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ASSESSING THE
CURRICULUM
Lesson 1 Intended vs.
Implemented vs. Achieved
Purpose of Curriculum
Assessment
Curriculum Assessment is the process of collecting
information for use in evaluation.
Curriculum assessment may achieve the following purposes:
1. Highlight curriculum expectations
2. Gather information about what students know and can do.
3. Motivate students to learn better.
4. Motivate and encourage teachers to meet the identified needs
of students.
5. Provide evidence to tell how well the students have learned.
6. Obtain feedback that helps teachers, students and parents
make good decisions to guide instructions.
INTENDED CURRICULUM
- Refers to a set of objectives at the beginning of any
particular plan. It establishes the goal, the specific
purposes, and the immediate objectives to be
accomplished.
There are certain indicators to
measure intended curriculum.
1. Are the objectives achievable within the learners’
developmental levels?
2. Can the objectives be accomplished within the time
frame?
3. Are the resources adequate to accomplish the objectives?
4. Are the objectives specific and clear?
5. Are there ways of measuring the outcomes of the
objectives?
6. Are the objectives observable?
7. Are the objectives doable?
8. Are the objectives relevant?
IMPLEMENTED CURRICULUM
- Refers to the various learning activities or
experiences of the students in order to
achieve the intended curricular outcomes.
To assess the implemented
Curriculum the following questions can be
addressed:
1. Are the learning activities congruent with the stated
objectives?
2. Are the materials and methods appropriate for the objectives
set?
3. Does the teacher have the skill to implement the activities or
use the strategy?
4. Does the teacher utilize the various ways of doing to
complement the learning styles of the students?
5. Are there alternative activities for the learners to do to
accomplish the same objectives?
7. Do the activities motivate the learners to do more
and harness their potentials?
8. Do the activities provide maximum learning
experiences?
9. Do the activities utilize multiple sensory abilities
of the learners?
10.Do the activities address multiple intelligences of
the learners?
ACHIEVED CURRICULUM
- Refers to the curriculum outcomes based on the first two
types of curriculum, the intended and the implemented. It is
now considered the product. It can be the learning
outcomes, or a material product itself, like a book, module
or instructional material.
To measure achieved curriculum
the following questions should
be addressed:
1. Do the learning outcomes achieved by the learners
approximate the level of performance set at the beginning of
the curriculum?
2. Are the learning outcomes achieved higher or lower than the
objectives set?
3. Do the achieved learning outcomes reflect knowledge, skills
and attitudes and skills intended to be developed?
4. How many percent of the learners in the same class perform
higher that the level set at the beginning?
5. Do the curricular outcomes reflect the goals and the
CURRICULUM
ACHIEVED
The relationship of the Three types of
Curriculum
The Basic Education Curriculum
(BEC) and the Three Types of Curriculum:
Intended,
Implemented and Achieved
Question 1 What does the BEC aim to accomplish?(Intended
curriculum)
1. To raise the quality of Filipino learners and graduates who will
become lifelong learners.
2. To decongest the curriculum in order that the teachers and
learners will be able to contextualize it.
3. To use innovative, interdisciplinary and integrative methods of
instructional delivery whenever possible and appropriate.
4. To make values development integral to all learning areas in
high school.
5. To increase time for tasks in order to gain mastery of
The curriculum objectives are expressed in terms of
competencies: knowledge, skills, values, and attitudes
which the learners will develop or acquire.
Question 1 How was the BEC implemented to accomplish the
goals?(Implemented curriculum)
1. The BEC decongested the overcrowded the old curriculum
into five learning areas, namely, English Mathematics,
Science, Filipino, and Makabayan.
2. The teachers in basic education were trained to use
innovative, interdisciplinary, thematic, and integrative modes
of instructional delivery.
3. Teaching-learning processes are interactive to enhance
learning. There is open communication between teachers and
learners and among learners themselves. Instructional
materials and multimedia are fully utilized to support
interactions thus teaching and learning become more
4. English, Science, Mathematics and Filipino are the
basic tool subjects, while Makabayan develops healthy
personal and national self-identity.
5. Makabayan entails the use of integrated units of learning areas
composed of several subjects in the elementary and in the
secondary levels.
For the elementary level, Makabayan is composed of
a) Araling Panlipunan or Social Studies
b) Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan EPP
c) Musika, Sining at Edukasyong Pangkatawan MSEP
d) Good Manners and Right Conduct GMRC
For the high school, Makabayan is composed of
a) Araling Panlipunan or Social Studies
b) Technology and Home Economics
c) Physical Education, Health, Music and Arts (PEHMA)
d) Edukasyon sa Pagpapahalaga (EP) or Values Education
6. The school year 2002-2003 was declared as the pilot year in
the public schools. Private basic education schools were
encouraged to join in the implementation of the BEC in the later
years.
Question 3 What has the BEC achieved?(Achieved curriculum)
The National Educational Testing and Research Center(NETRC)
The Bureau of Elementary Education (BEE)
The Bureau of Secondary Education (BSE)
A continuous monitoring was done by the school principals and
supervisors in the schools, district and divisions. This is referred
to as school-based monitoring, to allow curriculum managers
to make immediate adjustments and provide feedback to the
national offices.
Among the initial achievements of the BEC as
expressed by teachers, parents and students informally are
the following:
1. Increased interest and motivation of students to go to school.
2. Increased level of performance in the tool subject areas.
3. Change in teachers paradigm from a dispenser of knowledge
to facilitators of learning
4. Increased instructional materials support for teaching and
learning
5. Increase in the in-service training of teachers
6. More opportunities of learners to learn on their own.
7. Use of varied teaching strategies to complement the learning
styles of the students.
8. More involvement of other stakeholders in the education of
the children
9. More involvement of the school principals in decision
making that relate to curriculum implementation.
10.Empowered teachers and school officials.
ASSESSING THE
CURRICULUM
Lesson 2 Criteria for Curriculum
Assessment.
Criteria- are a set of standards to be followed
in assessment. Specifically, as they apply to
criteria are set of standards upon which the different
elements of the curriculum are being tested. The
criteria determine the different levels of
competencies or proficiency of acceptable
task performance.
Goals and Objectives- are statements of curricular
expectations. Objectives indicate clearly what the
students will learn. The items must reflect the tasks,
skills, content behavior and thought processes
that make up curricular domains and must also
match the students’ needs.
Goals and instructional objectives
- are formulated and specified for the following
purposes:
1. To have focus on curriculum and instruction which give
direction to where students need to go.
2. To meet requirements specified in the policies and
standards of curriculum and instruction
3. To provide the students’ the best possible education and
standards of curriculum and instruction.
4. To monitor the progress of students based on the goals set
5. To motivate students to learn and the teachers to be able to
feel a sense of competence when goals are attained.
For goals and objectives to
be formulated criteria on certain
elements should be included according to
Howell and Nolet in 2000.
1. Content
2. Behavior
3. Criterion
4. condition
Writing effective goals and
objectives should also use the following
general criteria.
1. Syntactic correctness (Are the objectives syntactically
correct?)
2. Compliance with legal requirements (Do the objectives
comply with the legal requirements of the course of subjects?)
3. The Stranger Test (Do the objectives pass the stranger test?)
4. Both knowledge and behavior are addressed (Do the
objectives address both knowledge and behavior?)
5. The So-What test (Do they pass the so-what test?)
6. Individualization (Are the objectives aligned?)
7. Common Sense (Do they make common sense?)
Criteria for Assessment of Instruction
The Two Approaches to Instruction:
1. Supplantive Approach- referred to as “direct” instruction.
The teachers attempts to promote learning by providing
explicit
directions and explanations regarding how to do a tank.
With this approach, information is presented in an ordered
sequence in which component subskills are taught directly
or a foundation for later tasks. This approach to instruction
is highly teacher-directed.
2. Generative Approach-referred to as “constructivist” or
“developmental”. The teacher functions as a facilitator who
takes a less central role in a learning process that is student-
directed. Generative instruction is “constructivist” because
much of its emphasis is on helping students to construct their
own educational goals and experiences as well as the
knowledge that results.
With this approach, information is presented on a
schedule determined by students’ interests and goals.
Prerequisites for more complex information are expected to be
learned as a consequence of the larger understanding students
would be guided to construct.
Attributes Generative Approach Supplantive Approach
Buzz Words used by
proponents
• Constructivist
• Developmental
• Top down
• Holistic
• Authentic
• Meaning-based
• Direct instruction
• Teacher-directed
• Mastery learning
• Task analytic
• Competency based
• Effective teaching
What proponents call the
other
• Romantics
• Fuzzy
• Postmodernist
• Unrealistic
• Reductionist
• Drill-and-kill
• Dogmatic
• unauthentic
Underlying beliefs about
what is taught
• Students construct their
own understanding
• When learning is
contextualized, students
will identify what they are
ready to learn
• The skills that students
need to learn can be
derived from an analysis
of the social demands
placed on them.
Underlying beliefs about
how learning occurs
• learning is “socially
constructed”, students
link to new information to
prior knowledge when
provided opportunities to
observe or experience.
• Learning can be induced
through instruction that
builds explicit links
between new information
and prior knowledge.
Attributes Generative Approach Supplantive Approach
Underlying beliefs about
how to teach
• Learning is
developmental and
occurs much the way
early language is acquired
• Teachers take a “hand’s
off” approach and seek to
provide a meaningful
context in which learning
will occur naturally
• When learning does not
occur, it can be facilitated
by building it from the
“bottom up” through
teaching of prerequisite
subskills.
• Teachers take a “hands-
on approach” by
structuring lessons and
providing explicit
direction.
Common error made by
proponents
• Creating interesting
classroom activities but
failure to link these
activities to learning
outcomes
• By focusing on specific
learning outcomes, they
may fail to attend to
other equally important
interests and topics
• Too much emphasis on
larger ideas, not enough
emphasis on the
components
• Too much emphasis on
the components, not
enough emphasis or the
larger ideas.
Select the Generative
Approach when:
Select the Supplantive
Approach when:
The Student • Has considerable prior
knowledge
• Has adaptive motivational
patterns
• Experiences consistent
successes on the task
• Has little prior knowledge
of the task
• Has non-adaptive
motivational patterns
• Experiences repeated
failure on the task
The Task • Is simple for the student
• Is well-defined
• Can be completed using a
general problem-solving
strategy
• Is to understand, but not
necessarily apply, what is
learned
• Is complex
• Is ill defined
• Has missing information
• Requires the use of a
task-specific strategy
• Is pivotal to the learning
of subsequent tasks
• must be used with a high
level of proficiency
The Setting • Allows plenty of time to
accomplish outcomes
• Places priority on
experiences and activities
• Time allowed to
accomplish outcomes is
limited
• Places priority on task
mastery
Curriculum Criteria
-are guidelines on standard for curriculum decision-making.
The objectives of a curriculum or teaching plan are the most
important curriculum criteria, since they should be used in
selecting learning experiences and in evaluating learning
achievement.
The criteria are stated in the form of
questions as follows:
1. Have the goals of the curriculum or teaching plan been clearly
stated; and are they used by teachers and students in
choosing content, materials and activities for learning?
2. Have teacher and students engage in student-teacher
planning in defining the goals and in determining how they will
be implemented?
3. Do some of the planned goals relate to the society of the
community in which the curriculum will be implemented or the
teaching will be done?
4. Do some of the planned goals relate to the individual learner
and is or her needs, purposes, interest and abilities?
5. Are the planned goals used as criteria in selecting
and developing learning materials for instruction?
6. Are the planned goals used as criteria in evaluating learning
achievement and in the further planning of learning
sub goals activities?
According to Hass and Parkay (1993), individual
differences, flexibility and systematic planning are criteria that
depend in part on knowledge of the different approaches to
learning.
What are the characteristics of a
Good curriculum?
1. The curriculum is continuously evolving
2. The curriculum is based on the needs of the people
3. The curriculum is democratically conceived
4. The curriculum is the result of long term effort
5. The curriculum is a complex of details
6. The curriculum provides for the logical sequence of subject
matter.
7. The curriculum complements and cooperates with the
programs of the community
8. The curriculum has educational quality
9. The curriculum has administrative flexibility
What marks a good curriculum?
1. A good curriculum is systematically planned and evaluated.
2. A good curriculum reflects adequately the aims of the school.
3. A good curriculum maintains balance among all aims of the
school.
4. A good curriculum promotes continuity of experience.
5. A good curriculum arranges learning opportunities flexibly for
adaptation to particular situations and individuals.
6. A good curriculum utilizes the most effective learning
experiences and resources available.
7. A good curriculum makes maximum provision for the
development of each learner.
What is evaluation?
Evaluation is the process of determining the value of something
or the extent to which goals are being achieved. It is a process of
making a decision or reading a conclusion. It involves decision
making about student performance based on information obtained
from an assessment process.
Assessment is the process of collecting information by reviewing
the products of student work, interviewing observing , or testing.
Evaluation is the process of using information that is collected
through assessment. It entails a reasoning process that is based
on influence.
