Chapter 1 Lesson 4 - Foundations-Of-Curriculum-Development
Chapter 1 Lesson 4 - Foundations-Of-Curriculum-Development
OF CURRICULUM
PHILOSOPHIES IN EDUCATION
(Ornstein and Hunkins, 2004)
•PERENNIALISM
Aim: To educate the rational person; cultivate intellect
Role: Teachers assist students to think with reason ( critical
thinking HOTS)
Focus: Classical subjects, literary analysis. Curriculum is
enduring
Trends: Use of great books (Bible, Koran, Classics) and
Liberal arts.
•ESSENTIALISM
Aim: To promote intellectual growth of
learners to become competent
Role: Teachers are sole authorities in the
subject area
Focus: Essential skills of the 3Rs; essential
subjects
Trends: Back to basics, Excellence in
education, cultural literacy
•PROGRESSIVISM
Aim: Promote democratic social living
Role: Teacher leads for growth and
development of lifelong learners
Focus: Interdisciplinary subjects. Learner-
centered. Outcomes-based
Trends: Equal opportunities for all,
Contextualized curriculum, Humanistic
education
•Reconstructionism
Aim: To improve and reconstruct society.
Education for change
Role: Teacher act a agent of change and
reforms
Focus: Present and future educational
landscape
Trends: School and curricular reform,
Global education, Collaboration and
Convergence, Standards and
Competencies
HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS
Franklin Bobbit (1876-19560
•He started the curriculum development movement.
•Curriculum is a science that emphasizes students’ need.
•Curriculum prepares learners for adult life
•Objectives and activities should group together when the
task are clarified
Werret Charters (1875-1952)
Keys to learning
•Assimilation ( incorporation of new experience)
•Accomodation ( learning modification and adaptation)
•Equilibrium ( balance between previous and later learning
Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934)
Theories
•Cultural transmission and development
•Learning precedes development
•Sociocultural development theory
Keys to learning
•Pedagogy creates learning processes that lead to development
•The child is an active agent in his or her educational process
Howard Gardner
•Multiple Intelligence
•Humans have several different ways of processing information
and these ways are relatively independent of one another.
•There are eight intelligences: linguistic, logico-mathematical,
musical, spatial, bodily/kinesthetic, interpersonal, intrapersonal
and naturalistic.
Daniel Goleman