Curriculum PPT 2011
Curriculum PPT 2011
Curriculum PPT 2011
INSTRUCTION
C.Hr -4
INSTRUCTOR : Aklilu Y.
UNIT ONE:
RELATED ISSUES
1.1: Definition of Curriculum
Curriculum
• comes from a Latin word “currere” meaning “race
course”,
1.1.1 Broad Definitions (definitions open to many
interpretations)
• All of the learning of students which are planned
and directed by the school to attain its
educational goals (Ralph Tyler ,1949):
• the planned experiences offered to the learner
under the guidance of the school ( D. K. Wheeler ,
1967)
• a plan for providing sets of learning opportunities
for persons to be educated( Lewis ,1981):
• Learning opportunity implies
a planned and controlled relationship
between
pupils,
teacher,
materials, equipment and the
environment, in which it is hoped
that desired learning will take place
• The learning experiences of students, in
so far as
they are expressed or
Mental Discipline
Connectionism
Behaviorism,
Cognitivism, information processing
Constructivism and
Social learning .
A. Mental Discipline
Mental Discipline: also known as faculty
psychology.
• The mind is made up of series of faculties, each of
which is related to a particular functions or ability
• Learning was thought to be exercising of the
various faculties regarded as muscles, which
needed exercise to grow.
• Memory was one of the faculties.
Mental Discipline Curriculum:
• Curriculum content was often chosen on the basis
of how well it would discipline and exercise the
mind
B. Connectionism
Connectionism
– A theory of learning based on the
connection of the various elements of
the nervous system in causing
behavior
– . behavior is caused by connection
formulated in the neural passage
hence learning is the process of
formulating new neural passage
connections
C. Behaviorism
Behaviorism
– It is dealt with and explained in terms of
observable reactions.
– Learning is explained as a conditioned response.
– Much concern is for reinforcement, association &
habit formation.
– Learning occurs when a particular response is
desired & a stimulus is found to produce it.
Behaviorism & Curriculum
– Experiences selected in the curriculum are such
as to produce conditioned response& drill
remains a prominent method of teaching
D. Cognitive views of learning
Cognitive views of learning
– Cognitivists place their focus on the
students and how they gain and
organize their knowledge
– Students do not merely receive
information but actively create a pattern
of what it means to them.
– Cognitivists believe that learning is the
result of our attempts to make senses of
the world by using all the mental tools
at our disposal.
– The teacher’s role is one of facilitating the students own
discovery-known as inquiry training
E. Constructivism views of learning
Constructivism View of Learning
• believes that there is no objective
reality that a teacher transfers to a
learner from external world;
• rather the real world is a product of the
mind that constructs that world.
F. Social learning theory
• Attention is given to personality
factors and interactions among
people
• It states that certain learning takes
place through the ability of
individuals to observe the behavior
of other persons, serving as models.
• This allows them to make choices
among these behaviors, which they
adapt to themselves (modeling) and
do in the same or better way.
III. Sociological foundation of
curriculum
• The sociological foundation of curriculum
encompasses the systematic study of groups
& institutions in the culture with reference
to their contribution to the process & growth
of the educational system as well as the
established practices in the school system.
• The curriculum designer actually deals with
cultural value, social needs & the learners’
background.
• The curriculum should be able to examine
&clarify obstacles prevalent in society,
which make change.
• The curriculum designer should also
consider elements of culture.
These are
• universal culture (distributed among the
adult population),
• special culture (Distributed among only
a portion of the adult population) &
• alternative cultures (Elements that do
not belong neither in the universal or
the especial culture.)
•
• The task of curriculum building
will be principally that of
constructing the curriculum so
that cultural elements, both old &
new will be mutually adjusted & a
new cultural synthesis achieved
IV. Scientific and Technological
Foundation
• Science and technology make things obsolete in a
short period of time
• The innovations, mechanics, mere benefits, etc
are results of science and technology,
• environmental pollution,
• degradation of resource,
• deterioration of human values,
• the dissolving of religious sanctions,
• restructuring of political democracy,
• specializations, psychological witness, etc are
the negative results of science and technological
developments.
• The implications of these to curriculum
planning are that:
– The need for the inclusion of many things to
be learned and culture to be transmitted
– Updating the curriculum to satisfy the
increasing demand of skilled manpower
– The unlimited demands for intercultural
exchange
– Securing knowledge about what is going on
around the world and making it part of once
life.
V. Historical Foundation of Curriculum
Types of Objectives
1. Cognitive domain
2. Affective domain
3. Psychomotor domain
•
The Taba Model
• Proposed seven-step approach to the processes
of curriculum design and development.
• Unlike Tyler’s model, her model gives priority to
the needs of the students, and hence the
procedures of curriculum development begin
with the diagnosis of needs.