Inference is the process of arriving at a logical conclusion from a
body of evidence. It usually refers to the process of developing a
conclusion on the basis of some phenomenon that is not
experienced or observed directly by the person drawing the
inference.
Evaluation is a thoughtful process. It is the judgment we make
about the assessment of student learning based on established
criteria. It involves the process of integrating assessment
information form various sources and using this information to
make inferences and judgments about how well students have
achieved the curriculum expectations.
Evaluation provides information-
 Directly to the learner for guidance
 Directly to the teacher for orientation of the next
instruction activities.
 Directly to external agencies for their assessment of
schools functioning in the light of national purpose.
What is curriculum
evaluation?
Curriculum evaluation is the process of obtaining information for
judging the worth of an educational program, product, procedure,
educational objectives or the potential utility of alternative
approaches designed to attain specified objectives.
Curriculum evaluation focuses on determining whether the
curriculum as recorded in the master plan has been carried out in
the classroom.
In evaluating a curriculum, the following key
Questions are usually asked:
 Are the objectives being addressed?
 Are the contents presented in the recommended sequence?
 Are students being involved in the suggested instructional
experiences?
 Are the students reacting to the contents?
Formative and Summative
Evaluation
Summative evaluation is evaluation that takes place at the end of
a unit or section of instruction.
Summative evaluation takes place at the end of the lesson or
project and tells the evaluator what has happened. It sum’s up the
learning. It is the after-the-fact, like end-of-the-year testing.
Formative evaluation takes place during the lesson or project and
tells the evaluator what is happening. It is on-going and yields
information that can be used to modify the program prior to
termination.
ASSESSING THE
CURRICULUM
Lesson 3 Tools to Assess the
Curriculum.
What are Assessment
Strategies?
Assessment Strategies are structures through which student
knowledge and skills are assessed. These are:
1. Pencil-and-paper-strategy
2. Performance based strategy
3. Observational
4. Personal communication
5. Oral
6. Reflective
7. Combinations of strategies
PAPER-AND-PENCIL STRATEGY
The Essay
A. Definition
The essay:
• Is a writing sample used to assess student understanding
and or how well students can analyze and synthesize
information;
• Is a pencil-and-paper assessment where a student
constructs a response to a question, topic or brief statement
• Provides the student with opportunity to communicate
his/her reasoning in a written response.
B. Purpose
The essay is used to:
• Assess the student’s ability to communicate idea in writing;
The Select Response
A. Definition
The select response:
• Is a paper-and-pencil assessment in which the student is to
identify the one correct answer
• Is a commonly used procedure for gathering formal
evidence about student learning, specifically in memory,
recall and comprehension.
B. Purpose
The select response is used to:
• Test student learning of subject/content knowledge (facts,
concepts, principles or generalizations, or procedures);
• Assess prerequisites knowledge
THE PERFORMANCE-BASED
STRATEGY
The Performance Task
A. Definition
The performance task:
• Is an assessment which requires students to demonstrate a
skill or proficiency by asking them to create, produce, or
perform
• May be an observation of a student or group of students
performing a specific task to demonstrate skills and/or
knowledge through open-ended, “hands-on” activities
B. Purpose
The performance task is used to:
• Provide an efficient means of assessment where the
skill cannot be demonstrated with a pencil-and-paper
test;
• Enable learners to demonstrate abilities, skills,
attitudes and behaviors
• Provide information about a learner’s ability to
organize, draw on prior knowledge and experience,
improvise, choose from a range of strategies, represent
learning and make decisions to complete a task
• Test skills in the affective, cognition, psychomotor, and
perceptual domains.
The Exhibition/Demonstration
A. Definition
The Exhibition/Demonstration:
• Is a performance in which student demonstrates individual
achievement through application of specific skills and
knowledge
• Is used to assess progress in tasks that require students to
be actively engaged in an activity
B. Purpose
The Exhibition/Demonstration is used to:
• Allow students to show achievement of a skill or knowledge
by requiring the student to demonstrate that skill or
knowledge in use.
THE OBSERVATIONAL STRATEGY
A. Definition
Observation:
• Is a process of systematically viewing and recording student
behavior for the purpose of making programming decisions;
permeates the entire teaching process by assisting the
teacher in making the decisions require in effective
teaching.
B. Purpose
Observation:
• Provides systematic, ongoing information about students in
relation to areas of strength and weaknesses, preferred
learning styles, unique interests, learning needs, skills,
attitudes, behavior and performance related expectations.
PERSONAL COMMUNICATIONS
STRATEGY
The Conference
A. Definition
The conference:
• Is a formal or informal meeting between/among the teacher
and student and/or parent;
• Has a clear focus on learning for discussion
B. Purpose
The conference is used to:
• Exchange information or share ideas between among the
individuals at the conference
• Explore the student’s thinking and to suggest next steps;
• Assess the student’s level of understanding of a particular
concept or procedure;
• Enable a student to move ahead more successfully on a
particular piece of work;
• Review, clarify, and extend what the student has already
completed
• Help students internalize criteria for good work.
The Interview
A. Definition
The interview:
• Is a form of conversation in which all parties increase their
knowledge and understanding
B. Purpose
The interview is used to:
• Focus on inquiry where the purpose of the meeting is based
on investigation
• Explore students’ thinking
• Assess the student’s level of understanding of a particular
concept or procedure;
• Gather information, obtain clarification, determine positions
and probe for motivations
• Help determine students’ understanding of qualities of good
ORAL STRATEGY
The Questions and Answers
A. Definition
Questions:
• are posed by the teacher to determine if students
understand what is being/has been presented or to extend
thinking, generate ideas or problem-solve
Answers:
• Provide opportunities for oral assessment when the student
respond to a question by speaking rather than by writing
B. Purpose
The questions and answers are used to:
• Provide mechanism which monitors a students’
understanding while assessing student progress
• Gather information about a students learning needs.
The Classroom Presentation
A. Definition
The classroom presentation:
• Is an assessment which requires students to verbalize their
knowledge, select and present samples of finished work and
organize thoughts, in order to present a summary of learning
about a topic.
B. Purpose
The classroom presentation is used to:
• Provide summative assessment upon completion of a project
or an essay;
• Assess students when it is inappropriate or difficult to test a
student’s understanding or knowledge with paper-and-pencil
test.
THE REFLECTIVE STRATEGY
Self-Assessment
A. Definition
Self-Assessment:
• Is the process of gathering information and reflecting on
one’s own learning;
• Is the student’s own assessment of personal progress in
knowledge, skills, processes or attitudes;
• Leads a student to a greater awareness and understanding
of himself or herself as a learner.
