Unit1 (Integrationcurriculum) - Millie Tapia
Unit1 (Integrationcurriculum) - Millie Tapia
Unit1 (Integrationcurriculum) - Millie Tapia
CURRICULUM
INTERGRATION
INTRODUCTION
Highlighting the 2002 Basic Education
Curriculum (BEC) is curriculum integration, the
touchstone for integrative teaching and learning.
Through curriculum integration knowledge can
be connected and linked with other fields of
knowledge. It allows students to build bridges
across learning areas (subjects) is the elementary
and the secondary schools and apply knowledge
to new learning situation. This happens when the
sources of the curriculum are issues, events and
concerns that have applications in everyday
living.
OBJECTIVES
At the end of this unit, the students shall able to:
1) explain the significance of curriculum integration in
planning.
2) compares the level of integration used by teachers to
enhance learning.
3) discuss the learning theories supporting curriculum
integration.
4) discuss the principles in integrating big ideas and
strategies as applied in curriculum integration.
5) explain the common elements of an integrated
curriculum and how each one applies to instruction.
6) present the sequential steps in planning an integrated
curriculum and
7) understand the significance of curriculum integration
in the DepEd 2002 BEC.
INTEGRATED CURRICULUM
The concept of an integrated curriculum and its significance to the learners was
expounded by the educators like Beane (1992), Johnson and Johnson (1998), and
Kellough (2003), presented below are their perspective about an integrated
curriculum.
a. An integrated curriculum refers to a single course that contains one or more
disciplines. It consists of one set of objectives and assessment that covers a number
of related disciplines (Johnson and Johnson 1998).
b. An integrated curriculum is an educational approach that cuts across and draws on
multiple subject areas for learning and instruction. It purposes is to realistically link
various disciplines into the study and exploration of certain aspects of the world
(Beane, 1992).
c. An integrated curriculum is a way of teaching and a way of planning and organizing
the instructional program. This enables the discrete discipline of subject matter
related to one another in a design that matches the developmental needs of the
learner to connect their learnings in ways that are meaningful to their current and
past experiences. This is an antithesis of the traditional, disparate, subject-matter
oriented teaching and curriculum designation (Kellough, 2003).
Kellough further elucidated that the term integrated curriculum or any of its
synonyms like thematic instruction, multidisciplinary teaching, integrated studies,
interdisciplinary curriculum, or interdisciplinary thematic instruction refers to both a
way of teaching and a way of planning in organizing the instructional program.
Constructivism
Constructivism. This theory expounds that development and
learning occur through constructive process and that knowledge
is constructed from experience. To the constructivists, learning is
active, engaging, and interesting. In the constructivist classroom,
the students are given the responsibility to search for their own
meaning through hands-on activities. During the teachinglearning process, students ask questions, explore and discover.
Thus, they are able to construct new understandings and
incorporate them into what they already hold in long tem
memory (Cruishank, 1999).
Constructivists like John Dewey (1938), Jean Piaget (1960), and
Lev Vygotsky (1934) maintain that children learn by actually
constructing meaning from their simultaneously embedded
experiences. Reaching in a constructivist mode has a slower pace,
uses varied strategies and resource materials, and provides
opportunities for the creation of new ideas.
6. What are the theories supporting curriculum integration? Explain each one.
____________________________________________________________________
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7. How does curriculum integration improve basic education?
____________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
2. Multiple Intelligence
3. Constructivism
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Write inside the chart a brief description on how integration takes place in each level.
CURRICULUM INTEGRATION
LEVEL 1
LEVEL 2
LEVEL 3
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 5
________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
2. ________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
3. ________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
4. ________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
5. ________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
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MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCE
1. Linguistic Intelligence
2. Logical- Mathematical
Intelligence
3. Spatial Intelligence
4. Bodily- Kinesthetic
Intelligence
5. Musical Intelligence
6. Interpersonal
Intelligence
7. Intrapersonal Intelligence
8. Naturalistic Intelligence
9. Existentialist Intelligence
Unit 1 : CURRICULUM
INTERGRATION
Prepared by :
BEEd III- A (General Education)
MILLIENOR D. TAPIA
JANILLE P. QUINTOS
YORADYL ARGUIL
PHILIP CYRILL F. CANDELARIA