Curriculum Design and Development-1
Curriculum Design and Development-1
DEVELOPMENT
by
Prof. S.SWAMINATHA PILLAI
DEFINITIONS OF CURRICULUM
• That which is taught in schools
• A set of subjects.
• Content
• A program of studies.
• A set of materials
• A sequence of courses.
• A course of study
• A set of performance objectives
• Everything that goes on within the school,
including extra-class activities, guidance, and
interpersonal relationships.
• Everything that is planned by school personnel.
• A series of experiences undergone by learners
in a school.
• That which an individual learner experiences as
a result of schooling.
• An aggregate of courses of study in a school
system.
• An aggregate of courses of study in a school
system.
• Planned and unplanned concept, content, skills,
work habits, means of assessment, attitudes and
instructional strategies taught in the classroom
and the variety of school activities in and out of
class that influence present and future
academic, social, emotional and physical growth
of students
DERIVING A DEFINITION
• CURRICULUM IS A COMPREHENSIVE
PLAN FOR AN EDUCATIONAL/
TRAINING PROGRAMME/COURSE TO
OFFER NEW/IMPROVED MANPOWER
TO FULFIL THE RISING NEEDS OF A
DYNAMIC SOCIETY.
KINDS OF CURRICULUM
(according to the four families of learning theories)
• Social,
• Information Processing,
• Personalist, and
• Behavioral.
ORIENTATIONS TO
CURRICULUM
• child-centered,
• society-centered,
• knowledge-centered, or
• eclectic.
Educational Philosophy
• What is knowledge and understanding?
• What is worth knowing?
• What does it mean to learn?
• How do you know that learning has taken place?
• What should be the role of a teacher?
• What should be the role of the student?
• What is the ultimate purpose of education?
• What are your core educational values?
APPROACHES TO CURRICULUM
(Common philosophical orientations)
• Idealism,
• Realism,
• Perennialism,
• Essentialism,
• Experimentalism,
• Existentialism,
• Constructivism,
• Reconstructivism
Idealism
• Subjective Idealism, only ideas can be known or have any reality (also known as
solipsism).
• Transcendental Idealism, developed by Kant, this theory argues that all knowledge
originates in perceived phenomena which have been organized by categories.
• Absolute Idealism, all objects are identical with some idea and the ideal knowledge
is itself the system of ideas. It is also Objective Idealism, in this monistic idealism
promoted by Hegel there is only one mind in which reality is created.
• Platonic Idealism, there exists a perfect realm of Form and Ideas and our world
merely contains shadows of that realm.
• Idealism believes in refined wisdom; reality is a world within a
person's mind; truth is in the consistency of ideas and goodness is
an ideal state to strive to attain.
• As a result, schools exist to sharpen the mind and intellectual
processes. Students are taught the wisdom of past heroes.
Realism
• Classical realism held universals such as "red" or "man" an independent, objective
existence, either in a realm of their own or in the mind of God.
• Medieval realism, contrasted with Nominalism, provided by Peter Abelard and William
of Occam.
• Modern realism is a broad term, encompassing several movements whose unity lies
in a common rejection of philosophical Idealism.
• Realism asserts that objects in the external world exist independently of what is
thought about them.
• The most straightforward of such theories is usually known as naive realism.
• Realism believes in the world as it is. It is based on the view
that reality is what we observe. It believes that truth is what we
sense and observe and that goodness is found in the order of
the laws of nature.
• As a result, schools exist to reveal the order of the world and
universe. Students are taught factual information.
Perennialism
• (1) Permanence is more real than change.
• (2) Human nature remains essentially the same.
• (3) The good life -- the life that is fit for men to live -- remains essentially the same.
• (4) Moral principles remain essentially the same.
• (5) Hence, the education that men receive should remain essentially the same.
• "Education implies teaching. Teaching implies knowledge. Knowledge is truth.
The truth everywhere is the same. Hence, education should be everywhere the
same."
• This is a very conservative and inflexible philosophy of education. It is
based on the view that reality comes from fundamental fixed truths-
especially related to God. It believes that people find truth through
reasoning and revelation and that goodness is found in rational
thinking.
• As a result, schools exist to teach reason and God's will. Students are
taught to reason through structured lessons and drills.
• Socratic dialogue. E.g. R.
Hutchins, M. Adler
Essentialism
• Essentialism is a uniquely American philosophy of
education which began in the 1930’s and 1940’s as a
reaction to what was seen as an overemphasis on a
child-centered approach to education and a concern that
students were not gaining appropriate knowledge in
schools.
• The two origins of essentialism are idealism and realism.
• Essentialists believe that there exists a critical core of
information and skill that an educated person must have.
• Didactic Instruction. e.g., W. Bagely, W. Bennett.
Experimentalism
• Experimentalism believes that things are
constantly changing. It is based on the view that
reality is what you experience. It believes that
truth is what works right now and that goodness
comes from group decisions.
• As a result, schools exist to discover and expand
the society we live in. Students study social
experiences and solve problems.
Existentialism
• IV.Lifelong Learning
• V.Self-Awareness,Self-Care,and PersonalGrowth
• VIII.Problem-Solving
• Objective
• Identify and assess system capabilities
• Alternative strategies
• Implementation design
• Budget
• Method: resources analysis, feasibility analysis, literature
research, exemplary program visits and pilot projects
• Decision
• Selecting sources
• Structuring activities
• Basis for judging implementation
Process evaluation
• Objective
• Identify/predict defects in design or implementation and record
and judge procedural activities
• Method: monitoring, describing process, interacting, observing
• Decision:
• For implementing and refining program design and procedures
• Process control
• Information to use in interpreting outcomes
• Provides periodic feedback to those responsible for implementation
• Maintain a record of procedures as they occur
Product evaluation
• Objective
• Describe and judge the outcome
• Relate them to objectives
• Interpret worth
• Method: operationally measuring criteria, collecting
stakeholder judgment
• Decision
• To continue
• Terminate
• Modify
• Refocus
• And present record of effects
• Purpose to measure and interpret
attainment at end of project cycle
• Operationally measures objectives and
compare to predetermined standards
• Interpret outcomes using context, input
and process information.
Steps in CIPP model
• Focus the evaluation
• Collect information
• Organize information
• Analyze information
• Report information
• Administration of the evaluation report
CURRICULAR CHANGES
• NATIONAL ASPIRATIONS AND NEEDS
• CUTURAL CHANGES
• SOCIAL CHANGES: TECHNOLOGICAL
DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC CHANGES, POLITICAL
VARIATION, CHANGES IN VALUES
• VALUE SYSTEM
• PHILOSOPHICAL,SOCIOLOGICAL,PSYC
HOLOGICAL APPROACHES
A SIX-STEP APPROACH
PROBLEM
EVALN. & ID &
FEEDBACK NEEDS
ASSESS
NEEDS
IMPLEMENT- ASSESSMENT
ATION OF
LEARNERS
SPECIFIC
EDUCATIONAL
MEASURABLE
STRATEGIES
OBJECTIVES
Step 1: Problem Identification
• Know
• who our target audience is and
• what out target audience needs
Step 3: Goals and Objectives
• Identify the end toward which an effort is
directed
• Goals
• Objectives –specific and measurable
(ASK)
• Direct the choice of curricular content
• Clearly communicate the purpose
• Suggest what learning methods will be
most effective
Step 4: Educational Strategies
• Step 1:
• What is the SOCIAL problem we need to address?
• Step 2:
• What methods should we employ to obtain the needs assessment
information we need?
• What do you think are these needs?
• Step 3:
• Identify the end toward which an effort is directed
• Goals
• Objectives –specific and measurable (ASK)
• Direct the choice of curricular content
• Clearly communicate the purpose
• Suggest what learning methods will be most effective
Small Group Activity
• Step 4
• What’s included in our content?
• What educational strategies should we employ (e.g.
lecture-discussion, lab, case-based, etc.)?
• Step 5:
• Who, what, where are our resources to support the
curriculum
• Step 6:
• How will we evaluate the program and our residents?
FLOWCHART REPRESENTATION OF TABA-
TYLER CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT MODEL
THANK YOU