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Maybelle B. Animas, R.N
The Word: Curriculum

Latin:   “Currere” - Running course
Scotland    1603: Carriage way, road
the   set of courses, and their content,
 offered at a school or university
Curriculum Organization?

 Process   of selecting curriculum
 elements form the subject, the current
 social life and the students experience
 then designing the selected curriculum
 elements appropriately so thy they can
 form the curriculum structure and type.
Criteria for Effective Curriculum
Organization

            Continuity

            Sequence

            Integration
Curriculum Designs
   A curriculum design is a framework or plan of
    action for preparing a course of study or a set of
    students’ experiences .It is a deliberate process of
    devising, planning and selecting the elements,
    techniques and procedures of curriculum.
    Curriculum design is a method of thinking.
Importance of Curriculum
Designs
   Curriculum design involves the creation of the set of
    operating principles or criteria, based on theory, that guide
    the selection and organization of content and the
    methodology used to teach that content .With the
    accelerated rate of social change, schools are preparing
    youth for adulthood in a society not yet envisioned by its
    members .Hawley’s words still ring true: “it’s not a question
    of whether or not to change , but whether or not we can
    control the way we are changing. We are living in an Alice in
    an Wonderland world where you have to run just to stay
    where you are .To get anywhere you have to run even faster
    than that. The pieces on the chess board keep changing and
    the rules are never the same.”
Models of Curriculum Designs
   An effective curriculum must be built on a solid philosophical
    foundation that answer the question of what educational
    purposes the school should seek to achieve. The classical
    model for curriculum design, proposed by Tyler in
    1949,asked four questions of curriculum planners:
   What educational purposes should the school seek to attain?
   What educational experiences can be provided that are likely
    to help attain these purposes?
   How can these educational experiences be effectively
    organized?
Models of Curriculum Designs
   How can we determine whether these purposes
    are being attained?
   Tyler’s steps for curriculum design included stating
    objectives, selecting learning experiences,
    organizing the experiences, and evaluating
    results. Tyler’s model is most closely aligned with
    the educational purposes of preserving the social
    order and teaching skills and competencies
    needed to function effectively in society.
Principles of Curriculum Designs
   The problems of curriculum change become the criteria for
    determining the desirability of a curriculum. A list of the
    problems of curriculum development, recapped and stated
    as criteria, following:
   Be consistent with the conceptual framework and implement
    the conceptual framework commitments.
   Derive and test its concepts and theories in teaching
    process.
   Respond to the educational needs of society and the
    immediate concerns of students.
   Cope with the knowledge explosion and the short “half-life”
    of scientific knowledge
Principles of Curriculum Designs
   Use the logical, precise, effective, and efficient
    educational technology that is currently available.
   Use teaching personnel in the most economical
    and efficient way (time, energy and money).
   Enable utilization of cognitive teaching input.
   Provide for student testing of learned behaviour in
    real situation.
   Produce a graduate capable of delivering creative
    teaching care for the next fifteen to twenty years.
   Spend a reasonable length of the time
    accomplishing the goals of the curriculum.
Steps in Curriculum Design
    Fiorno and Nowak suggest the following steps in curriculum
     design:
(1) Identification of the problem.
(2) Diagnosis of the problem.
(3) Search for alternative solutions.
(4) Selection for the best solutions.
(5) Ratification of the solution by the organization.
(6) Authorization of the solution.
(7) Preparation for adopting of the solution.
(8) Adoption of the solution.
(9) Direction and guidance of the staff.
(10) Evaluation of the effectiveness of the solution.
Establish a Curriculum
Committee
   Persons responsible for curriculum
    decisions include administrators
    ,teachers ,students ,parents ,and
    community leaders. Most major
    innovations in the public school are
    introduced by teachers , state boards or
    departments of education, and textbook
    publishers and instructional materials
    producers indirectly provide educational
    leardership.
Categories of Curriculum Designs


        Subject-Centered Curriculum

        Activity/Experience based
         curriculum

        Core curriculum
Subject Centered Design
   Subject centered curriculum is a rigid curriculum , based on
    specific courses, which mandates specific amounts of
    material to be covered over special periods of time
    regardless of student abilities or interests. Subject centered
    curriculum assign the greatest importance to subject matter
    rather than to the students .It consists of having students in
    classes for one subjects at a time such as mathematics for
    45 minutes, science for 45 minutes. And history for 45
    minutes. Three related designs have emerged from subject
    centered designs:
   Subject design
   Academic Disciplines design
   Broad Fields design
Subject Design
   This is probably the oldest and most widely used
    form of curriculum organization found in schools
    and educational systems .This is based on the
    classification and organization of subjects matter
    into discrete groups, which we have called
    subjects .These groupings, which have become
    known as school subjects, were initially based on
    evolving divisions of labour in research that
    produced physics , history, literature and
    mathematics and so forth. In more recent times
    practical areas such as typing , home economics
    and industrial arts have become accepted as
    subjects.
Academic Disciplines Design
   This approach to organizing curriculum is essentially a post
    second world war phenomenon ,gaining greatest support in
    the inherent organization of content, as is the subject design,
    the academic discipline design emphasizes the role played
    by those distinct entities called academic disciplines .In a
    school setting, the content of this design would focus on
    what an academician does, that is ,how a biologist , historian
    , or a mathematician research is done , how that research is
    carried out , how data are analysed, how research is
    reported , and so forth. The result , it is hoped ,is that the
    school would produce mini versions of academic
    disciplinarians.
Broad Fields Design
   This third design was developed to
    overcome a perceived weakness in the
    subject design that was evident in the
    nineteenth and the early twentieth
    centuries .Broad field design was
    deemed more suited to younger
    learners. The broad fields design is
    commonly found in primary and lower
    secondary schools.
Common Feature In Three Subject
Centered Designs
 Classification and organization of all
  contents into subjects or subjects-like
  groupings.
 Subjects are clearly defined and
  distinguished.
 A hierarchy of subjects is commonly
  found according to their perceived value.
 Methodology applied and practised is
  largely teacher-centered and expository
  in nature
Advantages of Subject Centered Design

 The advantages of subject-centered
  curriculum are:
 Students like it , they are used to it and
  it fits their idea of what school should be.
 What students learn , they learn well.
 This approach is efficient in a field in
  which resources for staff development
  are scant.
Disadvantages of Subject Centered Design

   The disadvantages of subject-centered curriculum
    are:
   Teachers wouldn’t be able to innovate their
    teaching style to help students learn in a creative
    way.
   Students simply memorize what they need to
    know in order to pas a test , instead of actually
    learning it.
   Teachers are teaching the students to think inside
    the box in order to pass the exams.
Activity/Experience Based Curriculum

   This approach is based on determine the genuine
    needs and interests of learner , which in turn form
    the basis of the curriculum. An important claim of
    this approach is that “people only learn what they
    experience”. According to M.K Gandhi ,education
    is the development of all the aspects i.e. body
    mind and spirit . So mind without activities can not
    develop the personality perfectly .so education
    must give importance to activities. Education
    ,which has no link with life is meaningless.
Activities Under Activity Based Curriculum

   Physical Activities:
                      These activities aim at physical
    development of the child .it includes physical
    training ,games and sports.

   Environmental Activity:
                          These activities includes
    nature study ,excursion ,survey , social visit.
    These activities develop civic sense and love for
    nature in children.
   Constructive Activity:
                         With these activities love for
    work dignity of labor , production efficiency may be
    developed. Handwork craft repairing of tools belong
    to this category of activities.

   Aesthetic activity:
                      Music ,arts creative crafts are
    included in this type of activities. These provide
    opportunities for self-expression and development
    of inborn creative faculties.
   Community Activity:
                      These Activities aim at
    community development and include
    community projects ,first aid ,social
    service , etc these activities also help in
    the socialization of the child. The
    teacher can provide information
    regarding history, geography ,and
    economics with the help of these
    activities.
Advantages of Activity Based Curriculum

   Advantages of Activity based curriculum are:
   The most important feature of Activity based curriculum is
    learning by doing .so this method can fulfill the natural urge
    of a growing child on one hand also can help them learn their
    lesson.
   The method also promote better understanding of a lesson
    among students as they learn the lesson by practicing the
    task themselves.
   It inspires the students to apply their creative ideas
    ,knowledge and mind in solving problems.
   It also helps learner psychologically as the can express their
    emotions through active participation in something useful.
Disadvantages of Activity Based
Curriculum
   Activity curriculum method require long term
    planning with details of the whole process before
    engaging the learners, the teacher has to make
    sure that all students have sufficient knowledge
    and skills regarding the task they are going to
    perform .so this method can not be used on a
    regular and daily basis as it involves a lengthy
    procedure.
   The objective of this method can be only be
    fulfilled if the planning of the lesson is flawless.
Limitations of Activity Based Curriculum

 Activity curriculum attaches too much
  importance on activities. It neglects
  other activities needed for intellectual
  development of the child.
 Personal supervision is needed for
  every activity which is not possible in
  school.
 Activity curriculum is not applicable to all
  stages of education.
Core Curriculum
   The notion behind a core design, usually called a core
    curriculum, is that there exists a set of common learnings
    (knowledge, skills and values) that should be provided to all
    learners in order to function effectively in a society .The core
    concept, however, does vary considerably in interpretation
    and one writer has suggested that it is possible to distinguish
    no less than six forms of the core design. For our purposes,
    it is sufficient to understand that a curriculum may be
    organized around the idea of a core as a set of learnings
    essential foe all students. The emphasis of this approach to
    core curriculum was that all students would experience a set
    of common and essential learnings that were necessary for
    learners to function effectively in society.
Benefits of Curriculum Design
 It Focuses Attention On Goal.
 It Improves the Probability of Success.
 It Improves economy of Time and
  efforts.
 It Facilitates Communication And
  Coordination of Projects.
 It Reduces Stress.

