 4. Geographically 5. Concrete to the abstract 6. General to specific 7. Groupings of similar topics, readings, & skills

3 elements that can turn a curriculum goal to an objective

1. performance or behavioral terms. IE those skills and knowledge the students are expected to demonstrate at the level of proficiency 2. Precise degree of mastery or proficiency 3. conditions under which the performance will take place

Tyler Model for curriculum development

Based on the book "Basic principles of curriculum and instruction" (1949) written by Ralph W. Tyler; recommend that curriculum developers gather data from 1. the learners, 2. contemporary life outside school, 3. the subject matter; Objectives filtered by a) educational and social philosophy of the school, and b)the psychology of learning;

General Systems theory

Based on the concept that each part has only a unique impact but that all parts of a system are interdependent and therefore, the combination into a functioning system has an exponential impact on outcomes

School District level of curriculum development

Can function as an isolated unit; Conducted through various teams; consider problems such as: -adding new programs -abandoning programs -implementing standards-based curriculum and instruction -creating items for progress monitoring or EOC exams -Writing or reviewing proposals for state, federal, and private foundation grants -articulating programs between levels

Step Model of Curriculum Development

Classroom (Team, Grade, and Department) Individual School School district State Nation International

Taba Model of Curriculum Development

Created by Hilda Taba; an inductive approach to curriculum development; creativity promoted at the teacher/local level; learning experiences are a major strategy; teachers involved in the process of curriculum design; order in decision making; process that takes variables into consideration resulting in a more thoughtfully planned and dynamic curriculum; professional learning for teachers should be provided so they can implement the units in their classroom

Interlocking model

Curriculum and instruction are independent but there is an integrated relationship between them at certain points. The relationship is interconnected but not holistically so.

Concentric Model

Curriculum and instruction are not independent of each other. One is a subsystem of the other, contained within

Cyclical Model

Curriculum and instruction are separate entities that impact each other in a continuous, repetitious, never-ending cycle.

Dualistic Model

Curriculum and instruction remain separate; developers/designers don't engage with teachers; standards discussions divorced from classroom implementation

School level of curriculum development

Curriculum is articulated and integrated and school leaders and staff should hold themselves accountable for the implications of curriculum decisions

Stuart vs. School District No.1 1874

Decided that school boards can spend public funds to provide a secondary school education to the youth of their district

The Olivia Model for Curriculum development

Deductive model; consists of 12 components;feedback cycles back from the evaluation of the curriculum to the curriculum goals and from the evaluation of the instruction to the instructional goals; emphasis of continuous revision of the components of their respective 2 sub-cycles

National level of curriculum development

Divided into US Congress, US department of Education, & US supreme court;

Models of Curriculum-Instruction Relationship

Dualistic Interlocking Concentric Cyclical

Allure of Essentialism

Easier to understand, simplest to organize and administer; tidiness and relative ease of measuring achievement of subject matter;

Reconstructionism

Most liberal of the 4 philosophies of education; doesn't have widespread endorsement; schools are used to achieve what is considered to be improvements in society; school should do more than transmit the cultural heritage or simply student social problems, instead becoming an agency for solving political and social problems; subject matter with which the student should be engaged consists of unsolved, often controversial, problems of the day, i.e. unemployment, health, housing, and urbanization; the solutions to the problems are found through group consensus; fear of indoctrination

Regional level of Curriculum development

Not comparable to lower-level planning; occasionally, curriculum specialists of a particular area may assemble and develop curriculum materials that they may use in their schools

Concepts of Curriculum Construction

Scope Relevance Balance Integration Sequence Continuity Articulation Transferability

Team, Grade, and Department Level of Curriculum Development

Specific curriculum innovations are discussed primarily to delineate the process of curriculum development and to help leader to impact and evaluate curriculum change.

