C Design 2
C Design 2
C Design 2
The aim of this part of the curriculum design process is to find the situational
factors that will strongly affect the course.
Environment analysis (Tessmer, 1990) involves looking at the factors that will
have a strong effect on decisions about the goals of the course,
or constraints analysis.
For example, a constraint could be that the teachers are all very highly
trained and are able and willing to make their own class activities.
For example, if the level of training of the teachers is very low and is not
taken into account,
it might happen that the teachers are unable to handle the activities in the
course.
1 whether the course will still be useful if the factor is not taken into account
2 how large and pervasive the effect of the factor is on the course.
1 There was very limited class time and contact time with English. ((One and
a half hours per week))
3 The learners knew that they could communicate more easily with each
other in Japanese than in English.
5 The learners had been learning English in much the same ways as native
speakers acquire their first language.
1 Parents should be guided in giving their children some extra contact with
English.
2 The activities should be fun so that the children look forward to doing them
for their own sake.
3 Some of the activities should carry over to the next class so that the
children look forward to continuing them.
Environment Constraints:
Table 2.1 lists a range of environment constraints.
When designing a course, the table can be used as a checklist to help sort
out the few that will be given most attention in a particular piece of
curriculum design.
Columns 1 and 2 list some constraints.
Column 3 suggests some of the effects on curriculum design.
There are numerous other possible effects.
In the table the constraints have been presented as questions that
curriculum designers can ask.
Normally they would be framed as descriptive statements.
For example, the first listed constraint could be expressed as The learners
are interested in a limited range of topics.
the effect of the first language on program policy, language learning and
special purposes.
To overcome the constraint the curriculum designer might try to provide selfstudy options for work to be done outside of class time
or if possible the time available for the course could be increased.
2 Choose the most important factors (no more than five) and rank them,
putting the most important first.
Decide what information you need to fully take account of the factor.
The information can come from investigation of the environment and from
research and theory.
Tasks:
2 Very briefly describe the most important constraint or strength and say
why it is important.
Case Studies:
2 Look at the SRA reading boxes. The SRA reading boxes were designed for
native speakers of English. Each box consists of around seven levels with
each level being distinguished by a different colour.
Within each level there are 20 cards each containing a reading text with
exercises.
Each card of the same colour has a different text of roughly equal length and
difficulty to others with the same colour.
The levels gradually increase in terms of text length and text difficulty.
Each learner chooses a card of the appropriate level, reads it and does the
exercises, gets the answer key from the box, uses it to mark their answers to
the exercises, and then records their score on a graph.
When the learner has gained a high score on three consecutive cards at a
level, the learner can then move to the next level up.
What constraints do you think led to their design?
List the constraints and relate each constraint to an aspect of the design.
The first one in Table 2.2 has been done for you.
((Table 2.2
Constraints Aspects of design
1 Wide range of reading proficiency in a class
2. . .
3. . .
4. . .
5. . .
6. . .
7. . .
There are ten levels in one SRA box.
There are a lot of cards and a lot of levels in each reading box.
NEEDS ANALYSIS: