Lecture Notes in Curriculum Development
Lecture Notes in Curriculum Development
Activity 2: Identify the specific types of curriculum being applied or operating in ASIST and
categories each types based on the 7 Types of Curriculum Operating in Schools by
Allan Glatthorn. Do an evaluation and make your own recommendation.
Major Foundations of Curriculum
1. Philosophical Foundations philosophy provides educators, teachers and curriculum makers
with framework for planning, implementing and evaluating
curriculum in schools
Helps in answering what schools are for, what subjects are
important, how students should learn and what materials and
methods should be used for the succeeding decision making
The philosophy of a curriculum planner, implementor or
evaluator reflects his or her experiences, common beliefs, social
and economic background and education like John Dewey,
1916, looks at Education as a Way of Life a laboratory in
which philosophy becomes concrete and is tested
Ralph Tylers framework shows that philosophy is one of the
five criteria in selecting educational purposes
b.
c.
d.
2. Essentialism
a.
b.
Schools are established institutions which are either run by the government or by the private
sector
Philippine educational system is divided in three educational levels: primary, secondary and
tertiary levels.
Based on the Philippine Constitution of 1987, all schools aim to:
a. Inculcate patriotism and nationalism
b. Foster love of humanity
c. Promote respect for human rights
d. Appreciate the role of national heroes in the historical development of the country
e. Teach the rights and duties of citizenship
f. Strengthen ethical and spiritual values
g. Develop moral character and personal discipline
h. Encourage critical and creative thinking
i. Broaden scientific and technological knowledge and promote vocational efficiency
Aims of Elementary Education (Education Act of 1982)
In the elementary level, schools through their curricula should aim to:
a. Provide knowledge and development skills, attitudes, values essential to personal
development necessary for living in and contributing to a developing and changing society
b. Provide learning experiences which increase the childs awareness and responsiveness to
the changes in the society
c. Promote and intensify knowledge, identification with and love for the nation and the people
to which he belongs
d. Promote work experiences which develop orientation to the world of work and prepare the
learner to engage in honest and gainful work
Aims of Secondary Education (Education Act of 1982)
In the high school or secondary level, educational curricula aim to:
a. Continue to promote the objectives of elementary education
b. Discover and enhance the different aptitudes and interests of students in order to equip
them with skills for productive endeavor and or to prepare them for tertiary schooling
Aims of Tertiary Education (Education Act of 1982)
Tertiary education refers to college and university formal education based on the curricula of
the different courses. The different courses should aim to:
a. Provide general education programs which will promote national identity, cultural
consciousness, moral integrity and spiritual vigor
b. Train the nations manpower in the skills required for national development
c. Develop the professions that will provide leadership for the nation
d. Advance knowledge through research and apply new knowledge for improving the quality
of human life and respond effectively to changing society
Based on the mandate of the constitution, each school therefore should be guided by its vision,
mission and goals and its curricula should also revolve around it.
Reaction: Are the aims of the Education Act of 1982 for tertiary education being practiced by
ASIST? If yes in what way? If not how? (Suggestions/Recommendation)
Schools Vision is a clear concept of what the institution would like to become in the future
Provides the focal point or unifying element according to which the school
staff, faculty, students perform individually or collectively
Is the guiding post around which all education efforts including curricula
should be directed
Is very ambitious but that is a characteristic of a vision
Ex. A center of professional excellence and quality education in the
Province of Abra providing opportunities to young Abrenios to
acquire knowledge, develop skills and form attitudes needed for
national development and global competitiveness.
Schools Mission spells out how it intends to carry out its vision
Targets to produce the kind of persons the student will become after
having been educated over a period of time
Ex. The college shall primarily provide technological and vocational
education and shall inspire leadership in the field of agriculture,
forestry, home technology, agricultural education and industry,
through scientific research and extension, and such other courses as
the Board of trustees may deem wise and necessary.
Schools Goals are broad statements or intents of the vision and mission which is to be
accomplished
Source data in making goals include the learners, the society and the fund
of knowledge
Example:
1. To produce quality graduates who are locally and globally competitive;
2. To disseminate and showcase client-responsive technologies and other
solutions to development problems;
3. To develop/operate new knowledge and verify client-oriented
technologies and other solutions to local and national development
problems;
4. To develop and operate Income generating Projects (IGPs) to augment
the finance of the college;
5. To realize ASIST as a dynamic and responsive learning and performing
organization efficiently and effectively managing its resources.
In curriculum, these goals are made simple and specific for the attainment of each learner,
which are called educational objectives
Educational Objectives (Benjamin Bloom and Robert Mager)
1. Explicit formulations of the ways in which students are expected to be changed by the
educative process
2. Intent communicated statements describing a proposed change in learners
Objectives direct change in behavior which is the ultimate aim in learning
Provide the bases for the selection of learning content and learning experiences
Set of criteria against which learning outcomes will be evaluated
3 Domains of Objectives (Benjamin Bloom and Associates)
1.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
2.
3.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
1. Communication Arts include skills in listening, speaking, reading and writing as well as the
effective use of language in daily living
2. Mathematics includes numeric and computational skills, geometry and measurement,
algebra, logic and reasoning
3. Science includes all branches of the natural sciences, exploration and discovery dealing with
the natural phenomena and the use of scientific method of investigation
4. Social Studies include basic elements of Geography, History, Sociology, Anthropology,
Economics, Civics, Political Science and Psychology
5. Physical Education includes health and physical fitness, individual and team sports,
spectatorship and wise use of leisure
6. Vocational Education includes psychomotor and manipulative skills in basic crafts and
trades, design, work ethic and appreciation of manual productive
work
Criteria in the Selection of Subject Matter content or knowledge for the curriculum
1. Self-sufficiency according to Scheffler (1970) the prime guiding principle for content
selection is helping the learners to attain maximum self-sufficiency in
learning but in the most economical matter means less teaching effort
and educational resources, less learners effort but more results and
effective learning outcomes
2. Significance when content or subject matter will contribute to basic ideas, concepts,
principles and generalization to achieve the overall aim of the curriculum,
then it is significant. It is also significant if it will develop learning abilities,
skills, processes and attitude. Subject matter is significant if it will develop
the cognitive, affective and psychomotor skills of the learner; and if the
cultural aspects are also considered
3. Validity authenticity of the subject matter is its validity. With information explosion,
oftentimes, knowledge selected for school content may become obsolete. Thus,
subject matter should be checked or verified at regular intervals, to determine if
the content that was originally continues to be
4. Interests for a learner-centered curriculum, this is the key criterion because a learner will
value the content if it is meaningful to him or her. Students interests should be
considered and adjusted taking into consideration maturity, prior experiences,
educational and social value of their interest among others
5. Utility usefulness of the content or subject matter may be relative to the learner who is
going to use it maybe either be for the present or the future. Questions like will
I use it in my future job?, will it add meaning to my life or develop my human
potential? or will the subject matter be useful in solving my current problems?
6. Learnability subject matter in the curriculum should be within range of the experiences of
the learners. Optimal placement and appropriate organization and sequencing of
contents are the two ways by which these can be done
7. Feasibility can the subject matter or content be learned within the time allowed, resources
available, expertise of the teacher and the nature of the learner? Content selection
should be considered within the existing reality in schools, in society and
government
Products
Aims
Objectiv
es
Evaluati
on
Content
/
Subject
Matter
Methods
/
Strategi
es