Curriculum Theorists Franklin Bobbitt
Curriculum Theorists Franklin Bobbitt
Curriculum Theorists Franklin Bobbitt
Franklin Bobbitt and Ralph Tyler have been considered by many in the curriculum field
to be giants by their own right when it comes to the field of curriculum theory. Their
contributions to the field of curriculum theory helped lay the foundation for curriculum
instruction, curricular planning as it is now known today. Both men left their intellectual
footprints on virtually everything we know today as curriculum & instruction. Bobbitt was
initially concerned with revising and improving the curriculum and that it initially be
Tylers monumental work entitled Basic Principles of Curriculum & Instruction, has
been considered to be by many the bible of curriculum & instruction design. It later came to
be known as the Tyler Rationale due to its detailed explanations given to viewing, analyzing and
interpreting the curriculum of an institution. In this essay I will attempt to delineate the more
salient aspects of Bobbitts body of work. I will also lay out the basic assumptions made in his
initial principles of his work that lack at times specificity and contain notable flaws in those very
same assumptions.
One of Bobbitts more notable published work and considered by many as the origin in
regards to C & I is The Curriculum (Kliebard, 1975; Giroux, Pena, Pinar, 1981). In this study
Bobbitt found the curriculum existing at that time as incomplete. His re-conception of the
curriculum was in part a response to the scientific notions of organization and measurement
which he felt lacked any real form of coherency (Pinar, Reynolds, Slattery & Taubman, 2004).
According to Bobbitt (1918): Only as we list the errors and shortcomings of the human
performance in each of the fields can we know what to include and to emphasize in the directed
Franklin Bobbitt
Franklin Bobbitt was born in 1876 and was a university professor at the University of
Chicago. Prior to this Bobbitt was awarded his Ph.D. degree from Clark University in 1909.
What initially interested Bobbitt in the field of curriculum was due to his experience while
teaching a course entitled Curriculum (Kliebard, 1986). As a result, Bobbitts popularity grew
with the students and led him to eventually partake in the social efficiency movement. What
led to this outcome was Bobbitts preoccupation with increasing the efficiency of the classroom
In a 1912 article entitled: The Elimination of Waste in Education Bobbitt insisted that
typical school plants were only being used fifty percent of the time. He felt it would be better to
have schools open on Saturdays, Sundays and even in summer. Another article indicative of
Bobbitts inclination towards the new movement inspired by social efficiency was itself
entitled: High School Costs. In it Bobbitt (1915) evaluated the efficiency of an English class
program whose yield was not commensurate with its costs. Bobbitt insisted on re-evaluating
underperforming English programs and opening up the school facility to the community at large.
In another article entitled: A City School as a Community Art and Musical Center,
Bobbitt insisted that schools should be open to accommodate the community as an arts and
leisure school instead. This was based on his idea after performing a scientific study of the
programs being offered and where the social community members interest lay in that it would
be more satisfactory for the school to convert into an art and musical centered school (Bobbitt,
1911). In 1915 Bobbitt published an article entitled: What the Schools Teach and Might
Teach, which indicated how schools ought to implement curriculum in their own programs
(Bobbitt, 1915).
CURRICULUM THEORISTS: FRANKLIN BOBBITT 3
Bobbitt was not only concerned with social efficiency at this point, he was also
committed to the idea of wedding a schools curriculum to the outside world. Bobbitts special
gift was to see that the curriculum made sense if it were actually tied to jobs and industry in what
he called the adult world (Schubert, 1980). Bobbitts most influential and popular work The
Curriculum came to embody this line of thought and was fundamental in creating the idea of the
life adjustment which was fundamental to his theory of curriculum design. It was initially
created as an instructional manual for teacher training in curriculum theory and design.
