This document contains a lesson plan about crafting curriculum. It discusses curriculum design models, specifically focusing on the subject-centered design model. The subject-centered design model organizes curriculum either horizontally by grade level or vertically by subject area. It also covers four types of subject-centered designs: subject design, discipline design, correlation design, and interdisciplinary design. Students are asked to identify examples of each design and evaluate which organizational approach and design model would be best for the K-12 curriculum.
This document contains a lesson plan about crafting curriculum. It discusses curriculum design models, specifically focusing on the subject-centered design model. The subject-centered design model organizes curriculum either horizontally by grade level or vertically by subject area. It also covers four types of subject-centered designs: subject design, discipline design, correlation design, and interdisciplinary design. Students are asked to identify examples of each design and evaluate which organizational approach and design model would be best for the K-12 curriculum.
This document contains a lesson plan about crafting curriculum. It discusses curriculum design models, specifically focusing on the subject-centered design model. The subject-centered design model organizes curriculum either horizontally by grade level or vertically by subject area. It also covers four types of subject-centered designs: subject design, discipline design, correlation design, and interdisciplinary design. Students are asked to identify examples of each design and evaluate which organizational approach and design model would be best for the K-12 curriculum.
This document contains a lesson plan about crafting curriculum. It discusses curriculum design models, specifically focusing on the subject-centered design model. The subject-centered design model organizes curriculum either horizontally by grade level or vertically by subject area. It also covers four types of subject-centered designs: subject design, discipline design, correlation design, and interdisciplinary design. Students are asked to identify examples of each design and evaluate which organizational approach and design model would be best for the K-12 curriculum.
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Bestlink College of the Philippines
COLLEGE OF TEACHER EDUCATION
Sapphire St., Millionaires Village, Brgy. San Agustin, Novaliches, Quezon City
Lesson Plan
I. Objectives. At the end of the lesson, 100% of the students are able to:
a. Understand the meaning of curriculum in its broad and holistic sense; b. Provide a background on curriculum designs and its dimensions particularly to the Subject-centered design model and c. Recognize the two approaches on how a curriculum must organize.
II. Subject Matter a. Topic: CRAFTING THE CURRICULUM i. Subtopic: Lesson 1-Curriculum Design Models: Subject-centered design model
b. References: CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT by Dr. Bilbao et.al., page 51 to 54.
c. Materials: Visual Aids, Chalk, Chalkboard
III. Procedure
a. Routinely Activity
i. Prayer. ii. Greetings. Good morning madam and to my co-students. Pick-up all the pieces of dirt under your chair. b. Motivation. After the Group 1 tackled all the elements and parts of the curriculum, we must take the term curriculum not just in the context of Traditional Point of View but rather in the Progressive Point of View where our professor Maam Cardenas have been emphasize at the start of our lesson. Progressive Point of View is viewed curriculum as all experiences children have under the guidance of teachers, or from written to actualization, thats the holistic meaning of curriculum.
Now, are we all ready to develop or design a curriculum? As a teacher, one has to be a curriculum designer, curriculum implementer and a curriculum evaluator. These threefold functions are embedded in the teaching profession. Every single day, a teacher plans, implements and evaluates the curriculum in school. Hence it would be of great help to know how school curricula are being made or crafted.
Our group will provides a background on curriculum designs, the dimensions and some principles that go with each and some curricular approaches.
c. Discussion.
Lesson 1- Curriculum Design Models I. Organization of a Curriculum 1. Horizontal Organization 2. Vertical Organization
II. Structures of Curriculum Design 1. Subject-Centered Design Model this model focuses on the content of the curriculum a. Subject Design- it answers the questions What subjects are your teaching? for teachers and What subjects are you taking? for the learners. The oldest and most familiar design for teachers, parents and other laymen in which it centers on the cluster of content. b. Discipline Design- It focuses on academic discipline that refers to specific knowledge learned through a method which the scholars use to study a specific content of their fields. c. Correlation Design from the core, it correlated curriculum design that links separate subject designs in order to reduce fragmentation. Subjects are related to one another but each subject maintains its identity. d. Broad field Design /Interdisciplinary- it is a variation of the subject- centered design that was made to prevent the compartmentalization of subjects and integrate the contents that are related to each other.
d. Generalization: i. What do we called to a Subject-Centered Design in which it focuses on the content of the subject matter? ii. What do we called to a Subject-Centered Design that refers to the core and links it to other subject design in order to reduce fragmentation? iii. What do we called to a Subject-Centered Design that is made to prevent the compartmentalization of subjects and integrate the contents that are related to each other. iv. What do we called to a Subject-Centered Design that focuses on academic discipline referring to specific knowledge learned through a method which the scholars use to study a specific content of their fields? v. What kind of model of curriculum that focuses on the content on the content of the curriculum vi. What are the two forms of organization in making a structural model of curriculum?
e. Application i. What is the best example of curriculum for SUBJECT DESIGN, DISCIPLINE DESIGN, CORRELATION DESIGN, AND INTERDISIPLINARY DESIGN? ii. From the 4 above mentioned design, where do you categorize a lesson plan, prospectus and a syllabus? IV. Evaluation a. What are distinctions and difference between the horizontal and a vertical form of organization in curriculum? b. Which do you prefer an organization? A horizontal or a vertical form and why? c. In using the Correlation Design, why did the lecturer suggest that the teachers should come together and plan their lessons cooperatively? d. Do you think, Subject-centered design model is still applicable in our era? Explain your view. e. In light of our K to 12 Curriculum, what is the best Subject-Centered Design model that you will uses effectively?
V. Assignment a. Reference: Bilbao, Purita et.al., Curriculum Development 1 st Edition 2008, National Bookstore, page 52-53. i. What is the Learner-Centered Design? ii. Can your enumerate the 3 examples of Learner-Centered Design iii. In your own opinion, what is the best design can you applied in the given 3 examples for the 21 st century learners? Prepared by: