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COURSE PLANNING AND SYLLABUS 
DESIGN
THE COURSE RATIONALE 
 It normally describes the beliefs, values and goals that underline the course. It 
would be a two-or three paragraph statement in providing teaching and 
learning that will take place in course. 
 The rationale thus serves the purposes of: 
1. Guiding the planning of the various components of the course 
2. Emphasizing the kinds of teaching and learning the course should exemplify. 
3. Providing check on the consistency of the various course components in 
terms of the course values and goals. (Posner and Rudnitsky 1986) 
Example of a course rationale: 
“This course is designed for working adults who wish to improve their communication 
skills n English in order to improve their employment prospects. It teaches the basic communication 
skills needed to communicate in a variety of different work settings. This course seeks to enable 
participants to recognize their strength and needs in language learning anf to give them the 
confidence to use English more effectively to achieve their own goals. It also seeks to develop the 
partcipants’ skills in independent learning outside of the classroom”.
DESCRIBING THE ENTRY AND EXIT LEVEL 
 Language programs and commercial materials typically distinguish between 
elementary, intermediate and advanced level, but these categories are too 
board for the kind of detail planning. 
 More detailed descriptions are gained from their result on international 
proficiency tests such as TOEFL or IELTS. An approach that has been widely 
used in language prgram planning is to identify different levels of performance 
or proficiency in the form of band levels o points on a proficiency scale. 
 It can describes what a student is able to do at different stages in a language 
program.
CHOOSING COURSE CONTENT 
 Decisions about course content reflect the planners’ 
assumptions about the nature of language, language 
use, and language learning, what the most essential, and 
how these can be organized as an efficient basis for 
second language learning. (See on p.148-149)
DETERMINING THE SCOPE AND SEQUENCE 
 Scope is concerned with the breadth and depth of coverage of items in 
the course, that is, with the following questions: 
1. What range of content will be covered 
2. To what extend should each topic be studied 
 Sequencing of content in the course involves decding which content is 
needed early in the course and which provides a basis for things will 
be learned later
SEQUENCING MAY BE BASED ON THE FOLLOWING CRITERIA : 
 Simple to complex: Ex : In reading course, simple skill such as “literal 
comprehension” may be required early on, and more complex skills such as 
“inferencing” taught at a later stage. 
 Chronology: Ex: In Writing, (1) brainstorming, (2) drafting, (3) revising, (4) 
editing. In proficiency course: (1) listening (2) speaking (3) reading (4) writing. 
 Need : content may be sequenced according to when learners ae most likely to 
need it outside of the classroom. (see on p.150) 
 Prerequisite Learning: the sequence of content may reflect what is necessary at 
one point as a foundation for the next step in the learning process. 
 Whole a Part or Part to Whole: material at the beginning of a course may focus 
on the overall structure or organization of a topic before considering the 
individual components that make it up, or vice-versa. 
 Spiral Sequencing: this approach involves the recycling of items to ensure that 
learners have repeated opprotunities to learn them.
PLANNING THE COURSE STRUCTURE 
 Two aspects in the process of planning the course, however, require more detailed 
planning: selecting a syllabus framework and developing instructional blocks. 
 Selecting a Syllabus Framework 
A syllabus describes the major elements that will be used in planning a 
language course and provides that basis for its instituional focus and content. The 
syllabus could be: 
1.Situational : organized around different situations and the oral skills needed in those 
situations. 
2.Topical: organized around different topics and how to talk about them in English 
3.Functional: organized around the functions most commonly needed in Speaking 
4.Task-based: organized around different tasks and activities that the learners would 
carry out in English
IN DECIDING SYLLABUS FRAMEWORK, 
PLANNERS ARE INFLUENCED BY THE 
FOLLOWING FACTORS: 
(1) KNOWLEDGE AND BELIEFS ABOUT THE SUBJECT 
AREA. 
(2) RESEARCH AND THEORY 
(3) COMMON PRACTICE 
(4) TRENDS.
OTHER APPROACHES TO SYLLABUS DESIGNS: 
1.Grammatical syllabus : it organizes around grammatical items. In developing 
a grammatical syllabus, the syllabus planners seek to solve the following 
problems: 
 To select sufficient patterns to support the amount of teaching time available. 
 To arrange items into a sequence that facilitates learning 
 To identify a productive range of grammatical items that will allow for the 
development of basic communicative skills. 