1. Diagnosis of needs
2. Formulation of objectives
3. Selection of contents
4. Organization of contents
5. Selection of learning experiences
6. Organization of learning experiences &
7. Evaluation
Differences with Tyler model
– Taba included diagnosis of needs
– treated contents and learning
experiences separately in terms of both
the selection and organization.
– Taba capitalizes on the
interdependence and inter-relatedness
of the various elements.
– Taba emphasized that no effective
decision is made about any element
without consideration of other elements.
Wheeler’s Model:
• This model had five basic stages as
follows. Basically, Wheeler used the
fundamental elements of the curriculum
processes as suggested by Tyler.
• But, Wheeler considered Tyler’s approach
is linear and argues that curriculum
development is a continuous process.
• Where as Thus, the activities involved in
the planning need to be interrelated in a
continuous and cyclical form.
Wheeler’s model of curriculum development
Selection of contents 2
Selection of learning
experiences 3
Aims, goals &
objectives 1
Evaluation 5
Organization & integration
of learning experiences 4
• According to Wheeler, the process of
curriculum development begins with the
treatment of objectives at various levels.
• The treatment begins with the aims from which
intermediate goals are derived.
• Wheeler goes to state that further specific
behavioral outcomes are defined to be attained
at a shorter period including at a specific
instructional level
Lawton model of curriculum development
Stage 3
Selection of contents
Stage 4
Psychological questions
and theories
Curriculum organization in
Order, sequences Stage 5
The Process Model:
• It was developed by Lawrence Stenhouse. He
argues that, a process model is more appropriate
than an objective model in areas of the curriculum
which center on knowledge and understanding.
• The root of this model is in philosophy of
education.
• Stenhouse believes that it is possible to design
curricula rationally by specifying content and
principles of procedures rather than by pre-
specifying the anticipated outcomes in terms of
objectives.
Stages in the Process Model
1. Selection of Content
2. Selection of Principles of procedures (learning
strategies)
3. Devising teaching methods and materials
4. Evaluation by criteria inherent in the field of
knowledge
The Situation Analysis Model
• Focuses on the context in which the teaching-learning
occurs rather than focusing on outcomes and processes.
• Curriculum is made separately for each institutional
situation as these are assumed to be unique.
Stages in the Situation Analysis Model
1. Situation analysis
2. Goal Formulation
3. Program building
4. Interpretation and Implementation
5. Monitoring, Assessment Feedback and Reconstruction:
interpretation and Implementation:
• Curriculum development takes into account the
realities of the society, the needs of the learners, and
developments in science and technology.
• Specifically, curriculum planning needs to be based up
on.
• The nature of knowledge or subject matter
• The needs and interests of the learners
• The social and physical environment
• The nature and processes of learning
• The availability of resources and facilities both
human as well as material
Curriculum objectives
• Are statements of intentions or intended
outcomes of an educational program
Sources of objectives
– Three main sources of objectives are:
– The learner needs and interests.
– The society, its culture, problems and issues.
– Subject specialists
Screening devises
– Philosophy and psychology
The selection of contents and learning
experiences
.
Logical organization
– Logical sequencing where contents & experiences
are sequenced in order of succession. It deals with
the question “what is to follow what” the when of
the curriculum.
Psychological organization
• has to do with how learning takes place in the
mind of the students or, in other words, the
student’s preferred organization.
• It is where contents & learning experiences
are sequenced based on students learning
characteristics such as speed of learning, ease
of difficulty, retention or memory, relevance &
transferability or utility & motivation
Criteria for curriculum Organization
• There are four main criteria in
organizing curriculum experiences.
1. Continuity – with increasing level
of complexity
2. Sequence -logical or psychological
3. Scope- the amount of concepts
and experiences
4. Integration- relationship of
concepts in different subjects
Unit Three:
• Curriculum Implementation,
Change and Evaluation
3.1 Meaning of Curriculum Implementation
Curriculum implementation
– is a process of putting newly planned or changed
curriculum into practice.
– involves changing the status quo by accepting and
utilizing a newly created curriculum or part of a
curriculum.
– If the curriculum is accepted and utilized
successfully, we say that it has become
institutionalized.
Curriculum Change
– is the process of transforming phenomena in to
something different.
– can be defined as any alteration in the aspects of
curriculum such as educational philosophy, values,
objectives, organizational structures and material,
teaching strategies, student experiences,
assessment and learning outcomes.
3.2. Curriculum Implementation Approaches
and Models
• For the implementation process to be successful,
it needs to consider the following points
1. Planning: A deliberate strategy is developed to
implement the curriculum in the school.
2. Communication: The curriculum is presented in terms
of its favorable characteristics.
3. Cooperation: Support is obtained at a systematic level
for the innovation.
4. Support: The characteristics of the school are disposed
towards the innovation.