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Curriculum organization

  • 2. The Word: Curriculum Latin: “Currere” - Running course Scotland 1603: Carriage way, road the set of courses, and their content, offered at a school or university
  • 3. Curriculum Organization?  Process of selecting curriculum elements form the subject, the current social life and the students experience then designing the selected curriculum elements appropriately so thy they can form the curriculum structure and type.
  • 4. Criteria for Effective Curriculum Organization  Continuity  Sequence  Integration
  • 5. Curriculum Designs  A curriculum design is a framework or plan of action for preparing a course of study or a set of students’ experiences .It is a deliberate process of devising, planning and selecting the elements, techniques and procedures of curriculum. Curriculum design is a method of thinking.
  • 6. Importance of Curriculum Designs  Curriculum design involves the creation of the set of operating principles or criteria, based on theory, that guide the selection and organization of content and the methodology used to teach that content .With the accelerated rate of social change, schools are preparing youth for adulthood in a society not yet envisioned by its members .Hawley’s words still ring true: “it’s not a question of whether or not to change , but whether or not we can control the way we are changing. We are living in an Alice in an Wonderland world where you have to run just to stay where you are .To get anywhere you have to run even faster than that. The pieces on the chess board keep changing and the rules are never the same.”
  • 7. Models of Curriculum Designs  An effective curriculum must be built on a solid philosophical foundation that answer the question of what educational purposes the school should seek to achieve. The classical model for curriculum design, proposed by Tyler in 1949,asked four questions of curriculum planners:  What educational purposes should the school seek to attain?  What educational experiences can be provided that are likely to help attain these purposes?  How can these educational experiences be effectively organized?
  • 8. Models of Curriculum Designs  How can we determine whether these purposes are being attained?  Tyler’s steps for curriculum design included stating objectives, selecting learning experiences, organizing the experiences, and evaluating results. Tyler’s model is most closely aligned with the educational purposes of preserving the social order and teaching skills and competencies needed to function effectively in society.
  • 9. Principles of Curriculum Designs  The problems of curriculum change become the criteria for determining the desirability of a curriculum. A list of the problems of curriculum development, recapped and stated as criteria, following:  Be consistent with the conceptual framework and implement the conceptual framework commitments.  Derive and test its concepts and theories in teaching process.  Respond to the educational needs of society and the immediate concerns of students.  Cope with the knowledge explosion and the short “half-life” of scientific knowledge
  • 10. Principles of Curriculum Designs  Use the logical, precise, effective, and efficient educational technology that is currently available.  Use teaching personnel in the most economical and efficient way (time, energy and money).  Enable utilization of cognitive teaching input.  Provide for student testing of learned behaviour in real situation.  Produce a graduate capable of delivering creative teaching care for the next fifteen to twenty years.  Spend a reasonable length of the time accomplishing the goals of the curriculum.
  • 11. Steps in Curriculum Design  Fiorno and Nowak suggest the following steps in curriculum design: (1) Identification of the problem. (2) Diagnosis of the problem. (3) Search for alternative solutions. (4) Selection for the best solutions. (5) Ratification of the solution by the organization. (6) Authorization of the solution. (7) Preparation for adopting of the solution. (8) Adoption of the solution. (9) Direction and guidance of the staff. (10) Evaluation of the effectiveness of the solution.
  • 12. Establish a Curriculum Committee  Persons responsible for curriculum decisions include administrators ,teachers ,students ,parents ,and community leaders. Most major innovations in the public school are introduced by teachers , state boards or departments of education, and textbook publishers and instructional materials producers indirectly provide educational leardership.
  • 13. Categories of Curriculum Designs  Subject-Centered Curriculum  Activity/Experience based curriculum  Core curriculum
  • 14. Subject Centered Design  Subject centered curriculum is a rigid curriculum , based on specific courses, which mandates specific amounts of material to be covered over special periods of time regardless of student abilities or interests. Subject centered curriculum assign the greatest importance to subject matter rather than to the students .It consists of having students in classes for one subjects at a time such as mathematics for 45 minutes, science for 45 minutes. And history for 45 minutes. Three related designs have emerged from subject centered designs:  Subject design  Academic Disciplines design  Broad Fields design
  • 15. Subject Design  This is probably the oldest and most widely used form of curriculum organization found in schools and educational systems .This is based on the classification and organization of subjects matter into discrete groups, which we have called subjects .These groupings, which have become known as school subjects, were initially based on evolving divisions of labour in research that produced physics , history, literature and mathematics and so forth. In more recent times practical areas such as typing , home economics and industrial arts have become accepted as subjects.