Criticisms on Grammatical syllabus: 
 They represent only a partial dimension of language proficiency 
 They do not reflect the acquistion sequences seen in naturalistic SLA 
 They focus on the sentence rather than on longer units of discourse 
 They focus on form rather than meaning 
 They do not address communicative skills
2.Lexical Syllabus: one that identifies a target 
vocabulary to be taught normally arranged according 
to levels such as: 
1,000 words = Elementary level, 
2,000 words = Intermediate levels, 
+2,000 words = Upper Intermediate level, 
++2,000 = Advanced level.
3. Functional Syllabus: one that is organized around communicative 
functions such as requesting, complaining, suggesting, agreeing. 
Advantages of Functional syllabus: 
 They reflect a more comprehensive view of language that grammar syllabus and focus 
on the use of the language. 
 They can readily linked to other types of syllabus content. 
 They provide convenient framework for the design of teaching materials, particularly 
in the domains of listening and speaking. 
Criticisms on functional syllabus: 
 There are no clear criteria for selecting or grading functions 
 They represent a simplistic view of communicative competence and fail to address the 
processes of communication 
 They represent an atomistic approach to language. 
 They often lead to a phrase-book approach to teaching that concentrates on teaching 
expressions and idioms. 
 Students learning from a functional course may have considerable gaps in their 
grammatical competence because some important grmmatical structures are not 
taught
4. Situational syllabus: one that is organized around the language 
needed for different situations such as at the airport or at a hotel. A situation is a 
setting in which particular communicative acts typically occur. Ex: (1) on an 
airplane (2) at an immigration counter (3) at a bank (4) on the telephon (5) on the 
street, etc. 
Criticisms on situational syllabus: 
 Little is known about the language used in different situations. 
 Language used in specific situations may not transfer to other situations. 
 Situational syllabus often lead to phrase-book approach. 
 Grammar is dealt with incidentally, so a situational syllabus may result in gaps 
in a students’ grammatical knowledge.
5. Topical Syllabus : one that is organized around 
themes, topics, or other units of content. 
Advantages of topical syllabus: 
 They facilitate comprehension 
 Content makes linguistics form more meaningful 
 Content serves as the best basis for teaching the skills 
areas 
 They address students’ needs 
 They motivate learners 
 They allow for intregation of the four skills 
 They allow for use of authentic materials 
(Brinton, Snow, and Wesche 1989; Mohan 1986)
6. Competency-based syllabus 
 One based on a specification of the competencies learners are expected 
to master in relation to specific situations and activities. Competencies 
are a description of the essential skills, knowledge, and attitudes 
required for effective performance of particular tasks and activities. 
 Competency-based syllabus are widely used in social survival and work-oriented 
language programs. Advantages and disadvantages are 
discussed in Chapter 5. 
7. Skills syllabus: one that is organized around the different underlying 
abilities that are involved in using a language for purposes such as 
reading, writing, listening and speaking. 
Advantage: focus on performance in relation to specific tasks and therefore 
provide a practical framework for designing courses and teaching materials 
Disadvantages: 
 There is no serious basis for determining skills 
 They focus on discrete aspects of performance rather than on 
developing more global and integrated communicatives abilites.
8. Text-based syllabus : one that is built around texts and samples of 
extended discourse. Feez (1998, 85-86) states that a text-based 
syllabus is a type of integrated syllabus because it combines elements 
of different types of syllabus. 
Advantages and disadvantages are explained briefly in page 164. 
9. An Integrated Syllabus: the course planners need to decide 
between macrolevel and microlevel planning units in the course. In 
practical terms, therefore, all syllabus reflect some degree of 
integration. 
Krahkne (1987, 75) concludes: “…and a combination of task-based, 
skill-based, situational, functional, and content instruction may be 
chosen”.
DEVELOPING INSTRUCTIONAL BLOCKS 
 An instructional block is a self-contained learning sequence that has its own 
goals and objectives and that also reflects the overall objectives for the course. 
 In organizing a course into teaching blocks one seeks to achieve the 
folllowing: 
1.To make the course more teachable and learnable 
2.To provide a progression in level of difficulty 
3.To create overall coherence and structure for the course 
 Two commonly used instructional blocks are : (1) Modules, and (2) Units
PREPARING THE SCOPE AND SEQUENCE 
PLAN 
 Preparing the scope and sequence plan might 
consist of a listing of the module or units and their 
contents and an indication of how much teaching 
time each block in the course will require. 
