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Curriculum
Domains
Aira Nina B. Cosico
Curriculum Development | Curriculum Design | Planned and Unplanned Curriculum
Curriculum
Foundation
Curriculum
Domain
external boundaries
 philosophical
 historical
 psychological
 social
 globalization
 technology
Edmund Short
Linda Behar
Allan Glatthorn and Jerry Jailall
Beaucham
p
 Planning
 Implementation
 Evaluation
Fenwick
English
 ideological
(philosophical-
scientific)
 technical(design)
 Operational
(managerial)
Edmund
Short
 policy making
 development
 evaluation
 change
 decision making,
 activities or fields
of study
 forms and
language of
inquiry
Linda Behar
 established an empirical format for identifying curriculum
domains and curriculum practices
 based on the most influential curriculum textbooks over a 20-year
period
 (a) curriculum philosophy (b) curriculum theory, (c) curriculum
research, (d) curriculum history, (e) curriculum development, (f)
curriculum design, (g) curriculum evaluation, (h) curriculum
policy, and (i) curriculum as a field of study.
Allan Gatthorn and Jerry Jailall
1. recommended curriculum delineated by scholars and professional
organizations;
2. written curriculum that appears in state and school district documents;
3. taught curriculum that teachers attempt to implement;
4. supported curriculum that helps implement or deliver the curriculum resources
such as textbooks and computers;
5. assessed curriculum that is tested and evaluated;
6. learned curriculum, what the students actually learn; and
7. hidden curriculum, unintended curriculum
Since 2000, the standards-education
movement has resulted in school
administrators becoming increasingly
concerned with aligning the written
curriculum (content) with the
assessed curriculum.
Despite this lack of consensus, however, it is important to
establish a framework for conceptualizing the domains of
curriculum.
conduct research and
make theoretical and
practical decisions
about curriculum
significant and
indispensable
knowledge
no framework exists
We maintain that, of all the domains of curriculum
knowledge…
design
development
theoretical aspects technical aspects
Curriculum
Developme
nt
Curriculum Development
how curriculum is planned,
implemented, and evaluated
what people, processes, and
procedures are involved in
constructing the curriculum
Curriculum Development
 Most curriculum textbooks offer some development
model, outline, or plan. Starting with a philosophy or set
of objectives, this model includes student assessment,
content selection and organization, implementation, and
evaluation.
Curriculum Development Models
 show the relationship of curriculum to various
decisions, activities, and processes.
 show input, transformations, and output and
treat curriculum as a system composed of
subsystems.
 ignore processes that are not easily
observed, measured, or controlled
 ignore attitudes, emotions, feelings,
and beliefs linked to teaching and
learning
Curriculum Development
 The path to curriculum development is strewn with
qualitative judgments, concessions to social and
political realities, and the need to serve diverse
students and teachers.
Curriculum Development
 There are no universal principles; everything is relational or
contextual. (William Doll)
 We must go beyond rational and logical methods and rethink
the curriculum in terms of aesthetics, morality, and spirituality.
(William Reid)
Curriculum Development
 A system of curriculum development can be open or
closed. Open systems are dynamic and evolutionary;
they develop through change. Closed systems are
static and unable to accommodate change.
Curriculum
Design
Curriculum Design
 The way we conceptualize the curriculum and arrange
its major components (subject matter or content,
instructional methods and materials, learner experiences
or activities) to provide direction and guidance as we
develop the curriculum.
Curriculum Design
 should provide a basic frame of reference, a
template if you wish, for planning what the
curriculum will look like after engaging in
curriculum development
If we liken a curriculum to a
painting, design refers to how we
want our artistic composition
arranged.
Curriculum Design
 Curriculum development tends to be technical and scientific;
curriculum design is more varied because it is based on
curricularists’ values and beliefs about education.
 Curriculum design should provide a framework for planning
what the curriculum will look like after curriculum development
Curriculum Design
 Curriculum development tends to be technical and scientific;
curriculum design is more varied because it is based on
curricularists’ values and beliefs about education.
 Curriculum design should provide a framework for planning
what the curriculum will look like after curriculum development
Curriculum Design
 20th century: curriculum specialists who started
out as teachers were content oriented,
emphasizing the core academic disciplines.
Curriculum Design
 20th century: curriculum specialists who started out as
teachers were content oriented, emphasizing the core
academic disciplines.
 We need designs that focus more on the student and
less on the content, but such designs have not gained
wide acceptance.
Planned and
Unplanned
Curriculum
Planned Curriculum
 What students learn in school extends beyond the
planned (formal or explicit) curriculum.