Balance

Structure and order of curriculum in its scope and sequence result in the achievement of educational objectives (Halverson, 1961); Results in a curriculum that completely fits a learner in terms their particular educational needs at that time (Doll, 1996)

Constructivism

Teacher is a facilitator of learning; students must be taught to take responsibility for their own learning; learning is an active process; complemented by experimentalist and gestalt psychology under progressivism education philosophy

psychological screen of Tyler Model

Teachers clarify the principles of learning that they believe to be sound; involves a unified formulation of a theory of learning that helps to outline the nature of the learning process, how it takes place, under what conditions, what sort of mechanisms operate, and the like; effective application presupposes adequate preparation in educational psychology and in human growth and development by those charged with the task of curriculum development

Philosophical screen of Tyler Model

Teachers should form an educational and social philosophy; developer should review general objectives and omit those that don't agree with it; include democratic goals: - the recognition of the importance of every individual human regardless of race or national, societal, or economic -opportunity for wide participation in all phases of activities in the social groups in society -encouragement of variability rather than demanding a single type of personality -faith in intelligence as a method of dealing with important problems rather than depending on the authority of an autocratic or aristocratic group

Integration

The blending of disciplines; an optional and controversial discipline to undertake; To some it occurs at the individual level, meaning methods must be developed to help learners develop a unity of knowledge (Taba, 1962); Relating the subject to one another while still maintaining their separateness

perennialism

The most conservative of the 4 educational philosophies; doesn't have widespread endorsement; sees the aim of education as the disciplining of the mind; believe that truth is eternal, everlasting, and unchanging; eschewed immediate needs of the learners, specialized education, and vocational or career education; "It is an education calculated to develop the mind" (Robert M. Hutchins, 1963); would create an education suitable to a small percentage of students who have interest and aptitude to pursue the intended learning; Eastern writings are completely ignored.

Course (of) Study

a curriculum guide that relates to a single course

Curriculum Guide

a single course or subject area at a particular grade level; all subjects at a particular grade level; a sequence in a discipline; or an area of interest applicable to two or more courses or grade levels

philosophy

a way of framing distinctive sorts of questions having to do with what is presupposed, perceived, intuited, believed, and known (Greene, 1973)

Sequencing centered on learners

choosing emphases in keeping with the learners' growth and development

Student as source for Tyler Model

developer must gather and analyze data relevant to student needs and interests; total range of needs: educational, social, occupational, physical, psychological, and recreational; evidence should include teacher observations and student/parent interviews

Articulation

element of sequencing that is increasing in importance and frequency with the expectation that graduates are college and career ready

Artifacts

guides, formative assessments, and alignment tables used in curriculum implementation

Proficiency levels

indicate progress towards proficiency on standards are set by the state for state standardized assessments and state end of course exams; may also be set for school district developed summative and formative assessments.

Sequencing centered on subject matter

placing subject matter at the grade level at which it is assumed learners will be able to master it.

Validation

process of determining whether the curriculum goals and curriculum objectives are accepted as appropriate for the school proposing them

Hierarchical development of curriculum

responsibility for curriculum development is spread across the levels of classroom, school, school district, and state; Each level possesses the power to approve or reject the curriculum proposals of the levels below it; Doesn't hold true beyond the state level.

Learning targets

short-term measurable instructional objectives. Provide the direction for instructional planning and formative assessments, usually made by teachers but may also be developed at the school district level.

Decline of Progressivism Cause

some aligned schools went to extremes to cater to the interests and needs of children; some seemed to sacrifice long-range needs and interests of which the young learner was unaware; perception that graduates weren't learning basic skills or elements of the nation's heritage; can appear disorganized and impossible to navigate; seemed to be usurping the functions of the home and some teachers agreed;

Determining priority

the placing of the curriculum goals and objectives in order of relative importance to the data informed needs of students

learning experiences

"The interaction between the learner and the external conditions in the environment to which he can read" Tyler, 1949

View of Mauritz Johnson, Jr (1967)

"only possible source [of the curriculum] is the total available culture"; only organized subject matter/ the disciplines can be a source of curriculum, not the interests of learners nor society

curriculum

"planned learning outcomes for which the school is responsible" (Popham & Baker, 1970) i.e. intentions and instruction

Critical Inquiry

"rigorous, time-consuming, collaborative, informed, school-based dialectic around generic questions" (Kenneth A Sirotnik, 1998); at the heart is "willingness and ability of people to engage in competent discourse and communication" (Sirotnik, 1998);

Philosophy of Education

"statements of aims of education are positions taken that are based on a set of beliefs" (Green, 1973); stem from philosophies of life

Three conceptions of sequencing

(Orlosky and Smith, 1978) a. sequencing according to need b. macrosequencing - the organization of knowledge and the formulation of instruction to coincide with the different stages of the individual's development c. microsequencing - the organization of subject matter according to the prerequisite knowledge required of each unit of content.

Characteristics of Curriculum goals

- Relate to the aims, mission, or education philosophy -they speak to one o r more areas of the curriculum, but they do not delineate the specific courses or specific items of content - reference is to the accomplishment of all students rather than the achievement of individual students - They are broad enough to lead to specific curriculum objectives or standards

Statements of curriculum goals can...

- stress of the role of the curriculum of the school or school district - focus on student learning

Direction of learning experiences

-also called implementation of instruction -occurs btwn selection and organization, and the evaluation of student achievement

Issues with Tyler's Model

-apparent linear structure -lack of interdependence betwn different components - not meant to be followed strictly

Attention should be given to learning experiences that...

-develop thinking -develop information gathering -develop social dispositions -expand interests

Significance of psychological screen

-enables us to distinguish changes in human beings that can be expected to result from a learning process from those that cannot -enables us to distinguish goals that are feasible from those that are likely to take a very long time or are almost impossible of attainment at the age level contemplated -gives us some idea of the length of time required to attain an objective and the age levels at which the effort is most efficiently employed

Why focus on student learning is preferable?

-places student at the center of learning, philosophically -its in keeping with instructional design, which focuses on student learning outcomes, rather than on the performance of the teacher/school -student outcome statements parallel writing instructional goals and instructional objectives or learning targets -evaluation design can be aligned for systematic curriculum and instruction and serve as feedback

Order of Taba Model

1. Create learning units for each grade level or subject area 2. Practice experimental units 3. Revise and merge 4. Determine a structure 5. Introduce and implement new units

Variables that effect balance

1. The learner-centered and the subject-centered curriculum 2. The needs of society and needs of the learner 3. General and specialized education 4. Breadth and depth 5. three domains may create a three-way balance 6. Individualization and general education 7. Innovation and stability 8. The needs of the exceptional and non-exceptional student 9. Within and across disciplines

aims procedure

1. general, all-inclusive aim stated 2. First statement is broken into small number of highly generalized statements 3.Small number of aims divided to suit the administrative organization 4. Aims of each division further broken up by stating objective by each subject 5. Subject objectives divided into objective for each grade

4 characteristics of the perceptual field that underlie the behavior of truly adequate persons

1. positive view of self 2. identification with others 3. openness to experience and acceptance 4. possession of a rich field of perceptions gained from both formal schooling and informal sources

Four major philosophies of education

1. reconstructionism 2. progressivism 3. essentialism 4. perennialism

Order of Tyler's Curriculum Rationale

1. source general objectives from students, society, and subject matter 2. Use these to form general objectives 3. Screen general objectives through educational philosophy and learning psychology 4. Use this to form precise instructional objectives

Order of Tyler's Curriculum Rationale (Expanded)

1. source general objectives from students, society, and subject matter 2. Use these to form general objectives 3. Screen general objectives through educational philosophy and learning psychology 4. Use this to form precise instructional objectives 5. selection of learning experiences 6. organization of learning experiences 7. direction of learning experiences 8. Evaluation of learning experiences

Curriculum System

blends the entire process of curriculum development including a feedback loop, into one model as a holistic approach that is more impactful than as individual components

Aim of education

statement of beliefs central to the author's philosophical creed that is directed to the mission of the school or school district; "must be derived from more fundamental and general thinking about value, reality, and knowledge" (J. DOnald Butler, 1968);

scope

breadth of the curriculum; "the focal points of learning through which the school's objectives are to be attained" (Goodlad, 1963); includes the focal points, the basic concepts or skills to be taught, and the knowledge that will be included in the curriculum( Tyler, 1949); Can be divided into general statements, administrative organization, subject and grade respectively

Sequence

The order in which the organizing elements or centers are arranged by the curriculum planners; i.e. pacing guide; determined after the scope;

