Module 22
Module 22
NAME: COURSE:
II. INTRODUCTION: You have been familiarized with the preliminaries of making a simple design
through lesson plan components. You will father enrich your knowledge by looking into how other
curricularists approach the curriculum design. In this lesson, we will see how several examples of
curriculum designs are used in the schools and classrooms.
III. STRATEGIES/CONTENT
A. ANALYSIS/ABSTRACTION AND GENERALIZATION
1. Subject-Centered Design
This is a curriculum design that focuses on the content of the curriculum. The subject-centered
design corresponds mostly to the textbook because textbooks are usually written based the specific subject
or course. Henry Morrison and William Harris are the few curricularist who firmly believe in this design. As
practiced, school hours are allocated to different school subjects such as Science, Mathematics, Language,
Social Studies, Physical Education, and others. This is also practiced in the Philippines, because a school
day is divided into class period, a school year in quarters or semester. Most of the schools using this this
kind of structure and curriculum sign in for excellence in the specific subject discipline content.
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THE TEACHER AND THE SCHOOL CURRICULUM
Subject centered curriculum design has also some variations which are focused on the individual
subject, specific discipline a combination of subjects or disciplines which are a broad field or
interdisciplinary.
1.1 Subject Design. What subject are you teaching? What subject are you taking? These are too
simple questions that the teacher and the learner can easily answer. It is because they are familiar with the
subject design curriculum.
Subject design curriculum is the oldest and so far, the most familiar design for teachers, parents and
other laymen. According to the advocates, subject design has an advantage because it is easy to deliver.
Textbooks are written and support instructional materials are commercially available. Teachers are familiar
with the format, because they were educated using also the design. In the Philippines educational system,
the number subjects in the elementary education is fewer than in the secondary level. In college, the
number of subjects also differs according to degree programs being pursued. For each subject, a
curriculum is being designed.
1.2 Discipline design. This curriculum design model is related to the subject design. However,
while subject design centers only the cluster of content, discipline design focuses on academic disciplines.
Discipline refers to specific knowledge learned through a method which the scholars used to study a
specific content of their fields. Students in history should learn the subject matter like historians, students
in biology should learn how the biologist learn, and so with students in mathematics, who should learn how
mathematicians learn. In the same manner, teachers should teach how the scholars in the discipline will
convey the particular knowledge.
Discipline design model of curriculum is often use in college, but not in the elementary or
secondary levels. So, from the subject-centered curriculum, curriculum moves higher to a discipline when
the students are more mature and are already moving towards their career path or disciplines as science,
mathematics, psychology, humanities, history and others.
1.3 Correlation design. Coming from a core, correlated curriculum design links separate subject
designs in order to reduce fragmentation. Subjects are related to one another and still maintain their identity.
For example, English literature and social studies correlate well in the elementary level. In the two subjects,
while history is being studied, different literary pieces during the historical period are also being studied.
The same is true when science becomes the core, mathematics is related to it, as they are taken in
chemistry, physics and biology. Another example is literature as the core with art, music, history, geography
related to it. To use correlated design, teachers should come together and plan their lessons cooperatively.
1. Learner-Centered Design
Among progressive educational psychologist, the learner is the center of the educative process. This
emphasis very strong in the elementary level, however, more concern has been placed on the secondary
and even the tertiary levels. Although in high school, the subject or content has become the focus and in
college level, the discipline is the center, both levels still recognize the importance of the learner in the
curriculum.
1.1 Child-centered design. This design is often attributed to the influence of John Dewey, Rouseau,
Pestallozi and Froebel. This curriculum design is anchored on the needs and the interest of the child. The
learner is not considered as passive individual but one who engage with his/her environment. One learns
by doing. Learners actively create, contrast meanings and understand as viewed by the constructivist. In
the child-centered design, learners interact with the teachers and the environment, thus there is a
collaborative effort on both sides to plan lessons, select content and do activities together. Learning is a
product of the child's interaction with the environment.