 In the case of a textbook it usually consists of a 
unit-by-unit description of the course cross-referenced 
to the syllabus items included. 
(Appendix 9)
(THE ELT CURRICULUM : A FLEXIBLE MODEL FOR A 
CHANGING WORLD) 
Curriculum : A Definition 
The term of curriculum is the nearest with the syllabus. A.V.Kelly makes a 
strong case for understanding curriculum as ‘the overal rationale for the 
educational programme of an institution’, and he defines curriculum must 
include the following: 
“the intention of the planners, the procedures adopted for the implementation 
of those intentions, the actual experiences of the pupils resulting from the 
teacher’s direct attempts to carry out their or the planner’s intentions, and the 
“hidden learning” that occurs as a by-product of the organization of the 
curriculum , and, indeed, of the school (Kelly, 1989, p.14)
RICHARDS, PLATT AND PLATT IN LONGMAN 
DICTIONARY OF APPLIED LINGUISTICS (1992, P.94) 
STATE THAT CURRICULUM IS AN EDUCATIONAL 
PROGRAMME WHICH STATES: 
a. The educational purposes of the programme (the ends) 
b. The content, teaching procedures and learning experiences which 
will be necessacry to achieve this purpose (the means) 
c. Some means for assessing whether or not the edcational ends have 
been achieved.
MODELS OF CURRICULUM PLANNING 
1. The Content Model : Classical Humanism 
 In the Classical Humanist tradition, the content is a valued cultural heritage, 
the understanding of which contributes to the overall intellectual development 
of the learner and agreed to be universal, unchanging and absolute. 
 Kelly (1989, p 45-46) points out, the model is inadequate as the basis for 
curriculum design because it is unable to cope with a discussion of the wider 
purposes of education, and does not take into account the abilities problems of 
the individual learner or the complexities of the learning process itself.
2. THE OBJECTIVES MODEL : RECONSTRUCTIONISM 
 Reconstructionism has the main purpose of education is to bring about some 
kind of social change. It lies in the movement for the scientific management of 
education and the work of behavioural psychologists in the first half of 20th 
century. 
 It has three essential characteristics: (1) they must inambiguously describe the 
behaviour to be performed (2) they must describe the conditions under which 
the performance will be expected to occur, (3) they must state a standart of 
acceptable performance (the criterion). 
 The attraction of the model is that it provides: (1) Clarity of goals (2) Ease of 
evaluation, (3) Accountability. 
 Kelly (1989) states that the fundamental criticism is that philosophically it 
reduces people to the level of automatons who can be trained to behave in 
particular ways and precludes such concepts as autonomy, self-fulfilment and 
personal development.
3. THE PROCESS MODEL : PROGRESSIVISM 
 The purpose of education from the point of view of the process model is to 
enable the individual to progress towards self-fulfilment. It is concerned with 
the development of understanding. 
 The analyses by Clark and White show that language teaching has not been 
entirely isolated from the educational mainstream, but has been influenced by 
philosophical trends and broad educatioanal development. 
 For the ELT curriculu designer in the 1990s, informed by research in first and 
SLA, there is a need for a frameworkof curriculum design which allows 
flexibility but gives a clear direction in which to move.
THE “NEW PRAGMATISM” : A MIXED-FOCUS CURRICULUM 
In the opinion of Dubi and Olshtain (1986, p.68), three areas are central to the 
concept of a communicative curriculum “ a view of the nature of language as 
seen by the field of…sociolinguistics: a cognitively based view of language 
learning; and a humanistic approach in education” 
1. Curriculum Policy 
It has the role in a curriculum design document that is for a juggler, keeping aloft 
the “balls” representing the needs of the learners, the needs of institution or 
planning committee, the needs, possibly, the society, or at least specific interest 
groups within society, and also the neeeds of the teachers nd administrators, the 
implementers of the curriculum.
2. NEED ANALYSIS 
Need analysis is now seen as the logical strating point for the 
development of a language program which is responsive to the 
learner ad learning needs. 