State Level of Curriculum development

These departments and/or agencies are directly responsible for the educational matters within their borders; governed by a board of education, which is often comprised of elected members or appointed members by the governor, or a combination of both; operate curriculum development through a number of channels within and outside of education that directly and indirectly impacts the curriculum for that area; Members help to: - set curriculum standards -review and adopt instructional materials -establish graduation requirements -oversee funding' -appointing board members to military and special school districts -provide final review of rules in educator certification -review the commissioner's proposed award of new charter schools, with authority to veto recommended applicant

Instructional Evaluation

Type of assessment decision concerning whether to continue or change instructional procedures that have been initiated with students; assesses individual students directly and programs indirecty

The tyler Curriculum Rationale

a process for selecting educational objectives; widely known and has been practiced in curriculum circles all over the world

secular perennialists

advocate a highly academic curriculum with emphasis on grammar, rhetoric, logic, classical and world languages, mathematics, and, the great books of the Western world, including the Bible and theological writings; Eastern writings are completely ignored.

Instruction evaluation implementation

assessing the learner on entry skills and knowledge before the start of instruction; progress monitor students; write and administer classroom level assessments, and interpret resulting data and evidence to further inform instruction; the assessment of student achievement before, during, and at the end of instruction; the assessment of the effectiveness of the instructor through student learning outcome;

Behaviorism

casts the learner in the passive role as the recipient of the many stimuli to which they must respond; aka connectionism, association, S-R bond (stimulus-response bond), and conditioning; uses drilling, programmed instruction, teaching machines, standardized testing, and behavioral objectives; teachers break content into logical, sequential pieces and prescribe the pieces the learner will study by giving learners a rule, concept or model, then provide opportunities to practice/drill using the guide; if the content has been properly mastered, it can be easily remembered as a part of long-term memory

The Eight-Year Study

conducted by the Progressive Education Association between 1933 and 1941; the cooperation of >300 colleges and universities allowed a limited number of high school graduates to be accepted in without regard for the usual college entrance requirements for a 5 year period while the schools these graduates came from were able to modify their programs as they saw fit; WIlford M. Aikin, H. H. Giles, S.P. McCutchen, Ralph W. Tyler, and A.N. Zechiel helped conduct the study; graduates of the experimental schools did as well or better than their counterparts in college; graduates of experimental schools excelled in scholastic honors, leadership positions, study habits, intellectual curiosity, and extra class activities; This showed a single pattern of required courses is not essential for college success

Gestalt Psychology

contrasts the behaviorist's idea of presenting subject matter in parts; concentrates on wholes, the big picture; determined that subject matter should be organized in a way that learners could see the relationships among the various parts; matches the progressivist concern for the whole child

School improvement team

data-centric and focuses on improving student achievement; reactive in its approach to solving student performances issues; will recommend a plan of action with timelines and metrics to create an immediate change but will not develop the curriculum

Transferability

learning in school should have applicability in either a broad or narrow sense outside the school or after school years; principle of both instruction and curriculum;

Curriculum evaluation implementation

determining if programs are valid, relevant, feasible, of interest to the learners, and meet the rigor of the standards; also when reviewing the voices of delivery systems, materials, and resources and examine the finished curriculum documents and artifacts they have created i.e. guides, unit plans, and lesson plans

Society as source for Tyler Model

developers create a classification scheme dividing life into diff aspects, i.e. health, family, recreation, vocation, religion, consumption, and civic roles; past and present trends

Screening process of Tyler model

eliminates unimportant and contradictory objectives

The Gordon Taylor Model of Curriculum System Development

encapsulates the idea that all components identified as a part of curriculum or that influence curriculum are included;

Experimentalist Psychology

encourages active involvement of the learner in all their capacities in the educational process; a part of the progressivist education philosophy

Curriculum leadership team

focuses on curricular issues and is both proactive and reactive in its manner of operating; ensures articulation between and among the various teams, grades subjects, and departments of the class; make certain that teachers are following agreed-upon sequences and meeting expectations of aligned standards-based curriculum, instruction, and assessment; also generates its own proposals and possible solutions to curricular issues

Perceptual Psychology

focuses on the development of the learner's self-concept/self-actualization; focus on developing persons who feel positive about themselves; Per progressivism, teachers are willing to help students to develop a positive concept of themselves and to deal with both their perceptions of the world and the world as it is

