CURRICULUM STUDIES Short Notes
CURRICULUM STUDIES Short Notes
CURRICULUM STUDIES Short Notes
By : Nisasharom
2. Target group Who is the target audience? For whom we design our curriculum?
Consider the pupils’
Individual needs
Abilities
Interests
Potentials
Multiple intelligence (visual, auditory or kinesthetic learner)
Various learning styles or learning modes (hands on, discovery
learning, experiential; learning, distance learning )
Curriculum should be appropriate for:
- personal development (attitudes, behaviours)
- social development (communication)
- aesthetic development
- interpersonal/intrapersonal development
- physical development
- Intellectual development
- Multiple intelligence
3. Aims and aims should relate to the combined impact of the curriculum, the
objectives pedagogy and the assessment of the various elements.
desired learning outcomes need to be student oriented, and
should point to the knowledge, skills, competencies and attitudes
of those students who successfully complete the course.
2. Discipline designs :
- specific body of knowledge that has its own methods of inquiry, has its
specialised words and terminology, has a tradition and a collection of
literature, and the persons involved in the field are theoreticians and
practitioners.
- a student who studies biology would approach the subject as a biologist
- the school is a mini version of the world of intellect and that the disciplines
reflect that world
4.Correlation designs
- lies in between the academic design model and the broad fields design.
- Eg: in a history lesson the class learns about the Japanese occupation of
Malaysia. During the literature class, students read novels about life during
that time period. However, each subject retains its own distinct identity.
5. Process designs.
- stress the learning of general procedures and processes that are not
applicable to any particular discipline.
- the teaching of thinking skills.
2. Romantic/radical designs
- the focus is the learner which is quite similar to the child- centred design;
the difference being that greater emphasis is placed on the need for the
curriculum to reform society.
- assume that society is corrupt and repressive. Children should be
educated towards the goal of social reform.
- Paulo Freire opposed treating students as empty vessels to be filled with
knowledge by the teacher.
- He objected to the teacher-student dichotomy (contrast) and proposed the
relationship between teacher and student be reciprocal (mutual), which is,
“the teacher who learns and the learner who teaches”.
- learning is reflective and not externally imposed by those in power.
Knowledge is not the finished product to be acquired by learners because
this is indoctrination.
- Learners should challenge content and be allowed to give their opinions.
3. Humanistic designs.
- The curriculum should be designed to empower learners to be involved in
the process of realising their potential.
- Greater emphasis was placed on the affective domain to permit students
to feel and to value.
- Carl Rogers argued that the aim of education is the facilitation of learning.
To facilitate learning, the teacher accepts learners as persons, placing
importance on their feelings and their opinions; while caring for them.
- With such a curriculum, learners become fully functional persons capable
of intelligent choice; are critical learners able to approach problem
situations with flexibility; and are able to work cooperatively with others
(Ornstein & Hunkins, 1998).
- focuses on the interconnectedness of the cognitive, affective and
psychomotor domains.
5.3 Problem 1. Life-situations design
centered design - It was argued by its advocates that it makes educational sense to organise
a curriculum around such life situations (healthy living, ethics, racial
tolerance, citizenship skills)
- Students will direct relevance in studying such social issues when they
are related to their world. Also, having students study social or life situations
will encourage them to seek ways to improve society.
- The life situations that need to be emphasised in schools will depend on
what students need before they enter the working world and assume adult
responsibilities.
- The life-centred situations curriculum has been criticised because
students do not learn much subject matter. However, proponents of the
model state that this is not true because the design draws heavily from the
traditional subject areas. The content is organised in a manner that allows
students to see problems faced by society. In addressing society's pressing
problems, content is drawn from different subject areas to explain and find
solutions to current issues
2. Core design
- Focus is still on the pressing problems of society; the difference being that
certain problem are selected to form the core. It is carefully planned before
students enter school and adjusted when necessary.
9. Constraints What are the program constraints? Technological: ICT, lab, LCDs
etc.
-Timing: Implementation, Readiness
- Duration: Length – lectures,
- Co-curriculum, practicum, internship, etc
Who is going to provide the cost of the training? Allowances, other
payments etc
2. The Learners
- The learners hold the key to what is actually transmitted and adopted
from the official curriculum.
- The learner factor influences teachers in their selection of learning
experiences, hence the need to consider the diverse characteristics of
learners in curriculum implementation.
8. Assessment
- Due to the great value given to public examination certificates by
communities and schools, teachers have tended to concentrate on
subjects that promote academic excellence and little else. This action by
the teacher obviously can affect the achievement of the broad goals and
objectives of the curriculum.
2. Access to Education
- the ability of people to have equal opportunity in education, regardless
of their social class, gender, ethnicity background or physical and mental
disabilities.
- encourages a variety of pedagogical approaches to accomplish the
dissemination of knowledge across the diversity of social, political,
cultural, economic, national and biological backgrounds.
- Equitable access
- UNICEF is committed to nothing less than full and complete access to
free, quality education for every child. Universal access to quality
education is not a privilege – it is a basic human right.
- UNICEF supports the Education for All (EFA) and the Millennium
Development Goals 2 and 3 to ensure that all children have access to and
complete a full course of primary schooling, and to eliminate gender
disparity in education by 2015.
3. Equity in Education
- equity refers to the principle of fairness.
- “equity is the process; equality is the outcome,”
3.1 Socio economic equity in education
3.1.1 Income and class
- Those who come from a family of a higher socioeconomic status (SES)
are privileged with more opportunities than those of lower SES.
- Parents of a higher SES are more willing to donate large sums of
money to a certain institution to better improve their child's chances of
acceptance, along with other extravagant measures. This creates an
unfair advantage and distinct class barrier.
4. Multilingualism
- A multilingual person is someone who can communicate in more than
one language, either actively (through speaking, writing, or signing) or
passively (through listening, reading, or perceiving).
5. Technological innovations
Types of technology used in the classroom
1. Use of computers in the classroom.
can be used by teachers to assign work to students and study
groups in a classroom.
to illustrate visual related subjects which help students to learn
easily.
installed applications can help students study well.
2. Creating class websites and blogs
Teachers can create class blogs were they post assignments.
3. Use of digital microphones in the classroom
Big classrooms are characterized by endless noise, so teachers
can resort to these wireless digital microphones.
Students can use it during presentation.
4. Use of mobile device.
use smart-phones for academic purposes in the classroom.
It is similar to e-learning or long distance education.
it is accessible from anywhere.
5. Use of smart interactive whiteboards.
Modern smart white boards have a touch screen functionality, so
the teacher can illustrate points using a pen or their finger.
students can use a white board to draw, write or manipulate
images.
6. Use of online media.
use online streaming Medias to learn in the classroom.
7. Use of online study tools.
Online study tools like ”Dynamic Periodic Table” (ptable.com)
which can be used by Chemistry students in keeping elements
apart , ”Foldit” (fold.it) this tool can help biology students easily
understand basics about proteins.
6. Unity in Education
Diversity of schools in Malaysian education
Public primary schools : SK, SJKC & SJKT
Public secondary schools : The secondary school system is
marked by the convergence of most students from the different
types of primary schools into a single school format.
Private schools : international schools, religious schools, and
Independent Chinese schools.
7. Special needs
addresses their individual differences and needs.
this process involves the individually planned and systematically
monitored arrangement of teaching procedures, adapted
equipment and materials, accessible settings.
These interventions are designed to help learners with special
needs achieve a higher level of personal self-sufficiency and
success in school and their community.
Special schools
- a school catering for students who have special educational
needs due to severe learning difficulties, physical disabilities or
behavioural problems.
- Special schools may be specifically designed, staffed and
resourced to provide appropriate special education for children
with additional needs.
- Student to teacher ratios are kept low, often 6:1 or lower
depending upon the needs of the children.
- Special schools will also have other facilities for children with
special needs, such as soft play areas, sensory rooms, or
swimming pools, which are necessary for treating students with
certain conditions.
- An alternative is a special unit or special classroom, also
called a self-contained classroom, which is a separate room or
rooms dedicated solely to the education of students with special
needs within a larger school that also provides general education.
- These classrooms are typically staffed by specially trained
teachers, who provide specific, individualized instruction to
individuals and small groups of students with special needs.
Instructional strategies
- Instructional strategies are classified as being either
accommodations or modifications.
3. Coercive strategies
These strategies work on the basis of power and coercion by
those in authority, using laws, directories, circulars and others.
Ministries of Education generally used these strategies.
The Research, This views the processes of change as a logical sequence of phases in
Development and which an innovation is:
Diffusion Model 1. invented or discovered,
2. developed,
3. produced, and
4. disseminated to the user.
Problem solving This model is built with the user of the innovation in mind. The user of
model the innovation would follow the steps below.
1. Determine the problem.
2. Search for an innovation.
3. Evaluate the trials.
4. Implement the innovation.
Social interaction change proceeds or diffuses through formal or informal contacts between
model interacting social groups. The model stresses the importance of
interpersonal networks of information, opinion, leadership and personal
contact. This model is based on the following:
• awareness of innovation
• interest in the innovation
• trial
• adoption for permanent use.
• The innovation
This involves executing the change itself; in other words putting it into
use or operation.
The innovation Innovation and change generally follow several logical steps:
process 1. Identify a problem, dissatisfaction or need that requires attention.
2. Generate possible solutions to the identified problem or need.
3. Select a particular solution or innovation that has been identified
as the most appropriate.
4. Conduct a trial.
5. Evaluate the proposed solution.
6. Review the evaluation.
7. If the innovation has solved the identified problem, implement it
on a wide scale.
8. Adopt and institutionalise the innovation or search for another
solution.
Innovations Effective planning for innovation cannot take place unless the following
planning elements are considered in the process:
• the personnel to be employed
• the specification of the actual task
• the strategy or procedure to be used to undertake the task
• the equipment needed
• the buildings and conducive environment
• the costs involved
• social contexts
• time involved
• sequencing of activities
• rationale for undertaking the innovation
• evaluation of the consequences or effects of the innovation.
Conditions for Potential users of an innovation are more likely to accept it if the
Successful conditions below are met.
Implementation • The innovation must be relevant to them.
of Innovations • It must be feasible in their particular organizational context.
• It must be compatible with the practices, values and
characteristics of their system.
• It must pose little or no threat to the user group’s identity, integrity
and territory. The innovation must be seen to be tolerable and non-
threatening.
• The innovation must yield material or non-material benefits. Gains
in social status or recognition may be some of the non-material benefits
• It must be flexible and adaptable.