There are two orientations as suggested by Brindley (1989, p.64): 
 A narrow: product-oriented view of needs which focuses on the 
language necessary for particular future purposes and is carried 
out by the ‘experts’ 
 A broad: process-oriented view of needs which takes into account 
factors such as learner motivation and learning styles as well as 
learner-defined target language.
3. SYLLABUS DESIGN 
 One of the most widely used syllabus models is one that integrates aspect of all 
three, a variable focus (Allen, 1984) or propotional (Yalden, 1987). 
 The three principles in syllabus design according to Yalden are : 
1. A view of how language is learned, which would result in a process-based syllabus 
2. A view of how language is acquired, which would result in a structure-based 
syllabus 
3. A view of how language is used, which would result in a function-based syllabus. 
 Allen’s three components in the variable focus syllabus which includes all levels, 
all the time, but the emphasis changes at different stages of learning: 
Structure/Function Function/Skills Task/Theme 
Great emphasis on structure 
and functions introduction of 
learning strategies & 
techniques 
Targetting specific functions. 
Application through task-based 
and problem solving activities 
Remedial structural work. 
Taks-based syllabus, focus on 
learning processes and 
strategies to encourage creative 
language use 
Elementary levels Pre-intermediate levels Intermediate and above
4. METHODOLOGY 
Teacher must be reflective, analytic and creative, open to new methods 
and ideas, the aim of teacher-training courses must be developed teachers who are 
researchers, not just technicians, and deliverers of the syllabus. 
In this way, teaching methodology can reflect curriculum goals, and 
teachers’ experiences in turn contribute to the process of curriculum renewal.
5. EVALUATION 
 Evaluation must take place at all stages of curriculum planning and 
inplementation, and invlove all participants. 
 The primary purpose of evaluation is to determine whether or no the 
curriculum goals have been met based on the assessment of the participants in 
the programme. 
 Another purpose is to determine the effectiveness of the curriculum and to 
evaluate the language program itself, which will focus on the teachers, the 
methodology, the materials and so on.
CONCLUSION 
I. This discussion emphasis on the importance of major types of curriculum models : 
Content, objectives and process; the reality is likely to be a blend of all three. 
Certainly, it is the mixed-focus product and process models which best fits the 
author’s experience of the curriculum. 
II. Curriculum development in ELT is that there is a need for flexibility and openness 
to change and influences from the broader prespectives of general educational 
theory. 
III. Richard’s (1984, p.25) concludes that: “ The language teaching profession has yet 
to embrace curriculum development as an overall approaach to the planning of 
teaching and learning. Our profession has evolved a considerable body of 
educational techniques, but little in the way of an integrated and systematic 
approach to language curriculum process. Such an approach may be crucial, 
however, of we are to develop a more rigorous basis for our educational 
practices”.

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Course planning and syllabus design

  • 1. COURSE PLANNING AND SYLLABUS DESIGN
  • 2. THE COURSE RATIONALE  It normally describes the beliefs, values and goals that underline the course. It would be a two-or three paragraph statement in providing teaching and learning that will take place in course.  The rationale thus serves the purposes of: 1. Guiding the planning of the various components of the course 2. Emphasizing the kinds of teaching and learning the course should exemplify. 3. Providing check on the consistency of the various course components in terms of the course values and goals. (Posner and Rudnitsky 1986) Example of a course rationale: “This course is designed for working adults who wish to improve their communication skills n English in order to improve their employment prospects. It teaches the basic communication skills needed to communicate in a variety of different work settings. This course seeks to enable participants to recognize their strength and needs in language learning anf to give them the confidence to use English more effectively to achieve their own goals. It also seeks to develop the partcipants’ skills in independent learning outside of the classroom”.
  • 3. DESCRIBING THE ENTRY AND EXIT LEVEL  Language programs and commercial materials typically distinguish between elementary, intermediate and advanced level, but these categories are too board for the kind of detail planning.  More detailed descriptions are gained from their result on international proficiency tests such as TOEFL or IELTS. An approach that has been widely used in language prgram planning is to identify different levels of performance or proficiency in the form of band levels o points on a proficiency scale.  It can describes what a student is able to do at different stages in a language program.