B. Purpose
Self-assessment is used to:
• Assist students to take more responsibility and ownership of
their learning;
• Provide insights and information that enable students to
make decisions about their learning and to set personal
learning goals
• Use assessment as a means of learning
• Focus on both the process and products of learning;
• Help students critique their own work;
• Help students internalize the characteristics/criteria of
quality student work.
COMBINATION OF STRATEGY
The Portfolio
A. Definition
The Portfolio:
• Is the purposeful collection of samples of a student’s work
that is selective, reflective, and collaborative;
• Demonstrates the range and depth of a students’
achievement, knowledge, and skills over time and across a
variety of contexts;
• Has student involvement in selection of portfolio materials
as part of the process;
• Is a visual presentation of a students’ accomplishments,
capabilities, strengths, weaknesses, and progress over a
specified time
B. Purpose
The portfolio is used to:
• Document typical student work and progress;
• Provide a comprehensive view of the students’ progress,
efforts and achievements
• Reflect growth and progress but may serve different
purposes during the year;
• Provide a focus for student reflection on their own learning.
• Build a student’s sense of responsibility for his/her own
learning
• Build a student’s confidence in her/his abilities as a learner;
• Promote an ongoing process where students demonstrate,
assess and revise in order to improve and produce quality
work.
RECORDING DEVICES/TOOLS
Recording devices provide various means of organizing the
recordings of information about student achievement. These
are:
1. Anecdotal record
2. Checklist
3. Rating scale
4. Rubric
5. Learning log
The Anecdotal Record
A. Definition
The anecdotal record:
• Is a short narrative describing both a behavior and the
context in which the behavior occurred;
• Should objectively report specific and observed behaviors;
• Describes student performance in detail and in writing.
B. Purpose
The anecdotal record is used to:
• Provide an ongoing record of written observations of student
progress;
• To record objectively, significant observations that are not
part of a formal assessment which might otherwise be
forgotten or remembered incorrectly;
• Record observations of unanticipated performances,
behaviors, incidents, or events.
The Checklist:
A. Definition
The checklist:
• Is a list of actions or descriptions that a rater checks off as
the particular behavior or expectation is observed;
• Is a written list of performance criteria which is used to
assess student performance through observation, or may be
used to assess written work;
• Is a list of skills, concepts, behaviors, processes, and/or
attitudes that might, or should, occur in a given situation.
B. Purpose
The checklist is used to:
• Record whether a specific skill or behavior was “evident” or
“not evident”.
• Record the presence or absence of specific behaviors in
given situations.
• Record a performance that can should be shown to students
to help them see where improvement is needed.
The Rating Scale
A. Definition
The rating scale:
• Is a simple tool for assessing performance on a several-point
scale ranging from low to high. It may have as few as 3
points, or as many as 10 points;
• Assesses the extent to which specific facts, skills, attitudes,
and/or behaviors are observed in a student’s work or
performance.
• Is based on a set of criteria which allows the teacher to judge
performance, product, attitude, and/or behavior along a
continuum.
• Is used to judge the quality of a performance.
B. Purpose
The rating scale is used to:
• Provide detailed diagnostic information on a student’s
performance, product, attitude, behavior in reference to pre-
stated criteria.
• Record the frequency or even the degree to which a student
exhibits a characteristic;
• Record the range of student achievement in relation to
specific behaviors;
• Describe performance along a continuum.
The Rubrics
A. Definition
The rubric:
• Is a series of statements describing a range of levels of
achievement of a process, product, or a performance.
• Contains brief, written descriptions of the different levels of
student performance.
• Defines desired expectations with specific performances
outlined for each level;
• Is descriptive rating scale which requires the rater to choose
among the different levels;
• Uses criteria and associated descriptions to assess the
actual performance.
B. Purpose
The rubric is used to:
• Summarize both student performance and product against
pre-stated criteria
• Make scoring of student performance more precise than
using a list of items;
• Provide a clear description of what “quality” work looks like.
The Learning Log
A. Definition
The learning log:
• Is an ongoing record by the student of what he/she does
while working on a particular task or assignment
• Makes visible what a student is thinking and/or doing through
frequent recordings over time.
B. Purpose
The learning log is used to:
• Show student progress and growth over time;
• Provide the student with the opportunities to gather and
interpret information, to ask questions, and to make
connections.
Non-Test Monitoring and
Assessment
1. Oral and written reports
2. Teacher and observation
3. Journal
4. Portfolio of student’s work
5. Slates or hand signals
6. Games
7. Projects
8. Debates
9. Checklist
10.Cartooning
11.Models
12.Notes
13.Daily assignments
14.Anecdotal record
15.Panel
16.Learning centers
17.Demonstration
18.Problem solving
19.Discussions
20.Organize note sheets
and study guides
ASSESSING THE
CURRICULUM
Lesson 4 Linking Curriculum,
Instruction and Assessment
Curriculum and Instruction
A curriculum according to Howell and Evans (1995) and
Sands, et. al (1995) is a structured set of learning outcomes or
tasks that educators usually call goals and objectives.
Curriculum is the “what” of teaching.
Howell and Evans (1995) says that knowledge of the
curriculum is for successful assessment, evaluation, decision
making and teaching.
Significance brings the content to the degree to
which it contributes the basic ideas, concepts,
principles and generalizations and to the development
of particular learning abilities, skills, processes
and attitudes.
Validity refers to the degree to the degree of authenticity of the
content selected and to the congruence of the
content in the light of the objectives selected.
Interest is the degree to which the content either caters or fosters
particular interests in the students.
Learnability is the appropriateness of the content in the light of
the particular students who are to experience the
curriculum.
Feasibility refers to the question, “Can the selected content be
taught in the time allowed, considering the resources, staff and
particular community?
The other aspect of the curriculum described here are the
objectives.
The objectives provide cue to what content should be included.
Curriculum objectives guide the learning outcomes to be
achieved as well as the activities to accomplish these objectives.
Each objectives provides a condition, a performance and an
extent of performance.
Objectives should meet the criteria of SMART.
Both the objectives and the contents are inputs to what
it is defined as the curriculum.
Instruction is the actual engagement of the learners of the
planned learning activities. It is the implementation of the
curriculum plan.
Meaningful instruction can be achieved through the different
learning experiences provided.
Curriculum and Assessment
Curriculum is also related to assessment.
Assessment is the process of collecting information which
describes student achievement in relation to curriculum
expectations.
There are four levels of achievement based on curriculum
expectations.
Level 4- student has demonstrated all the required knowledge
and skills and achievement has exceeded the standard set.
Level 3- student has demonstrated most of the required
knowledge and skills and achievement exceeded the standard
set.
