Module 1 - Addendum
Module 1 - Addendum
A. Concepts of Curriculum.
1. Definitions
2. Purpose
3. Nature
1. Recommended Curriculum
2. Written Curriculum
3. Taught Curriculum
4. Supported Curriculum
5. Assessed Curriculum
6. Learned Curriculum
7. Hidden/Implicit Curriculum
8. 8.Concomitant Curriculum
9. Phantom Curriculum
10. Null Curriculum
C. Components of Curriculum
Introduction:
Objectives/Competencies:
1. Define and describe the concepts and scope of curriculum from different
perspectives.
2. Analyze the nature of the different types of curriculum.
A. Concepts of Curriculum
1. What is curriculum?
Curriculum is often one of the main concerns in the educational field. Educators
are concerned about what choices are to make about teaching content and methods. As
for the parents, they would like to know what their children are going to learn. Learners
are also concerned about what kinds of content they are going to have in class.
“Curriculum” seems to be considered greatly as what teachers are going to teach and,
in other words, what learners are going to learn. In fact, “curriculum” is also closely
related to how well the learners learn—the outcomes.
In dictionaries, curriculum is often defined as the courses offered by a school, but
it is rarely used in such a general sense in schools. Depending on how broadly educators
define or employ the term, curriculum typically refers to the knowledge and skills students
are expected to learn, which includes the learning standards or learning objectives they
are expected to meet; the units and lessons that teachers teach; the assignments and
projects given to students; the books, materials, videos, presentations, and readings
used in a course; and the tests, assessments, and other methods used to evaluate
student learning. The term curriculum refers to the lessons and academic content taught
in a school or in a specific course or program.
While Arthur Bestor, believes that the mission of the school should be intellectual
training; -curriculum should focus on the fundamental intellectual discipline of grammar,
literature and writing. It should also include mathematics, science, history and foreign
language.
For Joseph Schwab’s, he views the curriculum as the discipline that is the sole
source of curriculum. He said that curriculum should consist only of knowledge which
comes from discipline which is the sole source. This definition leads us to the view of
Joseph Schwab that discipline is the sole source of curriculum.
Lastly, in our education system in the Philippines, curriculum is divided into chunks
of knowledge we call subject areas in the basic education such as English, Mathematics,
Science, Social Studies and others. In college, discipline may include humanities,
sciences, languages and many more. Most of the traditional ideas view curriculum as
written documents or a plan of action in accomplishing goals.
Marsh and Willis on the other hand view curriculum as all the “experiences in the
classroom which are planned and enacted by the teacher, and also learned by the
students.
For Smith, Stanley and Shores they defined curriculum as a “sequence of potential
experiences set up in schools for the purpose of disciplining children and youth in group
ways of thinking and acting.”
.
From the various definitions and concepts presented, differentiate
traditional from progressive points of view of curriculum using the VENN Diagram.
Progressive Traditional
From the various concepts given, the following are the types of curriculum;
1. Recommended Curriculum
2. Written Curriculum
3. Taught Curriculum
The different planned activities which are put into action in the classroom compose
the taught curriculum. These are varied activities that are implemented in order to arrive
at the objectives or purposes of the written curriculum. It varied according to the learning
styles of the students and the teaching styles of the teacher.
4. Supported Curriculum
In order to have a successful teaching, other than the teacher, there must be
materials which should support of help in the implementation of a written curriculum.
Support curriculum includes material resources such as textbooks, computers, audio-
visual materials, laboratory equipment, playgrounds, and other facilities. Support
curriculum should enable each learner to achieve real and lifelong learning.
5. Assessed Curriculum
6. Learned Curriculum
This refers to the learning outcomes achieved by the students. Learning outcomes
are indicated by the results of the tests and changes in behavior which can be either
cognitive, affective or psychomotor.
7. Hidden Curriculum
This is the unintended curriculum which is not deliberately planned but ay modify
behavior or influence learning outcomes. Peer influence, school environment, physical
condition, teacher-learner interaction, mood of the teacher and many other factors make
up the hidden curriculum.
8.Concomitant Curriculum
Things that are taught at home; those experiences that are part of a family's
experiences, or related experiences sanctioned by the family.
This type of curriculum may be received at church, in the context of religious
expression, lessons on values, ethics or morals, molded behaviors, or social experiences
based on a family's preferences.