  • 4. CHOOSING COURSE CONTENT  Decisions about course content reflect the planners’ assumptions about the nature of language, language use, and language learning, what the most essential, and how these can be organized as an efficient basis for second language learning. (See on p.148-149)
  • 5. DETERMINING THE SCOPE AND SEQUENCE  Scope is concerned with the breadth and depth of coverage of items in the course, that is, with the following questions: 1. What range of content will be covered 2. To what extend should each topic be studied  Sequencing of content in the course involves decding which content is needed early in the course and which provides a basis for things will be learned later
  • 6. SEQUENCING MAY BE BASED ON THE FOLLOWING CRITERIA :  Simple to complex: Ex : In reading course, simple skill such as “literal comprehension” may be required early on, and more complex skills such as “inferencing” taught at a later stage.  Chronology: Ex: In Writing, (1) brainstorming, (2) drafting, (3) revising, (4) editing. In proficiency course: (1) listening (2) speaking (3) reading (4) writing.  Need : content may be sequenced according to when learners ae most likely to need it outside of the classroom. (see on p.150)  Prerequisite Learning: the sequence of content may reflect what is necessary at one point as a foundation for the next step in the learning process.  Whole a Part or Part to Whole: material at the beginning of a course may focus on the overall structure or organization of a topic before considering the individual components that make it up, or vice-versa.  Spiral Sequencing: this approach involves the recycling of items to ensure that learners have repeated opprotunities to learn them.
  • 7. PLANNING THE COURSE STRUCTURE  Two aspects in the process of planning the course, however, require more detailed planning: selecting a syllabus framework and developing instructional blocks.  Selecting a Syllabus Framework A syllabus describes the major elements that will be used in planning a language course and provides that basis for its instituional focus and content. The syllabus could be: 1.Situational : organized around different situations and the oral skills needed in those situations. 2.Topical: organized around different topics and how to talk about them in English 3.Functional: organized around the functions most commonly needed in Speaking 4.Task-based: organized around different tasks and activities that the learners would carry out in English
  • 8. IN DECIDING SYLLABUS FRAMEWORK, PLANNERS ARE INFLUENCED BY THE FOLLOWING FACTORS: (1) KNOWLEDGE AND BELIEFS ABOUT THE SUBJECT AREA. (2) RESEARCH AND THEORY (3) COMMON PRACTICE (4) TRENDS.
  • 9. OTHER APPROACHES TO SYLLABUS DESIGNS: 1.Grammatical syllabus : it organizes around grammatical items. In developing a grammatical syllabus, the syllabus planners seek to solve the following problems:  To select sufficient patterns to support the amount of teaching time available.  To arrange items into a sequence that facilitates learning  To identify a productive range of grammatical items that will allow for the development of basic communicative skills. Criticisms on Grammatical syllabus:  They represent only a partial dimension of language proficiency  They do not reflect the acquistion sequences seen in naturalistic SLA  They focus on the sentence rather than on longer units of discourse  They focus on form rather than meaning  They do not address communicative skills
  • 10. 2.Lexical Syllabus: one that identifies a target vocabulary to be taught normally arranged according to levels such as: 1,000 words = Elementary level, 2,000 words = Intermediate levels, +2,000 words = Upper Intermediate level, ++2,000 = Advanced level.
  • 11. 3. Functional Syllabus: one that is organized around communicative functions such as requesting, complaining, suggesting, agreeing. Advantages of Functional syllabus:  They reflect a more comprehensive view of language that grammar syllabus and focus on the use of the language.  They can readily linked to other types of syllabus content.  They provide convenient framework for the design of teaching materials, particularly in the domains of listening and speaking. Criticisms on functional syllabus:  There are no clear criteria for selecting or grading functions  They represent a simplistic view of communicative competence and fail to address the processes of communication  They represent an atomistic approach to language.  They often lead to a phrase-book approach to teaching that concentrates on teaching expressions and idioms.  Students learning from a functional course may have considerable gaps in their grammatical competence because some important grmmatical structures are not taught
  • 12. 4. Situational syllabus: one that is organized around the language needed for different situations such as at the airport or at a hotel. A situation is a setting in which particular communicative acts typically occur. Ex: (1) on an airplane (2) at an immigration counter (3) at a bank (4) on the telephon (5) on the street, etc. Criticisms on situational syllabus:  Little is known about the language used in different situations.  Language used in specific situations may not transfer to other situations.  Situational syllabus often lead to phrase-book approach.  Grammar is dealt with incidentally, so a situational syllabus may result in gaps in a students’ grammatical knowledge.