Curriculum Implementation Models
• Curriculum implementation can be done using different models. The three
common once are :
1. Fidelity Model:
– the model requires the curriculum to be implemented without any modification as it is,
that is, as it is prescribed by the curriculum experts.
– The teacher has no right to make any form of change in all aspects of the curriculum.
2. Mutual Adaptation Model:
– Teachers are allowed to make some modification by considering the reality of the
context.
3. Enactment Model:
– the curriculum implementer participates in all curriculum development process at all
levels.
– Teachers are the most active participants in curriculum creation.
– This model goes up to school based curriculum development under the national
framework.
3.3 Factors Affecting Curriculum
Implementation
Factors Related with the Characteristics of the Change:
–Need and Relevance,
–Clarity,
–Complexity,
–Quality and Practicality of Program
Factors Related with the Characteristics of the School District Level
–Previous History of Innovation Attempts,
–The Adoption Process,
–Staff development and Participation,
–Time-line and information systems/ evaluation/, and
–Board and Community Characteristics
School Level Factors
–The Role of the Principal,
–Teacher-Teacher Relationship,
–Teacher characteristics and orientations,
External Environment Factors
–Government Agencies,
–External Assistance
3.3Factors Affecting Curriculum
Implementation
Factors Related with the Characteristics of the Change:
• Need and Relevance: Need and relevance refers to
the perceived need to the part of implementers. It
would seem that the greater the recognized need for
change, the greater the degree of implementation.
• Clarity: refers to understanding of goals and means of
an innovation by users. The greater the understanding
of goals and what is to be gained from their adoption,
the greater the degree of implementation.
• Complexity: has to do with the difficulty and extent of
change required of users. The greater the complexity in
innovations with differentiated components
incrementally introduced, the greater the degree of
implementation.
• Quality and Practicality of Program: refers to the quality
and availability of materials. Users must perceive that
materials are going to meet important needs as well as
be practical and usable. Unavailability of required
materials acts as inhibitors of implementation
Factors Related with the Characteristics of the School District
Level
• Previous History of Innovation Attempts: the more positive the
previous history with innovation, the greater the degree of
implementation.
• The Adoption Process: the higher the quality of planning to
meet problems, the greater the degree of implementation.
• Administrative Support: the greater the “real” administrative
support, the greater the degree
• of implementation.
• Staff development and Participation: The greater the quality
and quantity of sustained interaction and staff development,
the greater the degree of implementation.
• Time-line and information systems/ evaluation/: the
greater the extent to which timing or events is guided
by an understanding of implementation, the greater the
degree of implementation. The greater the linkage
between evaluation data and school/class level
improvement needs, the greater the degree of
implementation.
• Board and Community Characteristics: the greater the
board and community interest and support without
controversy, the greater the degree of implementation.
School Level Factors
• The Role of the Principal: the greater the active support of
the principal, the greater the degree of implementation.
• Teacher-Teacher Relationship: the more collegiality, trust,
support, interaction and open communication between
teachers, the greater the degree of implementation.
• Teacher characteristics and orientations: The greater the
sense of teacher efficacy, the greater the degree of
implementation.
.
External Environment Factors
• Government Agencies: The greater the
congruence between local needs and the
reform and the greater awareness of subjective
realities, the greater the degree of
implementation.
• External Assistance: The greater the
interaction with local district, the greater the
degree of implementation
• As a whole, curriculum implementation can be
affected by the following variables:
– The nature of the curriculum itself
– The situation of the learners
– The professional competence of the teacher
– Availability of resources
– The school environment
– The out of school environment
– The school-community relationship
– The management practices in the school.
3. 4. Curriculum Change, Resistance and
Increasing Receptivity for Curriculum
Change
– a. Inertia
– b. Insecurity:
– c. Rapidity of change:
– d. Lack of knowledge:
– e. Lack of Support:
– f. Self Interest:
3.4.2: Resistance to Curriculum Change
• The people’s resistance to change can be attributed to various
factors.
• a. Inertia: many people think it is easier to keep things as they are.
Wanting to keep things as they exist is often mixed with believing
that things do not need to be changed or that change being
suggested is unwise and will thus be unproductive in meeting the
objectives of the school.
• b. Insecurity: People feel instance about the uncertainty of things to
happen. Those who are comfortable with the present are reluctant
to change for a future which they cannot comprehend or see clearly.
They prefer to stay with certain known deficiencies than venture
forth to uncertain futures, even if the changes most likely would be
improvements.
• c. Rapidity of change: This refers to the factor
which makes people to resist change by
anticipating another change in curriculum
soon.
• Many people feel that if something is
implemented this year, it will most likely be
abandoned when another innovation appears
and this will thus make all their efforts useless.