9. Phantom Curriculum
The messages prevalent in and through exposure to any type of media. These
components and messages play a major part in the enculturation of students into the
predominant meta-culture, or in acculturating students into narrower or generational
subcultures.
10. Null
Refers to what is not taught. Not teaching some particular idea or sets of ideas may
be due to mandates from higher authorities, to a teacher’s lack of knowledge, or to deeply
ingrained assumptions and biases. Thus, giving students the message that these
elements are not important in their educational experiences or in our society.
When translated into questions, each component can be addressed by the following:
1. What is to be done?
2. What subject matter is to be included?
3. What instructional strategies, resources and activities will be employed?
4. What method and instruments will be used to assess the results of the
curriculum?
The components of a curriculum are distinct but interrelated to each other. These
four components should be always present in a curriculum. Curriculum experience could
not be effective if the content is not clearly defined. The aims, goals and directions serve
as the anchor of the learning journey, the content or subject matter serve as the meat of
the educational journey, curriculum experience serves as the hands –on exposure to the
real spectrum of learning and finally the curriculum evaluation serves as the barometer
as to how far had the learners understood on the educational journey.
Aims, goals, and objectives can be simplified as “what is to be done”, the subject
matter/content: what subject matter is to be included, the learning experience” what
instructional strategies, resources and activities will be employed, and the evaluation
approaches, while curriculum evaluation is“ what methods and instruments will be used
to assess the results of the curriculum.
The school’s mission statement, spells out how it intends to carry out its vision.
The mission targets to produce the kind of persons the students will become after having
been educated over a certain period of time.
The mission targets to produce the kind of persons the students will become after
having been educated over a certain period of time.
The school’s vision is a clear concept of what the institution should would like to
become in the future. It provides the focal point or unifying element according to which
the school staff, faculty, students perform individually or collectively.
• A model performing high school where students are equipped with knowledge,
skills and strength of character to realize their potential to the fullest.
• Commits to the Exemplary Christian Education for Life and responsive to the
needs of the total person and the world.
The school’s vision and mission are further translated into goals which are broad
statements or intents to be accomplished. Data for the sources of school goals may
include the learners, the society and the fund of knowledge.
In a curriculum, these goals are made simple and specific for the attainment of
each learner. These are called educational objectives. Benjamin Bloom and Robert
Mager defined educational objectives in two ways:
Examples of Goals
The curriculum aims, goals and objectives spell out what is to be done. It tries to
capture what goals are to be achieved, the vision, the philosophy, the mission statement
and objectives. Further, it clearly defines the purpose and what the curriculum is to be
acted upon and try what to drive at.
The traditional sources of what is taught and learned in school is precisely the
foundation of knowledge, therefore, the sciences and humanities provide the basis of
selecting the content of school learning.
Science – branches of the natural sciences, exploration and discovery and use of
scientific method of investigation.
• Social Studies – basic elements of Geography, History, Sociology, Anthropology,
Economics, Civics, Political Science and Psychology.
• Physical Education – health and physical fitness, individual and team sports,
spectatorship and music preparation.
Some criteria which can be used in the selection of subject matter content
or knowledge for the curriculum.
Other considerations that maybe used in the selection of the learning content; a.
frequently and commonly used in daily life;
For the third component, the curriculum experience, instructional strategies and
methods are the core of the curriculum. These instructional strategies and methods will
put into action the goals and use of the content in order to produce an outcome. These
will include a multitude of teaching methods and educational activities which will enhance
learning.
These would convert the written curriculum to instruction. Moreover, mastery is the
function of the teacher direction and student activity with the teacher supervision.
• Teaching methods are means to achieve the end. They are used to translate the
objectives into action.
• There is no single best teaching method. Its effectiveness will depend on the learning
objectives, the learners and skill of the teacher.
• Teaching method should stimulate the learners desire to develop the cognitive,
affective, psychomotor, social and spiritual domain of the individual.
• In the choice of the teaching methods, learning styles of the students should be
considered.
• Every method should lead to the development of the learning outcomes in the three
domains: cognitive, affective and psychomotor.
• Flexibility should be a consideration in the use of the teaching methods.
4. Curriculum Evaluation
All curricula to be effective must have the element of evaluation (Worthen and
Sanders, 1987). This refer to the formal determination of the quality, effectiveness or
value of the program, process, product of the curriculum. Evaluation is meeting the goals
and matching them with the intended outcomes. There are different evaluation methods
that can be utilized like diagnostic, placement, formative or summative evaluation or the
norm or criterion referenced evaluation.
• Analyze information.
Reflection/Learning Insights:
A. There are many divergent views about the nature of curriculum. What definition of
curriculum do you support? Justify your choice.
Activity 1 :
As a pre-service teacher, what is your perception of the top three priorities to
be included in a curriculum? Explain your answer.
Answer:
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
Analysis:
What is the connection between philosophy and curriculum?
Philosophy helps us answer the following: What are schools for? Why do we need
to study? How can we learn the content of the subject? Who will teach us the content of
the subject? Philosophy provides the educators a framework for organizing schools and
classrooms, to determine the goals of education, its content, organization, methodologies
to be applied and the process of teaching and learning.
There are four philosophies of curriculum namely: Perennialism, Essentialism,
Progressivism and Reconstructionism.
Perennialism- is the oldest and most conservative educational philosophy, has its roots
in the philosophy of Plato and Aristotle. Perennialism is a teacher-centered
educational philosophy that focuses on everlasting ideas and universal truths. This
philosophy suggests that the focus of education should be the ideas and truths that are
always valid and have lasted for centuries believing the ideas are as relevant and
meaningful today as when they were written.
Essentialism – comes from the word “essential” which means the main things or the
basics. It was originally popularized in the 1930s by William Bagley and later in the 1950s
by Arthur Bestor and Admiral Rickover. Essentialism is a philosophy which instills in the
students the essentials or basics of academic knowledge and character development.
Essentialism philosophy believes that teachers should instill traditional moral values and
intellectual knowledge that students need to become model citizens.
Progressivism- is a philosophy that argues that education must be based on the fact
that humans are by nature social and learn best in real-life activities with other people.
Progressive education emphasized the need to learn by doing. Dewey believed that
human beings learn through a ‘hands-on’, approach and allow learner’s to realize their
interests and potential.
Reconstructionism- is a philosophy that favor reform and argue that students must be
taught how to bring about change. Students are to study social problems and think of
ways to improve society. One proponent of reconstructionism was George Counts (1932).
Activity 2
Identify which of the four psychological perspectives in curriculum is
applicable to you as a learner. You can choose one or more perspectives.
Justify your answer.
Answer: ____________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________
Analysis
Psychology is a discipline devoted to the study of behavior, mind and thought.
When applied to teaching and learning, it provides the basis for understanding how
students learn and understand a body of knowledge.
There are four psychological perspectives that have had an impact on curriculum,
namely: Behaviorism, Cognitivism, Humanism and Constructivism.
Behaviorism - is the theory that human behavior consists of reflexes and behaviors
learned through conditioning. Learning occurs as a result of responses to stimuli in the
environment that are reinforced by adults and others, as well as from feedback from
actions on objects. The teacher can help students learn by conditioning them through
identifying the desired behaviors in measurable, observable terms, recording these
behaviors and their frequencies, identifying appropriate reinforcers for each desired
behavior and providing the reinforce as soon as the student displays the behavior.
Cognitivism – focuses on the conceptualization of students’ learning processes and
address the issues of how information is received, organized, stored and retrieved by the
mind. The learner is viewed as a very active participant in the learning process. It
emphasizes also the role that environmental conditions play in facilitating learning.
Instructional explanations, demonstrations and illustrative examples are all considered to
be instrumental in guiding student learning.
Constructivism - is the psychological foundation which believe that the learner actively
constructs his or her own understandings of reality through interaction with objects,
events and people in the environment and reflecting on those interactions. Learners are
not passive recipients of information but are active agents engaging in constructing their
own knowledge.
Humanism- believes that the learner should be in control of his or her own destiny. Since
the learner should become a fully autonomous person, personal freedom, choice and
responsibility are the focus. The learner is self-motivated to achieve towards the highest
level possible. Motivation to learn is intrinsic in humanism.
Lesson 3 - Historical- Sociological Foundations of Curriculum
Objectives:
At the end of this lesson, the students should be able to:
1. describe the historical-sociological foundations of curriculum and its significance.