1.2 Experienced-centered design. This design is similar to the child centered design. Although the
focus remains to be the child, experience centered design believes that the interest and needs of learners
cannot be pre- planned. Instead, experiences of the learners become the starting point of the curriculum,
thus the school environment is left open and free. Learners are made to choose from various activities that
the teacher provides. The learners are empowered to shaped their own learning from the different
opportunities given by the teacher. In a school where experience centered curriculum is provided, different
learning centers are found, time is flexible and children are free to make options. Activities revolve around
different emphasis such as touching, feeling, imagining, constructing relating and others. The emergence
of multiple intelligence theory blends well with experience-centered design curriculum.
1.3 Humanistic design. The key influence in this curriculum design is Abraham Maslow and Carl
Rogers. Maslow's theory of self-actualization explains that a person who achieves this level is accepting of
self, others and nature; is simple, spontaneous and natural; is open to different experiences; possesses
empathy and sympathy towards the less fortunate among the many others. The person can achieve this
state of self-actualization later in life but has to start the process while still in school. Carl Rogers, on the
other hand, believe that a person can enhance self-directed learning by improving self-understanding, the
basic attitude to guide behavior. In a humanistic curriculum design, the development of self is the ultimate
objective of learning. It stresses the whole person and the integration off thinking feeling and doing. It
considers the cognitive, affective and psychomotor domains to be interconnected and must be addressed
in the curriculum. It stresses the development of positive self-concept and interpersonal skills.
2. Problem-Centered Design
Generally, problem-centered design draws on social problems, needs interests and abilities off the
learners. Various problems are given emphasis. There are those that center on life situations,
contemporary life problems, areas of living and many others. In this curriculum content cuts across subject
boundaries and must be based on the needs, concerns and abilities of the students. Two examples are
given for the problem-centered design curriculum.
2.1 Life-situation design. What makes the design unique is that the contents are organize in ways
that allow students to clearly view problem areas. It uses the past and the present experience of learners
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as a means to analyze the basic areas of living. As a starting point, the pressing immediate problems of
the society and the students' exciting concerns are utilized based on Herbert Spencer's curriculum writing
his emphases where activities that sustain life, enhance life, aid in rearing children, maintain the individual's
social and political relations and enhance leisure, tasks and feelings. The connection of subject matter to
real situations increases the relevance of the curriculum.
1.1 Core problem design. Another example of problem-centered design is core design. In centers on
general education and the problems are based on the common human activities. The central focus of the
core design includes common needs, problems, and concerns of the learners. Popularized by Faunce and
Bossing in 1959, it presented way on how to proceed using core design of a curriculum. These are the
steps.
These are some examples of curriculum designs. There are many more which are emerging and those
that have evolved in the past. The example given may be limited, however, for our purposes, they can very
well represent curriculum designs.
From its design, how should a child-centered curriculum be approached? Let us consider these
principles.
In another setting, School Y aims to produce the best graduates in the school district. Every learner must
excel in all academic subjects to be on top of every academic competition. The higher the level of cognitive
intelligence, the better a learner. Hence the focus of learning is mastery of the subject matter in terms of
content. Memorization and drill are important learning skills. The school gives emphasis to intellectual
development. Success means mastery of the content.
School Z believes that a learner should be trained to solve real life problems that come about
because of the needs, interests and abilities of the learners. Problems persistent in life and society that
affect daily living are also considered. Most of the school activities revolve around finding solutions to
problems like poverty, drug problems, climate change, natural calamities and many more. Since the school
is using a problem-based design, the same approach is used. Case study and practical work are the
teaching strategies that are utilized. Problem centered approach has become popular in many schools.
We have given examples of curriculum design and the corresponding approaches. Again, the
choice of the design is influenced by philosophical and psychological beliefs of the designer. It is very
important that as a curricularist, you will be able to understand the different design models and how to
approach each one.
Get hold of materials about the K to 12. Discuss with your groupmates and
answer the following:
1. What kind of curriculum design influence mostly the K to 12 Curriculum?
Statement No. 1- "Schools that approach the curriculum as subject-centered, make robots
out of the students "
Statement No. 2- “In schools where child-centeredness is the approach, discipline is weak."
Statement No. 3- “Students are too young to solve life's problem, why should they do problem
solving in school?"
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Prepared by:
MR. JAYMAR B. MAGTIBAY
Instructor