Curriculum Development: Ramonito N. Abesar, LPT, Maed-Pes
Curriculum Development: Ramonito N. Abesar, LPT, Maed-Pes
Curriculum Development: Ramonito N. Abesar, LPT, Maed-Pes
• New-Fist thought about how he could harness the children’s play to better
the life of the community. He considered what adults do for survival and
introduced these activities to children in a deliberate and formal way. These
included catching fish with the bare hands, clubbing little woolly horses, and
chasing away-sabre-toothed-tigers-with-fire plenty of foods, hides for attire and
protection from threat.” It is supposed that all would have gone well forever
with this good educational system, if conditions of life in that community
remained forever the same.” But conditions changed.
“The Sabre- Tooth Curriculum “
By: Harold Benjamin (1939)
• The glacier began to melt and the community could no longer see
the fish to catch with the bare hands, and only the most agile and
clever fish remained which hid from the people. The woolly horses
were ambitious and decided to leave the region. The tigers got
pneumonia and most died. The few remaining tigers left. In their
place, fierce bears arrived who would not be chased by fire. The
community was in trouble.
• “if you had any education yourself, you would know that the
essence of true education is timelessness. It is something that
endures through changing conditions like a solid rock standing
squarely and firmly in the middle of a ragging torent”.
• The story was written in 1939. Curriculum then was seen as a
tradition of organized knowledge taught in schools of the 19th
century. Two centuries later, the concepts of a curriculum have
broadened to include several modes of thoughts or experiences.