 Translates the school’s goals into the subjects that
students are expected to learn, the measured objectives
of the courses and lessons and the subject’s assigned
readings.
Unplanned Curriculum
 A school also transmits an unplanned (informal)
curriculum, one that is not intended or stated.
Planned
Curriculum
developed after
considering several
options and is usually
prepared by a
curriculum committee of
the school or school
district.
Eisner also distinguishes between the planned and the
operational curriculum.
Operational
Curriculum
emerges in the
classroom as a result of
the actual situation and
requires that teachers
make adjustments as
needed
Hidden
Curriculum
arises from interactions
among students and
between students and
teachers
Hidden Curriculum
 Built around the peer group and often competes with the
teacher’s planned curriculum.
 It influences thinking and behavior in classrooms,
sometimes even conflicting with the primary goals and
values of the school and larger society.
Hidden Curriculum
 elevates correct answers over understanding, facts over
ideas, conforming behavior over independent behavior,
and getting on the honor roll over helping others
 “beating the system” “winning”.
Hidden Curriculum
John Holt
“The aim of teachers and schools is to create student
“producers,” not thinkers, to reward right-answer-oriented
students and discourage creative or divergent responses.”
Hidden Curriculum
John Holt
Producers
follow rules and conform to
teachers’ expectations
Thinkers
raise questions, come up with
novel answers, and grapple
with ideas
Implicit
Curriculum
what the school teaches
as having cognitive and
social value)
Eisner also distinguishes between the implicit curriculum and
the null curriculum.
Null
Curriculum
omitted content and
values
Null Curriculum
 Curriculum involves deliberate choices;
educators are inclined to emphasize agreed-on
content and perspectives and systematically
omit others.
Null Curriculum
 Certain facts, ideas, and values are represented and
considered “commonly shared content”; the norms and
rules that govern are implicit. Other data are omitted; this
exclusion coincides with the null curriculum and
unplanned curriculum.
 Whether we use terms such as unplanned,
hidden, or null curriculum, certain subjects have
always been considered more important than
others.
John Dewey and Boyd Bode
Reminded us that all subjects, including literature, art,
music, dance, and vocational education, serve as
means to an end, expand the learner’s understanding
of culture, and enhance the learner’s sensitivities and
appreciation of the norms and values of society.
John Dewey and Boyd Bode
They were concerned that certain subjects
would be deemphasized, and the spirit of
individual creativity would be curtailed
because of content omission.
Thank
you!

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eco-friendly-minitheme.ppsx

  • 1. Curriculum Domains Aira Nina B. Cosico Curriculum Development | Curriculum Design | Planned and Unplanned Curriculum
  • 2. Curriculum Foundation Curriculum Domain external boundaries  philosophical  historical  psychological  social  globalization  technology Edmund Short Linda Behar Allan Glatthorn and Jerry Jailall
  • 3. Beaucham p  Planning  Implementation  Evaluation Fenwick English  ideological (philosophical- scientific)  technical(design)  Operational (managerial) Edmund Short  policy making  development  evaluation  change  decision making,  activities or fields of study  forms and language of inquiry
  • 4. Linda Behar  established an empirical format for identifying curriculum domains and curriculum practices  based on the most influential curriculum textbooks over a 20-year period  (a) curriculum philosophy (b) curriculum theory, (c) curriculum research, (d) curriculum history, (e) curriculum development, (f) curriculum design, (g) curriculum evaluation, (h) curriculum policy, and (i) curriculum as a field of study.
  • 5. Allan Gatthorn and Jerry Jailall 1. recommended curriculum delineated by scholars and professional organizations; 2. written curriculum that appears in state and school district documents; 3. taught curriculum that teachers attempt to implement; 4. supported curriculum that helps implement or deliver the curriculum resources such as textbooks and computers; 5. assessed curriculum that is tested and evaluated; 6. learned curriculum, what the students actually learn; and 7. hidden curriculum, unintended curriculum
  • 6. Since 2000, the standards-education movement has resulted in school administrators becoming increasingly concerned with aligning the written curriculum (content) with the assessed curriculum.
  • 7. Despite this lack of consensus, however, it is important to establish a framework for conceptualizing the domains of curriculum. conduct research and make theoretical and practical decisions about curriculum significant and indispensable knowledge no framework exists
  • 8. We maintain that, of all the domains of curriculum knowledge… design development theoretical aspects technical aspects
  • 10. Curriculum Development how curriculum is planned, implemented, and evaluated what people, processes, and procedures are involved in constructing the curriculum
  • 11. Curriculum Development  Most curriculum textbooks offer some development model, outline, or plan. Starting with a philosophy or set of objectives, this model includes student assessment, content selection and organization, implementation, and evaluation.