  • 13. 5. Topical Syllabus : one that is organized around themes, topics, or other units of content. Advantages of topical syllabus:  They facilitate comprehension  Content makes linguistics form more meaningful  Content serves as the best basis for teaching the skills areas  They address students’ needs  They motivate learners  They allow for intregation of the four skills  They allow for use of authentic materials (Brinton, Snow, and Wesche 1989; Mohan 1986)
  • 14. 6. Competency-based syllabus  One based on a specification of the competencies learners are expected to master in relation to specific situations and activities. Competencies are a description of the essential skills, knowledge, and attitudes required for effective performance of particular tasks and activities.  Competency-based syllabus are widely used in social survival and work-oriented language programs. Advantages and disadvantages are discussed in Chapter 5. 7. Skills syllabus: one that is organized around the different underlying abilities that are involved in using a language for purposes such as reading, writing, listening and speaking. Advantage: focus on performance in relation to specific tasks and therefore provide a practical framework for designing courses and teaching materials Disadvantages:  There is no serious basis for determining skills  They focus on discrete aspects of performance rather than on developing more global and integrated communicatives abilites.
  • 15. 8. Text-based syllabus : one that is built around texts and samples of extended discourse. Feez (1998, 85-86) states that a text-based syllabus is a type of integrated syllabus because it combines elements of different types of syllabus. Advantages and disadvantages are explained briefly in page 164. 9. An Integrated Syllabus: the course planners need to decide between macrolevel and microlevel planning units in the course. In practical terms, therefore, all syllabus reflect some degree of integration. Krahkne (1987, 75) concludes: “…and a combination of task-based, skill-based, situational, functional, and content instruction may be chosen”.
  • 16. DEVELOPING INSTRUCTIONAL BLOCKS  An instructional block is a self-contained learning sequence that has its own goals and objectives and that also reflects the overall objectives for the course.  In organizing a course into teaching blocks one seeks to achieve the folllowing: 1.To make the course more teachable and learnable 2.To provide a progression in level of difficulty 3.To create overall coherence and structure for the course  Two commonly used instructional blocks are : (1) Modules, and (2) Units
  • 17. PREPARING THE SCOPE AND SEQUENCE PLAN  Preparing the scope and sequence plan might consist of a listing of the module or units and their contents and an indication of how much teaching time each block in the course will require.  In the case of a textbook it usually consists of a unit-by-unit description of the course cross-referenced to the syllabus items included. (Appendix 9)
  • 18. (THE ELT CURRICULUM : A FLEXIBLE MODEL FOR A CHANGING WORLD) Curriculum : A Definition The term of curriculum is the nearest with the syllabus. A.V.Kelly makes a strong case for understanding curriculum as ‘the overal rationale for the educational programme of an institution’, and he defines curriculum must include the following: “the intention of the planners, the procedures adopted for the implementation of those intentions, the actual experiences of the pupils resulting from the teacher’s direct attempts to carry out their or the planner’s intentions, and the “hidden learning” that occurs as a by-product of the organization of the curriculum , and, indeed, of the school (Kelly, 1989, p.14)
  • 19. RICHARDS, PLATT AND PLATT IN LONGMAN DICTIONARY OF APPLIED LINGUISTICS (1992, P.94) STATE THAT CURRICULUM IS AN EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMME WHICH STATES: a. The educational purposes of the programme (the ends) b. The content, teaching procedures and learning experiences which will be necessacry to achieve this purpose (the means) c. Some means for assessing whether or not the edcational ends have been achieved.
  • 20. MODELS OF CURRICULUM PLANNING 1. The Content Model : Classical Humanism  In the Classical Humanist tradition, the content is a valued cultural heritage, the understanding of which contributes to the overall intellectual development of the learner and agreed to be universal, unchanging and absolute.  Kelly (1989, p 45-46) points out, the model is inadequate as the basis for curriculum design because it is unable to cope with a discussion of the wider purposes of education, and does not take into account the abilities problems of the individual learner or the complexities of the learning process itself.
