Curriculum Organization
Curriculum Organization
Curriculum Organization
Curriculum Organization
It is the systematic arrangement of content and educational learning experiences
for the effective employment of human and material resources for the attainment of
educational objectives.
Steps in Curriculum Organization
1. Consideration of the educational aims to be achieved.
2. Formulation of educational objectives.
3. Selection and organization of the content.
4. Procedures and methods to be used to accomplish aims.
5. Selection of techniques for the evaluation of outcomes.
6. The selection of references and materials to be used by the learners and by the
teachers.
7. Determination of specific grade outcomes and standards of attainment.
Types of Curriculum Organization
1. Traditional Curriculum Patterns
2. Integrative Curriculum Patterns
3. Unified Program
1. Traditional Curriculum
a. Subject curriculum – is an organization in which the school subjects constitute
the basis for organizing the school experiences of learners.
b. Correlated curriculum – is one that articulates and establishes relationships
between two or more subjects on the basis of a topic or a theme, or teaching
similar topics on two or more subjects simultaneously in an effort to help
students gain a better understanding of such topics.
c. Broad Fields Curriculum – is essentially an effort to overcome the
compartmentalization and atomization of the curriculum by combining several
specific areas into larger fields.
2. Integrative Curriculum - entirely eliminates school subject division and broad
fields of subject matter and organizes the learning experiences of the work of the
school around the learner’s needs, interests, abilities, major functions of social life,
and normal activities of learners.
a. Learner-Centered Curriculum – is one that organizes its learning experiences
and content around normal child activities such as exploring, listening,
storytelling, playing and listening.
b. Experience Curriculum is one that places emphasis on the immediate felt needs
of learners and not on the anticipated needs and interest.
c. Core Curriculum – is also called the social functions or Areas of Living
Curriculum.
- is intended to enable the learner to study problems that demand personal
and social action in the contemporary world.
3. Unified Program
- According to William B. Ragan, there should be a balance between extremes in
educational theory and educational practice.
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Submitted By,
P. THIVIYA
divyalakshmi6794@gmail.com