2. Explain how history and society influence the curriculum.
Activity 3
Answer :
_________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
Analysis
Historical Foundation of the Curriculum
There are major events in the life of the Filipinos that have great impact on the
educational system. Three colonizers dominated the Filipinos and used education in
different ways to spread their principles and beliefs. Because of this, education in our
country has undergone various changes throughout the years. Pre-Hispanic Filipinos had
no formal schools. Learning began in the home. Education was oral, practical and hands-
on. Pre-Spanish children were taught reading, writing and arithmetic by their parents.
Spanish Government
The arrival of the Spaniards in the Philippines paved way to the establishments of
schools in the country. Religion was a compulsory subject at all levels-from the primary
schools to the universities. Establishment of normal school for the training of teachers
with a mastery of the Spanish language.
Although, the Spanish government exerted effort to educate the Filipinos, basic
education remained inadequate and defective. The educational system was
characterized by the absence of a systematic government supervision of the schools,
over-emphasis on religion, limited and irrelevant curriculum, obsolete teaching method,
poor classroom facilities and inadequate instructional materials. There was also racial
discrimination against Filipino students and absence of academic freedom.
American Government
There were three levels of education during the American period -the elementary,
secondary and college. Higher education was promoted by the Americans, the Public
Schools- the University of the Philippines in 1908 and the Philippine Normal School; the
Private Schools- Siliman University in1901, Centro Escolar University in 1907 and the
Philippine Women’s University in 1919 were created and started. Americans encourage
Filipino in the field of teaching. Outstanding Filipino scholars were sent to US to train as
teachers. Americans restored damaged school houses, build new ones and conduct
classes. They infused their students the spirit of democracy and progress as well as fair
play.
Japanese Government
The Japanese period recognized the important role of education in realizing their
vision of a New Order in Asia and emphasized the six basic principles. They promoted
the vocational courses and inspire people with the spirit of love and labor. On October 14,
1943, the Japanese sponsored Republic created the Ministry of Education. There were
important changes in the curriculum this period. The class size increased to 60, no
summer vacation for students, deleted anti-asian opinions, American symbols and
banned the singing of American songs. Nihongo was used as means of introducing and
cultivating love for Japanese culture.
After World War II, in 1947, by the virtue of Executive Order no. 94, the Department
of Instruction was changed to “Department of Education”. During this period, the
regulation and supervision of public and private schools belonged to the Bureau of Public
and Private Schools.
Education after 1940
The objective of the Philippine Education was to established “integrated,
nationalistic, and democracy- inspired educational system” which include the following:
1. Inculcate moral and spiritual values inspired by an abiding faith in God.
2. To develop an enlighten, patriotic, useful and upright citizenry in a democratic
society.
3. Conservation of the national resources.
4. Perpetuation of our desirable values.
5. Promote the science, arts and letter.
Objectives:
At the end of this lesson, the students should be able to:
1. describe the legal foundations of curriculum and its significance.
Analysis
The four dimensions of the legal bases of Philippine Education are the following:
1. The Philippine Constitution of 1987
2. The Educational Decree 6-A
3. The Educational Act of 1982 and
4. The Educational Act of 1994
Philippine Constitution of 1987 Article XIV: Education, Science and Technology, Arts,
Culture and Sports states that:
● Quality education accessible to all.
● Complete, adequate, and integrated relevant education.
● FREE public education in the elementary and high school levels.
● Elementary education is COMPULSORY for all children of school age.
● Scholarship programs to deserving students especially to the underprivileged.
● Non-formal, informal and indigenous learning systems.
● Training in civics, vocational efficiency, and other skills to adults, the disabled,
and out-of-school youth.
The Educational Decree No. 6-A – this decree shall be known as the Educational
Development Decree of 1972 which emphasized the following:
The Education Act of 1982 - was an act providing for the establishment and
maintenance of an integrated system of education. ... In accordance with Section 2,
this act shall apply to and govern both formal and non- formal system in public and private
schools in all levels of the entire educational system.
Application:
After learning the lessons in this module, what particular foundation/
philosophy of a curriculum can you recommend to use as basis to accommodate
and serve the students. Explain your answer.
Philosophical
Psychological
Historical-Sociological
Legal