Level 2- student has demonstrated some of the required
Instruction and Assessment
Instruction refers to the various ways of teaching, teaching
styles, approaches, techniques and steps in delivering the
curriculum. It is a complex activity that requires teachers to use a
variety of action to accomplish a variety of functions.
These factors may include the following:
1. Learner
2. Teacher
3. Learning environment
4. Subject matter
5. Method of teaching and learning
6. Measurement
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assessingthecurriculum-161014041528.pdf

  • 1. ASSESSING THE CURRICULUM Lesson 1 Intended vs. Implemented vs. Achieved
  • 2. Purpose of Curriculum Assessment Curriculum Assessment is the process of collecting information for use in evaluation. Curriculum assessment may achieve the following purposes: 1. Highlight curriculum expectations 2. Gather information about what students know and can do. 3. Motivate students to learn better. 4. Motivate and encourage teachers to meet the identified needs of students. 5. Provide evidence to tell how well the students have learned. 6. Obtain feedback that helps teachers, students and parents make good decisions to guide instructions.
  • 3. INTENDED CURRICULUM - Refers to a set of objectives at the beginning of any particular plan. It establishes the goal, the specific purposes, and the immediate objectives to be accomplished.
  • 4. There are certain indicators to measure intended curriculum. 1. Are the objectives achievable within the learners’ developmental levels? 2. Can the objectives be accomplished within the time frame? 3. Are the resources adequate to accomplish the objectives? 4. Are the objectives specific and clear? 5. Are there ways of measuring the outcomes of the objectives? 6. Are the objectives observable? 7. Are the objectives doable? 8. Are the objectives relevant?
  • 5. IMPLEMENTED CURRICULUM - Refers to the various learning activities or experiences of the students in order to achieve the intended curricular outcomes.
  • 6. To assess the implemented Curriculum the following questions can be addressed: 1. Are the learning activities congruent with the stated objectives? 2. Are the materials and methods appropriate for the objectives set? 3. Does the teacher have the skill to implement the activities or use the strategy? 4. Does the teacher utilize the various ways of doing to complement the learning styles of the students? 5. Are there alternative activities for the learners to do to accomplish the same objectives?
  • 7. 7. Do the activities motivate the learners to do more and harness their potentials? 8. Do the activities provide maximum learning experiences? 9. Do the activities utilize multiple sensory abilities of the learners? 10.Do the activities address multiple intelligences of the learners?
  • 8. ACHIEVED CURRICULUM - Refers to the curriculum outcomes based on the first two types of curriculum, the intended and the implemented. It is now considered the product. It can be the learning outcomes, or a material product itself, like a book, module or instructional material.
  • 9. To measure achieved curriculum the following questions should be addressed: 1. Do the learning outcomes achieved by the learners approximate the level of performance set at the beginning of the curriculum? 2. Are the learning outcomes achieved higher or lower than the objectives set? 3. Do the achieved learning outcomes reflect knowledge, skills and attitudes and skills intended to be developed? 4. How many percent of the learners in the same class perform higher that the level set at the beginning? 5. Do the curricular outcomes reflect the goals and the
  • 10. CURRICULUM ACHIEVED The relationship of the Three types of Curriculum
  • 11. The Basic Education Curriculum (BEC) and the Three Types of Curriculum: Intended, Implemented and Achieved Question 1 What does the BEC aim to accomplish?(Intended curriculum) 1. To raise the quality of Filipino learners and graduates who will become lifelong learners. 2. To decongest the curriculum in order that the teachers and learners will be able to contextualize it. 3. To use innovative, interdisciplinary and integrative methods of instructional delivery whenever possible and appropriate. 4. To make values development integral to all learning areas in high school. 5. To increase time for tasks in order to gain mastery of
  • 12. The curriculum objectives are expressed in terms of competencies: knowledge, skills, values, and attitudes which the learners will develop or acquire.
  • 13. Question 1 How was the BEC implemented to accomplish the goals?(Implemented curriculum) 1. The BEC decongested the overcrowded the old curriculum into five learning areas, namely, English Mathematics, Science, Filipino, and Makabayan. 2. The teachers in basic education were trained to use innovative, interdisciplinary, thematic, and integrative modes of instructional delivery. 3. Teaching-learning processes are interactive to enhance learning. There is open communication between teachers and learners and among learners themselves. Instructional materials and multimedia are fully utilized to support interactions thus teaching and learning become more
  • 14. 4. English, Science, Mathematics and Filipino are the basic tool subjects, while Makabayan develops healthy personal and national self-identity. 5. Makabayan entails the use of integrated units of learning areas composed of several subjects in the elementary and in the secondary levels. For the elementary level, Makabayan is composed of a) Araling Panlipunan or Social Studies b) Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan EPP c) Musika, Sining at Edukasyong Pangkatawan MSEP d) Good Manners and Right Conduct GMRC
  • 15. For the high school, Makabayan is composed of a) Araling Panlipunan or Social Studies b) Technology and Home Economics c) Physical Education, Health, Music and Arts (PEHMA) d) Edukasyon sa Pagpapahalaga (EP) or Values Education 6. The school year 2002-2003 was declared as the pilot year in the public schools. Private basic education schools were encouraged to join in the implementation of the BEC in the later years.
  • 16. Question 3 What has the BEC achieved?(Achieved curriculum) The National Educational Testing and Research Center(NETRC) The Bureau of Elementary Education (BEE) The Bureau of Secondary Education (BSE) A continuous monitoring was done by the school principals and supervisors in the schools, district and divisions. This is referred to as school-based monitoring, to allow curriculum managers to make immediate adjustments and provide feedback to the national offices.
  • 17. Among the initial achievements of the BEC as expressed by teachers, parents and students informally are the following: 1. Increased interest and motivation of students to go to school. 2. Increased level of performance in the tool subject areas. 3. Change in teachers paradigm from a dispenser of knowledge to facilitators of learning 4. Increased instructional materials support for teaching and learning 5. Increase in the in-service training of teachers 6. More opportunities of learners to learn on their own. 7. Use of varied teaching strategies to complement the learning styles of the students.
  • 18. 8. More involvement of other stakeholders in the education of the children 9. More involvement of the school principals in decision making that relate to curriculum implementation. 10.Empowered teachers and school officials.
  • 19. ASSESSING THE CURRICULUM Lesson 2 Criteria for Curriculum Assessment.
  • 20. Criteria- are a set of standards to be followed in assessment. Specifically, as they apply to criteria are set of standards upon which the different elements of the curriculum are being tested. The criteria determine the different levels of competencies or proficiency of acceptable task performance. Goals and Objectives- are statements of curricular expectations. Objectives indicate clearly what the students will learn. The items must reflect the tasks, skills, content behavior and thought processes that make up curricular domains and must also match the students’ needs.