  • 12.
  • 13. Curriculum Development Models  show the relationship of curriculum to various decisions, activities, and processes.  show input, transformations, and output and treat curriculum as a system composed of subsystems.  ignore processes that are not easily observed, measured, or controlled  ignore attitudes, emotions, feelings, and beliefs linked to teaching and learning
  • 14. Curriculum Development  The path to curriculum development is strewn with qualitative judgments, concessions to social and political realities, and the need to serve diverse students and teachers.
  • 15. Curriculum Development  There are no universal principles; everything is relational or contextual. (William Doll)  We must go beyond rational and logical methods and rethink the curriculum in terms of aesthetics, morality, and spirituality. (William Reid)
  • 16. Curriculum Development  A system of curriculum development can be open or closed. Open systems are dynamic and evolutionary; they develop through change. Closed systems are static and unable to accommodate change.
  • 18. Curriculum Design  The way we conceptualize the curriculum and arrange its major components (subject matter or content, instructional methods and materials, learner experiences or activities) to provide direction and guidance as we develop the curriculum.
  • 19. Curriculum Design  should provide a basic frame of reference, a template if you wish, for planning what the curriculum will look like after engaging in curriculum development
  • 20. If we liken a curriculum to a painting, design refers to how we want our artistic composition arranged.
  • 21. Curriculum Design  Curriculum development tends to be technical and scientific; curriculum design is more varied because it is based on curricularists’ values and beliefs about education.  Curriculum design should provide a framework for planning what the curriculum will look like after curriculum development
  • 22. Curriculum Design  Curriculum development tends to be technical and scientific; curriculum design is more varied because it is based on curricularists’ values and beliefs about education.  Curriculum design should provide a framework for planning what the curriculum will look like after curriculum development
  • 23. Curriculum Design  20th century: curriculum specialists who started out as teachers were content oriented, emphasizing the core academic disciplines.
  • 24. Curriculum Design  20th century: curriculum specialists who started out as teachers were content oriented, emphasizing the core academic disciplines.  We need designs that focus more on the student and less on the content, but such designs have not gained wide acceptance.
  • 26. Planned Curriculum  What students learn in school extends beyond the planned (formal or explicit) curriculum.  Translates the school’s goals into the subjects that students are expected to learn, the measured objectives of the courses and lessons and the subject’s assigned readings.
  • 27. Unplanned Curriculum  A school also transmits an unplanned (informal) curriculum, one that is not intended or stated.
  • 28. Planned Curriculum developed after considering several options and is usually prepared by a curriculum committee of the school or school district. Eisner also distinguishes between the planned and the operational curriculum. Operational Curriculum emerges in the classroom as a result of the actual situation and requires that teachers make adjustments as needed Hidden Curriculum arises from interactions among students and between students and teachers
  • 29. Hidden Curriculum  Built around the peer group and often competes with the teacher’s planned curriculum.  It influences thinking and behavior in classrooms, sometimes even conflicting with the primary goals and values of the school and larger society.
  • 30. Hidden Curriculum  elevates correct answers over understanding, facts over ideas, conforming behavior over independent behavior, and getting on the honor roll over helping others  “beating the system” “winning”.
  • 31. Hidden Curriculum John Holt “The aim of teachers and schools is to create student “producers,” not thinkers, to reward right-answer-oriented students and discourage creative or divergent responses.”
  • 32. Hidden Curriculum John Holt Producers follow rules and conform to teachers’ expectations Thinkers raise questions, come up with novel answers, and grapple with ideas
  • 33. Implicit Curriculum what the school teaches as having cognitive and social value) Eisner also distinguishes between the implicit curriculum and the null curriculum. Null Curriculum omitted content and values
  • 34. Null Curriculum  Curriculum involves deliberate choices; educators are inclined to emphasize agreed-on content and perspectives and systematically omit others.
  • 35. Null Curriculum  Certain facts, ideas, and values are represented and considered “commonly shared content”; the norms and rules that govern are implicit. Other data are omitted; this exclusion coincides with the null curriculum and unplanned curriculum.
  • 36.  Whether we use terms such as unplanned, hidden, or null curriculum, certain subjects have always been considered more important than others.
  • 37. John Dewey and Boyd Bode Reminded us that all subjects, including literature, art, music, dance, and vocational education, serve as means to an end, expand the learner’s understanding of culture, and enhance the learner’s sensitivities and appreciation of the norms and values of society.
  • 38. John Dewey and Boyd Bode They were concerned that certain subjects would be deemphasized, and the spirit of individual creativity would be curtailed because of content omission.
  • 39.