• d. Lack of knowledge: Sometimes people resist
innovation and its implementation because they lack
knowledge. They either do not know about the
innovation at all or they have little information about it.
• e. Lack of Support: People also resist change if financial
or time support is not given to the effort. Resistance to
change is sometimes perceived as good, because it calls
upon the change agents to think carefully about the
innovations and to consider the human dynamics
involved in implementing programs.
• f. Self Interest: People also resist to
curriculum change when they feel that the
change may result in a loss in their current
position which is related to their personal
interest.
3.4.3: Improving Receptivity to Curriculum
Change
• Curriculum leaders can also increase the
person’s willingness to change by “linking”
the need and expectations of the individuals
with those of the organizations.
• Curriculum activity must be Cooperative: it
should be perceived by all parties as their own
program.
• Resistance to any new idea is often natural.
Curriculum leaders should anticipate it, and
should prepare procedures for dealing with
• Innovations are subject to change: Nothing
should be viewed as permanent.
• Proper timing: it is a key factor that increases
peoples’ receptivity to an innovation.
3.4.3: Improving Receptivity to Curriculum
Change
• Curriculum implementation requires face-to-face
interaction or person-to-person contact. It is also a
group process involving individuals working together
• Curriculum leaders can also increase the person’s
willingness to change by “linking” the need and
expectations of the individuals with those of the
organizations.
• Brue Joyce and his coworkers have identified the
following guidelines that help individuals to increase
their receptivity to curriculum innovations.
• Curriculum activity must be Cooperative: if
any program is to be implemented and
institutionalized, it should be perceived by all
parties as their program. This sense of
ownership is achieved by involving people
directly and indirectly with the major aspects
of curriculum development and
implementation.
• Consider as some people do not like change:
Resistance to any new idea is often natural.
Curriculum leaders should anticipate it, and
should prepare procedures for dealing with it.
• Innovations are subject to change: Nothing
should be viewed as permanent.
• Proper timing: it is a key factor that increases
peoples’ receptivity to an innovation.
3.5 Curriculum Evaluation
• Evaluation is one of the important steps of curriculum
development.
3.5.1: Meaning of Evaluation
• a process that helps us to see the difference between what is
intended or expected and how much is accomplished.
• In doing so it provides valid and reliable information that
could help to decide about the failure or success of an
educational program.
• Modern educational evaluation began with the work of Ralph
Tyler in 1930s (the father of modern program evaluation.
3.5.2: The Purpose of Evaluation
• Evaluation provides useful information
– to curriculum developers to clarify the stated objectives and where
change is required and
– to those interested (such as students, parents, educational systems,
employers, universities, development planners, and so forth) about
how well students perform in their learning,
• It enables to see what has been achieved (impact evaluation).
• It is used to document what has been done and what progress
has been made (process or implementation evaluation).
• It is used to determine cost-benefit accountability for
expenditures.
• It used to share experiences (professional
development).
• Used to determine the effectiveness of a
program in light of the attainment pre-set
priorities and goals. Therefore, evaluation can
be undertaken for one or more purposes listed
above.
3.5.3 Evaluation Procedures to be Followed
• 1- Curricular Structure:
• 2 - Curricular Sequence:
• 3 – Curricular Element Proportionality
• 4 - Curricular Integration:
• 5 - Curricular Balance/Learner Outcomes:
• 6 - General Preparation:
• 7 - Curricular Evaluation
• 8 - Faculty Development:
3.5.5 Criteria for Curriculum
Evaluation
• Criterion 1- Curricular Structure:
Is the curriculum sufficiently complete?
What are the current education elements?
What is missing?
• Criterion 2 - Curricular Sequence:
• Is the sequential logic of the curriculum
optimal?
• For example, are curricular elements
optimally sequenced for learning clinical
method and related topic areas?
• This involves the idea of learner readiness.
• Criterion 3 – Curricular Element
Proportionality
Does curricular content proportionally
reflect the objectives of medical
education, the elements that are
required for the student to develop a
general and balanced preparation?
How is the time allotted in the
curriculum?
Are learning experiences of sufficient
duration for a student to learn what is
intended?
• Criterion 4 -Curricular Integration:
• Is the curriculum sufficiently
integrated /linked in terms of
educational elements
• so that optimal learning is
facilitated and curricular
redundancy minimized?
• Criterion 5 - Curricular Balance/Learner
Outcomes:
• Is the curriculum and its evaluative
components (objectives) balanced in terms
of learner outcomes?
• Is there an educationally sound balance
between knowledge, skill, and attitude
development?
• To what level of competency are learners
prepared?
• 1. Knowledge
• 2. Comprehension
• 3. Application
• 4. Analysis
• 5. Synthesis
• 6. Evaluation
• Criterion 6 - General Preparation:
• Does the curriculum prepare all
students broadly enough?