  • 21. 2. THE OBJECTIVES MODEL : RECONSTRUCTIONISM  Reconstructionism has the main purpose of education is to bring about some kind of social change. It lies in the movement for the scientific management of education and the work of behavioural psychologists in the first half of 20th century.  It has three essential characteristics: (1) they must inambiguously describe the behaviour to be performed (2) they must describe the conditions under which the performance will be expected to occur, (3) they must state a standart of acceptable performance (the criterion).  The attraction of the model is that it provides: (1) Clarity of goals (2) Ease of evaluation, (3) Accountability.  Kelly (1989) states that the fundamental criticism is that philosophically it reduces people to the level of automatons who can be trained to behave in particular ways and precludes such concepts as autonomy, self-fulfilment and personal development.
  • 22. 3. THE PROCESS MODEL : PROGRESSIVISM  The purpose of education from the point of view of the process model is to enable the individual to progress towards self-fulfilment. It is concerned with the development of understanding.  The analyses by Clark and White show that language teaching has not been entirely isolated from the educational mainstream, but has been influenced by philosophical trends and broad educatioanal development.  For the ELT curriculu designer in the 1990s, informed by research in first and SLA, there is a need for a frameworkof curriculum design which allows flexibility but gives a clear direction in which to move.
  • 23. THE “NEW PRAGMATISM” : A MIXED-FOCUS CURRICULUM In the opinion of Dubi and Olshtain (1986, p.68), three areas are central to the concept of a communicative curriculum “ a view of the nature of language as seen by the field of…sociolinguistics: a cognitively based view of language learning; and a humanistic approach in education” 1. Curriculum Policy It has the role in a curriculum design document that is for a juggler, keeping aloft the “balls” representing the needs of the learners, the needs of institution or planning committee, the needs, possibly, the society, or at least specific interest groups within society, and also the neeeds of the teachers nd administrators, the implementers of the curriculum.
  • 24. 2. NEED ANALYSIS Need analysis is now seen as the logical strating point for the development of a language program which is responsive to the learner ad learning needs. There are two orientations as suggested by Brindley (1989, p.64):  A narrow: product-oriented view of needs which focuses on the language necessary for particular future purposes and is carried out by the ‘experts’  A broad: process-oriented view of needs which takes into account factors such as learner motivation and learning styles as well as learner-defined target language.
  • 25. 3. SYLLABUS DESIGN  One of the most widely used syllabus models is one that integrates aspect of all three, a variable focus (Allen, 1984) or propotional (Yalden, 1987).  The three principles in syllabus design according to Yalden are : 1. A view of how language is learned, which would result in a process-based syllabus 2. A view of how language is acquired, which would result in a structure-based syllabus 3. A view of how language is used, which would result in a function-based syllabus.  Allen’s three components in the variable focus syllabus which includes all levels, all the time, but the emphasis changes at different stages of learning: Structure/Function Function/Skills Task/Theme Great emphasis on structure and functions introduction of learning strategies & techniques Targetting specific functions. Application through task-based and problem solving activities Remedial structural work. Taks-based syllabus, focus on learning processes and strategies to encourage creative language use Elementary levels Pre-intermediate levels Intermediate and above
  • 26. 4. METHODOLOGY Teacher must be reflective, analytic and creative, open to new methods and ideas, the aim of teacher-training courses must be developed teachers who are researchers, not just technicians, and deliverers of the syllabus. In this way, teaching methodology can reflect curriculum goals, and teachers’ experiences in turn contribute to the process of curriculum renewal.
  • 27. 5. EVALUATION  Evaluation must take place at all stages of curriculum planning and inplementation, and invlove all participants.  The primary purpose of evaluation is to determine whether or no the curriculum goals have been met based on the assessment of the participants in the programme.  Another purpose is to determine the effectiveness of the curriculum and to evaluate the language program itself, which will focus on the teachers, the methodology, the materials and so on.
  • 28. CONCLUSION I. This discussion emphasis on the importance of major types of curriculum models : Content, objectives and process; the reality is likely to be a blend of all three. Certainly, it is the mixed-focus product and process models which best fits the author’s experience of the curriculum. II. Curriculum development in ELT is that there is a need for flexibility and openness to change and influences from the broader prespectives of general educational theory. III. Richard’s (1984, p.25) concludes that: “ The language teaching profession has yet to embrace curriculum development as an overall approaach to the planning of teaching and learning. Our profession has evolved a considerable body of educational techniques, but little in the way of an integrated and systematic approach to language curriculum process. Such an approach may be crucial, however, of we are to develop a more rigorous basis for our educational practices”.