In this work Bobbitt emphasizes three core concepts that were indicative of a well-
designed curriculum plan: Effectiveness, efficiency and economy. The central focus of this
book was that the curriculum itself should be able to prepare the students for the adult world
outside in what we now call industry. It was the task of the curriculum designer to study jobs
outside of academia and to ensure that their implementation of the curriculum at their school
would adequately reflect it. Bobbitt like Tyler felt that much of what had been written in the
curriculum field beforehand was suspect and at times nothing more than a guessing game by
He cites a good example of what task analysis could accomplish by looking at a study on
the grammatical mistakes made by school children (Charters, 1915). This kind of study was
systematic fashion that mirrored Tylers idea of task analysis. The fact that the authors of the
study used a task analysis (scientific method) in designing the grammatical curriculum of the
Bobbitt emphasized the concept of the directed curriculum in preparation for the
overall academic attainment of the student. He was concerned with the processes and errors in
other fields besides the field of education and used this information to make a more suitable
curriculum for its intended course or program. Bobbitt was not only an academic, but a school
planner as well. While teaching at the University of Chicago he undertook surveys of school
systems where he took a critical assessment of the schools operations and placed heavy emphasis
In 1914 he famously surveyed and evaluated the San Antonio Public Schools and in 1922
made an extensive examination of the Los Angeles Public Schools curriculum. Besides his
influential book The Curriculum he also published another famous work entitled: How to Make a
Curriculum (1924). In it and along with other previous publications Bobbitt develops further his
notions of curriculum theory via the principles elucidated by Fredrick Taylors work on the idea
predicated on the idea of the workplace on how it might relate to greater efficiency.
Taylor insisted the scientific management system he had developed was intended to guide
those in the industry towards a firm control of their factories division of labor with an eye
towards mass production, effectiveness, and efficiency (Taylor, 1911). Bobbitt studied Taylors
ideas on productivity and efficiency and applied them in a transformational way towards his idea
of curriculum theory. Some have suggested that Bobbitts concern with scientific management
stemmed from his obsessiveness with control (Apple, 2004). This control would be of the form
considered social by its very nature since his main objective was to systematize a curriculum
According to Apple (2004), Bobbitts concern with social control stemmed from a pre-
occupation (as many curriculust of that era also concurred), that a segment of society with
existing social privilege, interests and knowledge be preserved at the expense of those who
lacked such capital. In developing his philosophical foundation for the school curriculum
Bobbitt developed the notion called large group consciousness. He felt that this very notion
would embody the idea of social integration. This community model would embody the
At first this idea was deemed by many to be indicative of progressivism and made
Bobbitts exposition of it in his popular work The Curriculum a frequent reference too by
educators of that period. What initially caught the attention of those educators was Bobbitts
(1918) passage:
How does one develop a genuine feeling of membership in a social group, whether large
or small? There seems to be but one method and that is, to think and feel and ACT with
the group as a part of it as it performs its activities and strives to attain its ends.
Individuals are fused into coherent small groups, discordant small groups are fused into
the large internally-cooperating group, when they act together for common ends, with
This sentiment was not singularly felt at that present time in America. The emerging
fields of sociology, psychology and education were emerging in their own rights and as a result
this intellectual sentiment was viewed as a norm during this progressive period in our American
history. The ideas at this time resonated with the idea that the curriculum that reaches the learner
the most efficiently and had the most lasting effect was a well-designed curriculum.
CURRICULUM THEORISTS: FRANKLIN BOBBITT 6
This well designed curriculum would ideally be suited to match the background and
community that the student resided in. In other words the curriculum itself would be a more
representative guide for that particular student. Bobbitts attempt to bring to fruition this type of
curriculum resulted in three primary developmental stages that he felt would in effect create a
more personalized and tailored curriculum for the students (Bobbitt, 1918). The first stage
would be to analyze the total range of human abilities, habits, systems of knowledge that one
should possess.
The second stage would gather the data generated from the analysis in stage one and then
construct and bracket the related knowledge, skills, and abilities, based on the experiences the
individuals had and any other interactive experiences they would encounter during their
formative years. Finally, stage three would be to recognize the multiple objectives and goals that
exists and to strive and attain as many as possible. Bobbitt would go on to continue and expand
his ideas on the curriculum and social efficiency in the ensuing years with publications in 1924
Albeit Bobbitt had good intentions in his quest to create and design effective curriculum
principles, his overarching aim at productive citizenship came abruptly short and seemed
incomplete in some aspects. His idea that the ends justify the means in regards to his
conception of what schooling ought to entail were not always realistic as Bobbitt (1926) notes:
The school is not an agency of social reform. It is not directly concerned with improving
society. Its responsibility is to help the growing individual continuously and consistently
to hold to the type of human living which is the best practical one for him.
CURRICULUM THEORISTS: FRANKLIN BOBBITT 7
this improvement is not a thing directly aimed at. It is only a by-product (p.45).
As Apple and other noted scholars have suggested, it was his tone and forcefulness of his
writing which gave one the feeling that he was ultimately conservative by character. An
additional yet troubling element to Bobbitts argument regarding curriculum design was his
insistence that a schools curriculum could only be effectively planned at the district or school
level. He felt that it would not be beneficial to involve the state or the nation in designing or
planning a curriculum for its district constituencies. Bobbitt felt that the larger the scope of the
curriculum, the less useful it would be in a school or particular classroom (Bobbitt, 1924).
It appears that even though Bobbitts intentions were for the betterment of the student it
would seem at worst to be untenable and at best to idealistic for his time. By not standardizing
the schools curriculum at the state or national level it would in essence deny a level of equity to
all students via the community stakeholders of that particular state. Bobbitt also did not take into
account that not all teachers are created alike. As experience has shown, there are poorly skilled
teachers as well as highly skilled teachers in every school and its associated districts.
teachers from giving poorly scripted lesson plans not properly aligned with other schools
curriculums. Ultimately, having a standardized curriculum allows for equal opportunity for all
of the students. By doing this the students themselves will be compared to the same standards
via the same curriculum. If this were not the case then every school districts demand in regards
to curriculum, scope and sequence, and lesson plans would be unequal and benchmarks would
Bodes (1924) study found it to be incredulous that Bobbitt would have even considered
the idea of scientific methods as ultimately producing educational gains. In his paper Bode goes
on to state:
Bobbitts How to Make a Curriculum conveys the idea that the question of ideals is at
bottom just a question of scientific analysis The author seems to be unaware that in
the scheme the cart is placed before the horse. How such analysis are to be made unless
we know in advance which persons are good citizens, good parents, and true believers is
not clear. It is assumed that if we dug up the facts by means of scientific analysis, the
appropriate ideals will come to the surface too. But this simply means that science, like
patriotism, may be used as a cover for prejudice and as an obstacle to progress (p. 471).
Bodes analysis of Bobbitts ideas on curriculum resonate with his sharp insight into the
inner workings of the scientific management style and its incontrovertible link to curriculum
theory. It seems to Bode that Bobbitt is presuming that every student and teachers character is
good, noble and just. Bobbitts mistake it would seem is potentially genuinely simple in that he
Why? Because without this assumption the scientific analysis he was promoting would
be undermined if this were not to be the case. Its underlying foundation presumes that the cogs
of the school machinery operate efficiently and effortlessly without any breakdown in reaching
its goals and objectives in creating the school curriculum. It seems that the problem wasnt so
much with Bobbitts character of being rational, systematic or meticulous. Instead it was the fact
Yet his no-nonsense style of thinking ultimately would have others perceive his system of
thought as having a wooden-like quality to it. As a result there were those who did not believe
manner. This is why many in the scholarly community were not inclined to align with Bobbitts
educational objectives. This progressive sentiment is echoed via Melby (1935): This
philosophy assumes that education is growth. It assumes that we shall choose such bodies of
experience as will contribute to the growth of an individual child. It proceeds on the assumption
that the child is more important than the subject (p. 128).
One can sense in this passage the progressives diametrical conception of what education
ought to be in contrast to Bobbitts cooler and systematized way of looking at the student. For
the progressive, the majority of their focus centered on the child while Bobbitts centered on the
analysis and systematized way of looking at the curriculum and its application to the adult
world. This is primarily the reason why the progressive movement of the 1930s essentially
This is another reason why the child-centered school and the activity movement make no
mention of Bobbitts contributions to the field of curriculum theory, it just did not mesh well
with their philosophical ideals regarding schools and in particular the educational curriculum.
Even the evidentialists of this period like Robert Maynard Hut believed that his methodology
was unsound. They could not support or buy into the notion of social analysis and its associated
scientific methodology. For the essentialists believed that if any method were to successfully
guide curriculum design it would be the school textbook and not a systemized study utilizing
Finally, it seems like Bobbitts persistence in focusing solely on curriculum and scientific
procedures diverted him away from paying attention to outcomes. There is hardly any
mention regarding educational outcomes and their associated effects on the child or the
educational institution. As a result his obsessiveness with the intricacies associated with the
merging of the scientific method and curriculum design led him away from other conceptual
The teachers task to implement and measure outcomes based on individual pupils
capacity was missing in his curriculum design. Much of this can be attributable to Bobbitts
unique point of view and in particular his brand of curriculum based design decisions. Much of
the research indicates that Bobbitts ideas on curriculum design lacked a historical basis. Since
his curriculum design ideas were so unique it was evident that he never did spend considerable
Even though Bobbitt tried in vain to develop a quintessential vision of what curriculum
should look like he did not seem to realize that many of the objectives and goals he set for the
implementation of a rigorous curriculum-based design led many teachers instead to move away
from his vision of curriculum theory and into the party of the progressive movement.