Prelims - Racelis
Prelims - Racelis
Prelims - Racelis
Philosophy Department
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Subject: RE9 (Preparation of Curriculum Materials) Course/ Year: Philo 4 Unit: 3
nd
Term: 2 semester 2021-22 Time:10:30-12:00/7:30-9:00 Day: Thursday & Friday
Preliminary Examination
Direction. Answer in a separate answer sheet.
Studies of
Contemporary
Life
Studies of Learners
School Purposes
Tyler stated his curriculum rationale in terms of four questions published in 1949
Tyler his curriculum rationale in terms of four questions that, he argued, must be
answered in developing any curriculum plan of instruction
2. What educational experiences can be provided that will likely attain these purposes?
(1) the learner's personality (developmental aspects, interests and needs, life
experiences, and so on);
(2) societal values and goals (democratizing principles, beliefs, and attitudes); and (3)
societal values and goals.
Curriculum creators have to filter their judgements via the three elements while
answering the four questions and constructing educational experiences for students.
The hidden contrast between memorizing particular bits and pieces of knowledge
and grasping the unifying principles that underpin the information is revealed by this
argument. . Tyler argued that this is the process through which real education takes
place, with the proviso that "being educated" should not be confused with "knowing
facts." Indeed, learning entails more than simply talking about topics; it also entails
demonstrating what one can accomplish with those topics. Tyler seems to be implying
that a highly educated individual has not only learned specific facts, but has also
changed his or her behavior patterns as a consequence. (Many educators associate
him with the notion of behavioral goals.) These behavior patterns allow the educated
individual to deal well with a wide range of circumstances, not simply those in which the
learning occurred.
Tyler's argument has been criticized for its blatantly bureaucratic and linear
approach to the educational curriculum. Some detractors have described it as
antiquated and theoretical, appropriate mainly for administrators who want to dominate
the school curriculum in ways that are unresponsive to teachers and students. The
reasoning is historically wed to social efficiency traditions, according to the most well-
known critique of the explanation.
a. Historical
Curriculum development is not a new field. Majority of few of academics
would date it back to 1918, with the publishing of Franklin Bobbit’s book The
Curriculum. Philippine education arose as a result of diverse effects from other
countries of all the foreigners, the American educational system is the most
important, and our educational system is influenced by this.
b. Psychological
The teaching and learning process is built on the foundation of psychology.
Behaviorist Psychology
a. Connectionism – Edward Thorndike (Which influenced Tyler and
Taba, the well-known curricularists)
b. Classical Conditioning – Ivan Pavlov
c. Operant Conditioning – B.F. Skinner
d. Modeling and Observation Theory (Bandura)
e. Hierarchical Learning – Robert Gagne
Cognitive Psychology
a. Cognitive development stages – Jean Piaget
b. Social constructivism – Lev Vgotsky
c. Multiple intelligences – Howard Gardner
d. Learning styles – Felder and Silverman
e. Emotional intelligences – Daniel Goleman
Humanistic Psychology
Humanist psychologist are concerned with how learners can develop their human
potential.
a. Gestalt theory
b. Theory of human needs and for self-actualizing persons - Maslow
c. Carl Roger’s non directive lives
c. Social
Schools exist within the social context. In considering the social foundations of
curriculum, we must recognize that schools are the only one of the many
institutions that educate society. The home, the family, community likewise
educate the people in the society. But schools are formal institutions that address
more complex and interrelated societies and the world.
Test III. Choose 3 and explain the following theories of learning by citing a case.
Test IV. How does teaching and learning complement each other?
Teaching and learning go hand in hand. Without the success or support of the
other, neither can prosper. A teacher cannot claim to have taught if the students have
not gained significant knowledge.
Teaching as a process cannot be studied in its totality on its own. With so many
elements required, the learner remains the most crucial. Because the learner is at the
core of the lesson, it will significantly impact the study. Learning has evolved to the point
where a basic stimulus-response theory no longer suffices to describe it. As learners
become more sophisticated people capable of learning independently, the teaching
repertoire should expand as well. The cause is teaching, and the outcome is learning.
Learning outcomes may be used to evaluate a teacher's effectiveness. The quality of
instruction affects the quality of learning.
As the direct links between teaching and learning become clearer, phrases like
"learning in teaching" and "teaching for learning" emerge.
Prepared by:
ARACELI E. CARRERAS,Ed.D.
Professor