  • 21. Goals and instructional objectives - are formulated and specified for the following purposes: 1. To have focus on curriculum and instruction which give direction to where students need to go. 2. To meet requirements specified in the policies and standards of curriculum and instruction 3. To provide the students’ the best possible education and standards of curriculum and instruction. 4. To monitor the progress of students based on the goals set 5. To motivate students to learn and the teachers to be able to feel a sense of competence when goals are attained.
  • 22. For goals and objectives to be formulated criteria on certain elements should be included according to Howell and Nolet in 2000. 1. Content 2. Behavior 3. Criterion 4. condition
  • 23. Writing effective goals and objectives should also use the following general criteria. 1. Syntactic correctness (Are the objectives syntactically correct?) 2. Compliance with legal requirements (Do the objectives comply with the legal requirements of the course of subjects?) 3. The Stranger Test (Do the objectives pass the stranger test?) 4. Both knowledge and behavior are addressed (Do the objectives address both knowledge and behavior?) 5. The So-What test (Do they pass the so-what test?) 6. Individualization (Are the objectives aligned?) 7. Common Sense (Do they make common sense?)
  • 24. Criteria for Assessment of Instruction The Two Approaches to Instruction: 1. Supplantive Approach- referred to as “direct” instruction. The teachers attempts to promote learning by providing explicit directions and explanations regarding how to do a tank. With this approach, information is presented in an ordered sequence in which component subskills are taught directly or a foundation for later tasks. This approach to instruction is highly teacher-directed.
  • 25. 2. Generative Approach-referred to as “constructivist” or “developmental”. The teacher functions as a facilitator who takes a less central role in a learning process that is student- directed. Generative instruction is “constructivist” because much of its emphasis is on helping students to construct their own educational goals and experiences as well as the knowledge that results. With this approach, information is presented on a schedule determined by students’ interests and goals. Prerequisites for more complex information are expected to be learned as a consequence of the larger understanding students would be guided to construct.
  • 26. Attributes Generative Approach Supplantive Approach Buzz Words used by proponents • Constructivist • Developmental • Top down • Holistic • Authentic • Meaning-based • Direct instruction • Teacher-directed • Mastery learning • Task analytic • Competency based • Effective teaching What proponents call the other • Romantics • Fuzzy • Postmodernist • Unrealistic • Reductionist • Drill-and-kill • Dogmatic • unauthentic Underlying beliefs about what is taught • Students construct their own understanding • When learning is contextualized, students will identify what they are ready to learn • The skills that students need to learn can be derived from an analysis of the social demands placed on them. Underlying beliefs about how learning occurs • learning is “socially constructed”, students link to new information to prior knowledge when provided opportunities to observe or experience. • Learning can be induced through instruction that builds explicit links between new information and prior knowledge.
  • 27. Attributes Generative Approach Supplantive Approach Underlying beliefs about how to teach • Learning is developmental and occurs much the way early language is acquired • Teachers take a “hand’s off” approach and seek to provide a meaningful context in which learning will occur naturally • When learning does not occur, it can be facilitated by building it from the “bottom up” through teaching of prerequisite subskills. • Teachers take a “hands- on approach” by structuring lessons and providing explicit direction. Common error made by proponents • Creating interesting classroom activities but failure to link these activities to learning outcomes • By focusing on specific learning outcomes, they may fail to attend to other equally important interests and topics • Too much emphasis on larger ideas, not enough emphasis on the components • Too much emphasis on the components, not enough emphasis or the larger ideas.
  • 28. Select the Generative Approach when: Select the Supplantive Approach when: The Student • Has considerable prior knowledge • Has adaptive motivational patterns • Experiences consistent successes on the task • Has little prior knowledge of the task • Has non-adaptive motivational patterns • Experiences repeated failure on the task The Task • Is simple for the student • Is well-defined • Can be completed using a general problem-solving strategy • Is to understand, but not necessarily apply, what is learned • Is complex • Is ill defined • Has missing information • Requires the use of a task-specific strategy • Is pivotal to the learning of subsequent tasks • must be used with a high level of proficiency The Setting • Allows plenty of time to accomplish outcomes • Places priority on experiences and activities • Time allowed to accomplish outcomes is limited • Places priority on task mastery
  • 29. Curriculum Criteria -are guidelines on standard for curriculum decision-making. The objectives of a curriculum or teaching plan are the most important curriculum criteria, since they should be used in selecting learning experiences and in evaluating learning achievement.
  • 30. The criteria are stated in the form of questions as follows: 1. Have the goals of the curriculum or teaching plan been clearly stated; and are they used by teachers and students in choosing content, materials and activities for learning? 2. Have teacher and students engage in student-teacher planning in defining the goals and in determining how they will be implemented? 3. Do some of the planned goals relate to the society of the community in which the curriculum will be implemented or the teaching will be done? 4. Do some of the planned goals relate to the individual learner and is or her needs, purposes, interest and abilities?
  • 31. 5. Are the planned goals used as criteria in selecting and developing learning materials for instruction? 6. Are the planned goals used as criteria in evaluating learning achievement and in the further planning of learning sub goals activities? According to Hass and Parkay (1993), individual differences, flexibility and systematic planning are criteria that depend in part on knowledge of the different approaches to learning.
  • 32. What are the characteristics of a Good curriculum? 1. The curriculum is continuously evolving 2. The curriculum is based on the needs of the people 3. The curriculum is democratically conceived 4. The curriculum is the result of long term effort 5. The curriculum is a complex of details 6. The curriculum provides for the logical sequence of subject matter. 7. The curriculum complements and cooperates with the programs of the community 8. The curriculum has educational quality 9. The curriculum has administrative flexibility
  • 33. What marks a good curriculum? 1. A good curriculum is systematically planned and evaluated. 2. A good curriculum reflects adequately the aims of the school. 3. A good curriculum maintains balance among all aims of the school. 4. A good curriculum promotes continuity of experience. 5. A good curriculum arranges learning opportunities flexibly for adaptation to particular situations and individuals. 6. A good curriculum utilizes the most effective learning experiences and resources available. 7. A good curriculum makes maximum provision for the development of each learner.
  • 34. What is evaluation? Evaluation is the process of determining the value of something or the extent to which goals are being achieved. It is a process of making a decision or reading a conclusion. It involves decision making about student performance based on information obtained from an assessment process. Assessment is the process of collecting information by reviewing the products of student work, interviewing observing , or testing. Evaluation is the process of using information that is collected through assessment. It entails a reasoning process that is based on influence.
  • 35. Inference is the process of arriving at a logical conclusion from a body of evidence. It usually refers to the process of developing a conclusion on the basis of some phenomenon that is not experienced or observed directly by the person drawing the inference. Evaluation is a thoughtful process. It is the judgment we make about the assessment of student learning based on established criteria. It involves the process of integrating assessment information form various sources and using this information to make inferences and judgments about how well students have achieved the curriculum expectations.
  • 36. Evaluation provides information-  Directly to the learner for guidance  Directly to the teacher for orientation of the next instruction activities.  Directly to external agencies for their assessment of schools functioning in the light of national purpose.
  • 37. What is curriculum evaluation? Curriculum evaluation is the process of obtaining information for judging the worth of an educational program, product, procedure, educational objectives or the potential utility of alternative approaches designed to attain specified objectives. Curriculum evaluation focuses on determining whether the curriculum as recorded in the master plan has been carried out in the classroom.
  • 38. In evaluating a curriculum, the following key Questions are usually asked:  Are the objectives being addressed?  Are the contents presented in the recommended sequence?  Are students being involved in the suggested instructional experiences?  Are the students reacting to the contents?
  • 39. Formative and Summative Evaluation Summative evaluation is evaluation that takes place at the end of a unit or section of instruction. Summative evaluation takes place at the end of the lesson or project and tells the evaluator what has happened. It sum’s up the learning. It is the after-the-fact, like end-of-the-year testing. Formative evaluation takes place during the lesson or project and tells the evaluator what is happening. It is on-going and yields information that can be used to modify the program prior to termination.
  • 40. ASSESSING THE CURRICULUM Lesson 3 Tools to Assess the Curriculum.
  • 41. What are Assessment Strategies? Assessment Strategies are structures through which student knowledge and skills are assessed. These are: 1. Pencil-and-paper-strategy 2. Performance based strategy 3. Observational 4. Personal communication 5. Oral 6. Reflective 7. Combinations of strategies
  • 42. PAPER-AND-PENCIL STRATEGY The Essay A. Definition The essay: • Is a writing sample used to assess student understanding and or how well students can analyze and synthesize information; • Is a pencil-and-paper assessment where a student constructs a response to a question, topic or brief statement • Provides the student with opportunity to communicate his/her reasoning in a written response. B. Purpose The essay is used to: • Assess the student’s ability to communicate idea in writing;
  • 43. The Select Response A. Definition The select response: • Is a paper-and-pencil assessment in which the student is to identify the one correct answer • Is a commonly used procedure for gathering formal evidence about student learning, specifically in memory, recall and comprehension. B. Purpose The select response is used to: • Test student learning of subject/content knowledge (facts, concepts, principles or generalizations, or procedures); • Assess prerequisites knowledge
  • 44. THE PERFORMANCE-BASED STRATEGY The Performance Task A. Definition The performance task: • Is an assessment which requires students to demonstrate a skill or proficiency by asking them to create, produce, or perform • May be an observation of a student or group of students performing a specific task to demonstrate skills and/or knowledge through open-ended, “hands-on” activities
  • 45. B. Purpose The performance task is used to: • Provide an efficient means of assessment where the skill cannot be demonstrated with a pencil-and-paper test; • Enable learners to demonstrate abilities, skills, attitudes and behaviors • Provide information about a learner’s ability to organize, draw on prior knowledge and experience, improvise, choose from a range of strategies, represent learning and make decisions to complete a task • Test skills in the affective, cognition, psychomotor, and perceptual domains.
  • 46. The Exhibition/Demonstration A. Definition The Exhibition/Demonstration: • Is a performance in which student demonstrates individual achievement through application of specific skills and knowledge • Is used to assess progress in tasks that require students to be actively engaged in an activity B. Purpose The Exhibition/Demonstration is used to: • Allow students to show achievement of a skill or knowledge by requiring the student to demonstrate that skill or knowledge in use.
  • 47. THE OBSERVATIONAL STRATEGY A. Definition Observation: • Is a process of systematically viewing and recording student behavior for the purpose of making programming decisions; permeates the entire teaching process by assisting the teacher in making the decisions require in effective teaching. B. Purpose Observation: • Provides systematic, ongoing information about students in relation to areas of strength and weaknesses, preferred learning styles, unique interests, learning needs, skills, attitudes, behavior and performance related expectations.
  • 48. PERSONAL COMMUNICATIONS STRATEGY The Conference A. Definition The conference: • Is a formal or informal meeting between/among the teacher and student and/or parent; • Has a clear focus on learning for discussion
  • 49. B. Purpose The conference is used to: • Exchange information or share ideas between among the individuals at the conference • Explore the student’s thinking and to suggest next steps; • Assess the student’s level of understanding of a particular concept or procedure; • Enable a student to move ahead more successfully on a particular piece of work; • Review, clarify, and extend what the student has already completed • Help students internalize criteria for good work.
  • 50. The Interview A. Definition The interview: • Is a form of conversation in which all parties increase their knowledge and understanding B. Purpose The interview is used to: • Focus on inquiry where the purpose of the meeting is based on investigation • Explore students’ thinking • Assess the student’s level of understanding of a particular concept or procedure; • Gather information, obtain clarification, determine positions and probe for motivations • Help determine students’ understanding of qualities of good
  • 51. ORAL STRATEGY The Questions and Answers A. Definition Questions: • are posed by the teacher to determine if students understand what is being/has been presented or to extend thinking, generate ideas or problem-solve Answers: • Provide opportunities for oral assessment when the student respond to a question by speaking rather than by writing B. Purpose The questions and answers are used to: • Provide mechanism which monitors a students’ understanding while assessing student progress • Gather information about a students learning needs.
  • 52. The Classroom Presentation A. Definition The classroom presentation: • Is an assessment which requires students to verbalize their knowledge, select and present samples of finished work and organize thoughts, in order to present a summary of learning about a topic. B. Purpose The classroom presentation is used to: • Provide summative assessment upon completion of a project or an essay; • Assess students when it is inappropriate or difficult to test a student’s understanding or knowledge with paper-and-pencil test.
  • 53. THE REFLECTIVE STRATEGY Self-Assessment A. Definition Self-Assessment: • Is the process of gathering information and reflecting on one’s own learning; • Is the student’s own assessment of personal progress in knowledge, skills, processes or attitudes; • Leads a student to a greater awareness and understanding of himself or herself as a learner.
  • 54. B. Purpose Self-assessment is used to: • Assist students to take more responsibility and ownership of their learning; • Provide insights and information that enable students to make decisions about their learning and to set personal learning goals • Use assessment as a means of learning • Focus on both the process and products of learning; • Help students critique their own work; • Help students internalize the characteristics/criteria of quality student work.
  • 55. COMBINATION OF STRATEGY The Portfolio A. Definition The Portfolio: • Is the purposeful collection of samples of a student’s work that is selective, reflective, and collaborative; • Demonstrates the range and depth of a students’ achievement, knowledge, and skills over time and across a variety of contexts; • Has student involvement in selection of portfolio materials as part of the process; • Is a visual presentation of a students’ accomplishments, capabilities, strengths, weaknesses, and progress over a specified time
  • 56. B. Purpose The portfolio is used to: • Document typical student work and progress; • Provide a comprehensive view of the students’ progress, efforts and achievements • Reflect growth and progress but may serve different purposes during the year; • Provide a focus for student reflection on their own learning. • Build a student’s sense of responsibility for his/her own learning • Build a student’s confidence in her/his abilities as a learner; • Promote an ongoing process where students demonstrate, assess and revise in order to improve and produce quality work.
  • 57. RECORDING DEVICES/TOOLS Recording devices provide various means of organizing the recordings of information about student achievement. These are: 1. Anecdotal record 2. Checklist 3. Rating scale 4. Rubric 5. Learning log
  • 58. The Anecdotal Record A. Definition The anecdotal record: • Is a short narrative describing both a behavior and the context in which the behavior occurred; • Should objectively report specific and observed behaviors; • Describes student performance in detail and in writing. B. Purpose The anecdotal record is used to: • Provide an ongoing record of written observations of student progress; • To record objectively, significant observations that are not part of a formal assessment which might otherwise be forgotten or remembered incorrectly; • Record observations of unanticipated performances, behaviors, incidents, or events.
  • 59. The Checklist: A. Definition The checklist: • Is a list of actions or descriptions that a rater checks off as the particular behavior or expectation is observed; • Is a written list of performance criteria which is used to assess student performance through observation, or may be used to assess written work; • Is a list of skills, concepts, behaviors, processes, and/or attitudes that might, or should, occur in a given situation.
  • 60. B. Purpose The checklist is used to: • Record whether a specific skill or behavior was “evident” or “not evident”. • Record the presence or absence of specific behaviors in given situations. • Record a performance that can should be shown to students to help them see where improvement is needed.
  • 61. The Rating Scale A. Definition The rating scale: • Is a simple tool for assessing performance on a several-point scale ranging from low to high. It may have as few as 3 points, or as many as 10 points; • Assesses the extent to which specific facts, skills, attitudes, and/or behaviors are observed in a student’s work or performance. • Is based on a set of criteria which allows the teacher to judge performance, product, attitude, and/or behavior along a continuum. • Is used to judge the quality of a performance.
  • 62. B. Purpose The rating scale is used to: • Provide detailed diagnostic information on a student’s performance, product, attitude, behavior in reference to pre- stated criteria. • Record the frequency or even the degree to which a student exhibits a characteristic; • Record the range of student achievement in relation to specific behaviors; • Describe performance along a continuum.
  • 63. The Rubrics A. Definition The rubric: • Is a series of statements describing a range of levels of achievement of a process, product, or a performance. • Contains brief, written descriptions of the different levels of student performance. • Defines desired expectations with specific performances outlined for each level; • Is descriptive rating scale which requires the rater to choose among the different levels; • Uses criteria and associated descriptions to assess the actual performance.
  • 64. B. Purpose The rubric is used to: • Summarize both student performance and product against pre-stated criteria • Make scoring of student performance more precise than using a list of items; • Provide a clear description of what “quality” work looks like.
  • 65. The Learning Log A. Definition The learning log: • Is an ongoing record by the student of what he/she does while working on a particular task or assignment • Makes visible what a student is thinking and/or doing through frequent recordings over time. B. Purpose The learning log is used to: • Show student progress and growth over time; • Provide the student with the opportunities to gather and interpret information, to ask questions, and to make connections.
  • 66. Non-Test Monitoring and Assessment 1. Oral and written reports 2. Teacher and observation 3. Journal 4. Portfolio of student’s work 5. Slates or hand signals 6. Games 7. Projects 8. Debates 9. Checklist 10.Cartooning 11.Models 12.Notes 13.Daily assignments 14.Anecdotal record 15.Panel 16.Learning centers 17.Demonstration 18.Problem solving 19.Discussions 20.Organize note sheets and study guides
  • 67. ASSESSING THE CURRICULUM Lesson 4 Linking Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment
  • 68. Curriculum and Instruction A curriculum according to Howell and Evans (1995) and Sands, et. al (1995) is a structured set of learning outcomes or tasks that educators usually call goals and objectives. Curriculum is the “what” of teaching. Howell and Evans (1995) says that knowledge of the curriculum is for successful assessment, evaluation, decision making and teaching.
  • 69. Significance brings the content to the degree to which it contributes the basic ideas, concepts, principles and generalizations and to the development of particular learning abilities, skills, processes and attitudes. Validity refers to the degree to the degree of authenticity of the content selected and to the congruence of the content in the light of the objectives selected. Interest is the degree to which the content either caters or fosters particular interests in the students. Learnability is the appropriateness of the content in the light of the particular students who are to experience the curriculum.
  • 70. Feasibility refers to the question, “Can the selected content be taught in the time allowed, considering the resources, staff and particular community? The other aspect of the curriculum described here are the objectives. The objectives provide cue to what content should be included. Curriculum objectives guide the learning outcomes to be achieved as well as the activities to accomplish these objectives. Each objectives provides a condition, a performance and an extent of performance. Objectives should meet the criteria of SMART.
  • 71. Both the objectives and the contents are inputs to what it is defined as the curriculum. Instruction is the actual engagement of the learners of the planned learning activities. It is the implementation of the curriculum plan. Meaningful instruction can be achieved through the different learning experiences provided.
  • 72. Curriculum and Assessment Curriculum is also related to assessment. Assessment is the process of collecting information which describes student achievement in relation to curriculum expectations. There are four levels of achievement based on curriculum expectations. Level 4- student has demonstrated all the required knowledge and skills and achievement has exceeded the standard set. Level 3- student has demonstrated most of the required knowledge and skills and achievement exceeded the standard set. Level 2- student has demonstrated some of the required
  • 73. Instruction and Assessment Instruction refers to the various ways of teaching, teaching styles, approaches, techniques and steps in delivering the curriculum. It is a complex activity that requires teachers to use a variety of action to accomplish a variety of functions.
  • 74. These factors may include the following: 1. Learner 2. Teacher 3. Learning environment 4. Subject matter 5. Method of teaching and learning 6. Measurement