  • 16. Academic Disciplines Design  This approach to organizing curriculum is essentially a post second world war phenomenon ,gaining greatest support in the inherent organization of content, as is the subject design, the academic discipline design emphasizes the role played by those distinct entities called academic disciplines .In a school setting, the content of this design would focus on what an academician does, that is ,how a biologist , historian , or a mathematician research is done , how that research is carried out , how data are analysed, how research is reported , and so forth. The result , it is hoped ,is that the school would produce mini versions of academic disciplinarians.
  • 17. Broad Fields Design  This third design was developed to overcome a perceived weakness in the subject design that was evident in the nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries .Broad field design was deemed more suited to younger learners. The broad fields design is commonly found in primary and lower secondary schools.
  • 18. Common Feature In Three Subject Centered Designs  Classification and organization of all contents into subjects or subjects-like groupings.  Subjects are clearly defined and distinguished.  A hierarchy of subjects is commonly found according to their perceived value.  Methodology applied and practised is largely teacher-centered and expository in nature
  • 19. Advantages of Subject Centered Design  The advantages of subject-centered curriculum are:  Students like it , they are used to it and it fits their idea of what school should be.  What students learn , they learn well.  This approach is efficient in a field in which resources for staff development are scant.
  • 20. Disadvantages of Subject Centered Design  The disadvantages of subject-centered curriculum are:  Teachers wouldn’t be able to innovate their teaching style to help students learn in a creative way.  Students simply memorize what they need to know in order to pas a test , instead of actually learning it.  Teachers are teaching the students to think inside the box in order to pass the exams.
  • 21. Activity/Experience Based Curriculum  This approach is based on determine the genuine needs and interests of learner , which in turn form the basis of the curriculum. An important claim of this approach is that “people only learn what they experience”. According to M.K Gandhi ,education is the development of all the aspects i.e. body mind and spirit . So mind without activities can not develop the personality perfectly .so education must give importance to activities. Education ,which has no link with life is meaningless.
  • 22. Activities Under Activity Based Curriculum  Physical Activities: These activities aim at physical development of the child .it includes physical training ,games and sports.  Environmental Activity: These activities includes nature study ,excursion ,survey , social visit. These activities develop civic sense and love for nature in children.
  • 23. Constructive Activity: With these activities love for work dignity of labor , production efficiency may be developed. Handwork craft repairing of tools belong to this category of activities.  Aesthetic activity: Music ,arts creative crafts are included in this type of activities. These provide opportunities for self-expression and development of inborn creative faculties.
  • 24. Community Activity: These Activities aim at community development and include community projects ,first aid ,social service , etc these activities also help in the socialization of the child. The teacher can provide information regarding history, geography ,and economics with the help of these activities.
  • 25. Advantages of Activity Based Curriculum  Advantages of Activity based curriculum are:  The most important feature of Activity based curriculum is learning by doing .so this method can fulfill the natural urge of a growing child on one hand also can help them learn their lesson.  The method also promote better understanding of a lesson among students as they learn the lesson by practicing the task themselves.  It inspires the students to apply their creative ideas ,knowledge and mind in solving problems.  It also helps learner psychologically as the can express their emotions through active participation in something useful.
  • 26. Disadvantages of Activity Based Curriculum  Activity curriculum method require long term planning with details of the whole process before engaging the learners, the teacher has to make sure that all students have sufficient knowledge and skills regarding the task they are going to perform .so this method can not be used on a regular and daily basis as it involves a lengthy procedure.  The objective of this method can be only be fulfilled if the planning of the lesson is flawless.
  • 27. Limitations of Activity Based Curriculum  Activity curriculum attaches too much importance on activities. It neglects other activities needed for intellectual development of the child.  Personal supervision is needed for every activity which is not possible in school.  Activity curriculum is not applicable to all stages of education.
  • 28. Core Curriculum  The notion behind a core design, usually called a core curriculum, is that there exists a set of common learnings (knowledge, skills and values) that should be provided to all learners in order to function effectively in a society .The core concept, however, does vary considerably in interpretation and one writer has suggested that it is possible to distinguish no less than six forms of the core design. For our purposes, it is sufficient to understand that a curriculum may be organized around the idea of a core as a set of learnings essential foe all students. The emphasis of this approach to core curriculum was that all students would experience a set of common and essential learnings that were necessary for learners to function effectively in society.
  • 29. Benefits of Curriculum Design  It Focuses Attention On Goal.  It Improves the Probability of Success.  It Improves economy of Time and efforts.  It Facilitates Communication And Coordination of Projects.  It Reduces Stress.