Instructional objectives

general objectives that have passed the screening process; now referred to as goals, educational ends, educational purposes, and behavioral objectives

Vertical Articulation

grade to grade

grass roots model

initiated by teachers in individual schools, employs democratic group methods of decision making, proceeds on a "broken front" and is geared to the specific curriculum problems of particular schools or even classrooms -curriculum can be successfully implemented only if the teachers have been intimately involved in the construction and development - students, parents, and other lay members of the community must be included in the curriculum planning process

Sector development of curriculum

majority of curriculum development takes place by teachers and curriculum specialists in the classroom, team, or grade, school, and school district; decreasing amounts of curriculum development takes place in sectors beyond the school district boundaries.

Subject matter as a source for Tyler Model

mathematics, audio-lingual foreign language programs, and science programs that came from subject-matter specialists

Essentialism

one of the 4 educational philosophies; has widespread endorsement; aim is the transmission of the cultural heritage, seeking to preserve society & adjusting men and women to society; organized courses are the vehicle for transmitting the culture, and emphasis is placed on the subject matter; students made to fit the curriculum; curriculum consists of the reading, writing, arithmetic, and academic subjects; mainly uses the technique of Assign-Study-Recite-Test; erudition highly valued; education is seen as preparation for a future purpose; fits well with centralized administrative structures as represented in European style ministries of education; students can be rewarded and promoted based on their mastery of subject matter; follows the behavioristic school of psychology

progressivism

one of the 4 educational philosophies; has widespread endorsement; led by John Dewey, William H. Kilpatrick, John Childs, and Boyd Bode; subject matter is subordinate to the learner; advocates rearing a child in a relaxed environment without forcing learning; the needs and interest of learners are considered and it is recognized that learners bring their bodies, emotions, and spirits to school along with their minds; students learn best when actively experiencing their world, instead of passively absorbing preselected content; shows concern for the student, society, and subject matter but student is at the center of the learning process; faith in democracy; Cooperation is fostered in the classroom; individual growth is greater than growth in comparison to others; Learn by Doing; is complemented by critical inquiry, constructivist psychology, experimentalist psychology, and gestalt psychology; scientific method is a general method to be applied in any area of human endeavor

Deductive approach to curriculum design

start with the general design and work toward the specifics

inductive approach to curriculum design

start with the specifics and build up to a general design and working to the specifics

Curriculum Goal

purpose or end stated in general terms without criteria of achievement; derived from a statement of philosophy, defined aims of education, and data on student needs and their achievement BUT leaves instructional decision making to others

Curriculum objective or standard

purpose or end stated in specific, measurable terms with the intention that students will develop proficiency; derived after the curriculum goals.

descriptive model

recommends an approach in more general terms; curriculum developer relies on a practice they are familiar with and do no necessarily follow an exact approach; control of outcomes are less predictable in this model

prescriptive model

recommends what should be done and is seen as a standard in the industry by many curriculum developers; outcomes are achieved in a more controlled manner

Classroom Level of Curriculum Development

teachers carry out curriculum design when they review the target standards and align instructional goals and instructional objectives with them. Extend the design by incorporating subject matter, choosing materials, and identifying resources in the school and community.

Erudition

the ability to reproduce that which has been learned

Curriculum evaluation

the assessment of programs, processes, and curricular documents, and artifacts; assesses programs directly and individual student performance indirectly; assessment of achievement of the specified curriculum objectives or standards

instruction

the means of providing knowledge, i.e. pedagogy, delivery mode, or implementation

Macrosequencing

the organization of knowledge and the formulation of instruction to coincide with the different stages of the individual's development

Microsequencing

the organization of subject matter according to the prerequisite knowledge required of each unit of content.

Continuity

the planned repetition of content at successive levels, each time at an increased level of complexity; vertical reiteration of major curriculum elements; Concepts, skills, and knowledge are introduced and reintroduced; repetition with increasing levels of complexity of thinking and appropriate resources at each stage;

Relevance

the utility of knowledge within everyday activities; the difficulty with defining this principle is how it's determined and by whom;

Horizontal Articulation

within a grade


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