This document discusses school subjects and academic disciplines. It defines school subjects as branches of knowledge taught in schools using simple concepts, while academic disciplines are more specialized fields taught at universities using complex theories. School subjects lay the foundation for academic disciplines and have the goal of developing basic skills, while disciplines focus on developing experts. The document also examines the relationship between subjects and disciplines and why studying subjects is important for students' development.
3. CONTENTS
MEANING AND DEFENITION OF SCHOOL SUBJECTS
MEANING AND DEFENITION OF ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SCHOOL SUBJECTS & ACADEMIC DISCIPLINES
CONTENT OF A SCHOOL SUBJECT
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SCHOOL SUBJECTS AND ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE
WHY STUDYING SCHOOL SUBJECTS ?
4. A subject or a field of study is a branch of knowledge that is taught and researched at the school, college or university
level.
A School Subject refers to an area of knowledge that is studied in school . It can be called a learning tool or the
criteria by which we learn. More precisely, subjects are the parts into which learning can be divided. It is a field or sphere
of knowledge in which the learner has chosen to specialise.
It can sometimes be used synonymously with the term ‘discipline’ and can be referred to as a systematic instruction given to the
students in a particular area of learning that follows a specific code of conduct.
5. A School Subject can be defined as a branch of knowledge or a body of knowledge that is being provided to
its learner.
According to Zongyi Deng “a school subject refers to an area of learning within the school curriculum
that constitutes an institutionally defined field of knowledge and practice for teaching and learning.”
6. Meaning of Discipline
The term ‘discipline’ originates from the Latin
words discipulus, which means pupil, and disciplina,
which means teaching. A discipline is focused study
in one academic field or profession. A discipline
incorporates expertise, people, projects,
communities, challenges, studies, inquiry, and
research areas that are strongly associated with a
given discipline. A discipline may have branches, and
7. An academic discipline or field of study is a
branch of knowledge that is taught
and researched as part of higher education.
8. DEFINITION FOR ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE
ACCORDING TO ZONGYI DENG “AN ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE
IS A FIELD OR BRANCH OF LEARNING AFFILIATED WITH AN
ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT WITHIN A UNIVERSITY,
FORMULATED FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF RESEARCH AND
SCHOLARSHIP AND THE PROFESSIONAL TRAINING OF
RESEARCHERS, ACADEMICS, AND SPECIALISTS.
9. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SCHOOL SUBJECTS & ACADEMIC
DISCIPLINES
BASIS OF DIFFERENCE
SCHOOL SUBJECTS ACADEMIC DISCIPLINES
Aims of education Development of basic skills and awareness.
Development of a social citizen.
Development of specialised knowledge and skills.
Development of scholars, researchers, academics,
specialists, etc.,
Nature of content Simple ideas and informations. Complex theories of educators.
Curriculum
construction
Considering needs, wants of learners. Includes
learner centred teaching methods.
Contents are arranged for the development of different
specialised skills at complex and wider levels.
Development of skills Gives importance for the development of basic skills
, such as reading , writing and arithmetic.
Gives importance for the development of specialised
skills, mainly professional and vocational skills.
Area of operation Limited to Schools. For university and other higher education.
Developmental phases School subjects comes first in the development of a
person.
Academic disciplines comes later in one’s learning
journey from school to university
10. CONTENT OF A SCHOOL SUBJECT
THE ARGUMENT PROPOSED HERE IS THAT TEACHERS DO NEED BASIC
KNOWLEDGE OF RELATED ACADEMIC DISCIPLINES, BUT KNOWING THE
CONTENT OF A SCHOOL SUBJECT LIES AT THE HEART OF THEIR PROFESSIONAL
UNDERSTANDING. SCHOOL SUBJECTS, NOT ACADEMIC DISCIPLINES,
CONSTITUTE THE “LOCUS” OF CLASSROOM TEACHING; THEY FRAME
CLASSROOM TEACHERS’ PRACTICE AND PER- SPECTIVES ON CURRICULUM AND
INSTRUCTION . KNOWING THE CONTENT OF A SCHOOL SUBJECT INVOLVES
KNOWING MORE THAN THE CONTENT PER SE; IT ENTAILS KNOWING THE
THEORY OF CONTENT – I.E., KNOWING HOW THE CONTENT IS SELECTED,
FORMULATED, FRAMED, AND TRANSFORMED IN WAYS THAT RENDER
MEANINGFUL AND EDUCATIVE EXPERIENCES FOR STUDENTS. THIS KNOWING IS
CRUCIAL FOR DISCLOSING THE EDUCATIONAL POTENTIAL INHERENT IN THE
11. CONTENT OF A SCHOOL SUBJECT……..
TEACHERS NEED TO HAVE THREE KINDS OF SUBJECT MATTER KNOWLEDGE: CONTENT KNOWLEDGE,
PEDAGOGICAL CONTENT KNOWLEDGE, AND CURRICULAR KNOWLEDGE. CONTENT KNOWLEDGE
INCLUDES KNOWLEDGE OF THE SUBSTANCE AND STRUCTURE OF THE ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE.
PEDAGOGICAL CONTENT KNOWLEDGE INVOLVES AN UNDERSTANDING OF PEDAGOGICAL
REPRESENTATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES, AND OF STUDENTS’ PRE-CONCEPTIONS WITH
RESPECT TO PARTICULAR CURRICULUM TOPICS AT PARTICULAR GRADE LEVELS. BY MEANS OF THIS
KNOWLEDGE, THE TEACHER TRANSFORMS HIS OR HER DISCIPLINARY CONTENT INTO “FORMS THAT ARE
PEDAGOGICALLY POWERFUL AND YET ADAPTIVE TO THE VARIATIONS IN ABILITY AND BACKGROUND
PRESENTED BY STUDENTS” . CURRICULAR KNOWLEDGE INVOLVES AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE
CURRICULUM AND THE INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS AVAILABLE FOR TEACHING A SUBJECT AT VARIOUS
GRADE LEVELS, WHICH CAN BE AN AID TO THE TRANSFORMATION PROCESS.
12. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SCHOOL SUBJECTS AND ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE
School subjects can have different and variable relationships to academic disciplines,
depending on their aims, contents, and developmental phases. School subjects are derived
from and organized according to the “structure” of academic disciplines. They constitute a
faithful and valid introduction to the academic disciplines. While students are dealing with
relatively simple ideas and methods in school subjects, they study the same ideas and methods
known by experts in the academic disciplines. So school subjects are the connecting links to
academic disciplines. Academic disciplines are of complex nature, and they are the
continuation of school subjects. School subjects are basis for the development of basic
informations that will turns the learners into specialists in academic disciplines.
13. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SCHOOL SUBJECTS AND ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE…………………..
A school subject results from the transformation of an Academic Discipline. School
subjects come first and academic disciplines later in one’s learning journey from school
to university. An academic discipline provides the endpoint for the formation of a
school subject and the school subject furnishes the avenue for getting to know the
academic discipline.
14. WHY STUDYING SCHOOL SUBJECTS ?
To develop basic skills like reading ,writing and arithmetic [ 3R’s]
To enhance students’ understanding of themselves, their society, their
nation, the human world and the physical environment.
To enable students to develop multiple perspectives on contemporary
issues in different contexts (e.g., cultural, social, economic, political, and
technological contexts).
To help students become independent thinkers so that they can construct
knowledge appropriate to changing personal and social circumstances.
15. WHY STUDYING SCHOOL SUBJECTS
?.............
To develop in students a range of skills for life-long learning, including critical
thinking skills, creativity, problem-solving skills, communication skills, and
information technology skills.
To help students appreciate and respect diversity in cultures and views in a
pluralistic society and handle conflicting values.
To help students develop positive values and attitude towards life, so that they can
become informed and responsible citizens of society, the country and the world.
They contribute to the pursuit of self actualization, personal growth, and individual
freedom.