Seminar on Curriculum Reform in HK - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 28
About This Presentation
Title:

Seminar on Curriculum Reform in HK

Description:

Learning beyond the school setting: learning to make good ... Learning what is learning for: adaptability, flexibility, ... be fashionable in proposals ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:62
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: HKI9
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Seminar on Curriculum Reform in HK


1
Seminar on Curriculum Reform in HK
  • Lee Wing On
  • HKIEd

2
Changing Social Realities
  • Rapid changes, particularly economic
    restructuring
  • Knowledge Economy
  • Fewer jobs, changing job nature
  • Intensive global competitions
  • Increased uncertainties
  • Schooling for tomorrow
  • Learning for tomorrow
  • Sustained competitiveness

3
Calling for Lifewide Learning Perspectives
  • Learning throughout a lifespan thus lifelong and
    lifewide learning come together
  • Learning beyond the school setting learning to
    make good use of community resources, learning to
    tap opportunities
  • Learning what is learning for adaptability,
    flexibility, diversifiability, comprehensibility,
    sustainability, transformability, applicability

4
Breaking the Learning Divide
  • between acquiring knowledge today and applying
    knowledge tomorrow
  • between school and career
  • between public and private sectors
  • between policy sectors and the school sector
  • between formal and nonformal/informal education
  • between disadvantaged and advantaged learners

5
A quote
  • To ensure that HK will not lose out in a
    knowledge-based, globalized economy, the HKSAR
    has made education and skill training the number
    of one priority of our social policy. We have
    launched a massive education reform program which
    aims, among other things, to help our young
    people learn how to learn and to inculcate in
    them a commitment to lifelong learning.
  • Fanny Law, 2002

6
Common Needs/Problems Common Solutions
7
Common Needs/Problems
  • China the better the teacher teaches, the more
    the students dislike learning
  • HK Not to lose out in the knowledge-economy
  • Malaysia Public outcry that the existing
    curriculum is overloaded, student no. sizeable,
    students unable to read

8
Common Needs/Problems
  • Singapore globalization challenges
  • Thailand economic crisis, science and technology
    and way of life
  • Korea standardized individuals who lack
    individuality intellectuals who lack creativity
    students who lack moral values
  • Japan achievement decline

9
Common solutions
  • Integration and diversification of the curriculum
  • Lifelong and lifewide learning
  • Civic moral values
  • Individual development, creative and critical
    thinking
  • Key Learning Areas (HK, Taiwan, Malaysia)
  • General education

10
Common terminologies
  • Generic skills
  • Reducing loads
  • ICT
  • Decentralization
  • School-based curriculum development
  • Flexible curriculum
  • Relevance

11
Change in Curriculum Definitions
  • Static, content-based perspectives
  • Narrow Definition of the curriculum
  • French scolarie
  • German Lehrplan
  • English syllabus

12
Change in Curriculum Definition
  • Change-oriented perspectives with various foci
  • The complicated, dynamic and continuous process
    of organizing education
  • Objectives intended for students
  • Teaching strategies schools plan to use
  • The actual implementation and learning
    achievements
  • An ongoing search for qualitative improvement, in
    response to changes in society

13
Challenges for the Implementation of Change
  • Reminders from Torres comments on teacher
    education reform
  • Each new policy, plan or project starts from
    zero, disregarding pervious knowledge and
    experience
  • Considers training principally as a need for
    teachers rather than their supervisors
  • Views training isolated from other dimensions
  • Adopts a top-down approach
  • Provides homogeneous proposal
  • Oriented toward correcting mistakes

14
Challenges for the Implementation of Change
  • Udo Bude
  • The implications of the panic approach to
    curriculum reform
  • Changes come about often as a reaction to problem
    or emergency situation
  • Based on perceived problems and solutions rather
    than systematic and planned research
  • Often come from high authority
  • Experts tend to be fashionable in proposals
  • Teachers are regarded as conveyors of the
    curriculum

15
Challenges for the Implementation of Change
  • What will happen to our curriculum reform, if we
    adopt the view that curriculum means continuous
    response to changing social circumstances, what
    kind of mechanism can we think of? Who has the
    right to respond? And at what stage are
    unintended response become legitimized?

16
Challenges for the Implementation of Change
  • Collective decision making (from the Malaysian
    paper)
  • This implies the need for widened participation
    in curriculum reform, decision, and curriculum
    design. How much, and how, are we opening up for
    participation?
  • What roles do the teacher play in curriculum
    responses?
  • What roles do the students play in knowledge
    creation?

17
Challenges for the Implementation of Change
  • The concept of teaching still seems to be a
    top-down or unidirectional concept. Even the best
    approaches aim at students receiving teaching in
    the most pleasant way. If we agree that the new
    curriculum concept requires responsiveness to
    change, what role do students play in this
    process? How can their contribution be
    recognized? How can their lifewide experiences be
    formalized as a part of learning?

18
Challenges for the Implementation of Change
  • School-based development has become a natural
    direction of development under the new concept of
    curriculum. However, its not a matter of whether
    we agree development to be school-based, but how
    far can their autonomy go? How far
    decentralization can be accepted by the
    government?

19
Higher Order Thinking Project in a School in HK
  • Classification skills
  • Relationship skills
  • Decision making skills
  • Interaction skills
  • Problem solving skills
  • Self development skills

20
The Present Curriculum Reform
  • Responding to the changing social realities
  • Keeping abreast of curriculum development trends
    taking place elsewhere

21
Highlights of the Curriculum Reform Documents
  • Key learning areas
  • Generic skills
  • Learning experiences
  • Lifewide learning, authentic experiences
  • Construction of knowledge
  • Flexible time-tabling

22
HKIEds Curriculum Development
  • Moving from teacher isolation to collaborative
    teaching, peer observation, peer coaching
  • Developing a demand for reflection in teachers
    professional development
  • Emphasis on diverse teaching practices by
    exposing student teachers to diverse educational
    settings
  • Making good use of student teachers diverse
    backgrounds

23
Examples teaching approaches introduced in HKIEd
  • Problem-based learning in various Departments
  • Experiential learning in developing language
    skills in English
  • Performing magic and artwork presentations for
    creative teaching in Mathematics
  • Interdisciplinary approaches, field-based and
    lifewide learning in General Studies

24
  • IT skills in teaching and learning
  • Interactive enquiry in art education
  • Cognitive approaches combining listening,
    performing and composing in music education
  • Movement approaches in teaching ball games in PE
  • Group dynamics in writing in Chinese
  • Reflective enquiry and issue-based approaches in
    civic education
  • Student learning experience projects
  • Portfolios..

25
Further Development and Challenges New
Terminologies and New Perspectives
  • Flexibility
  • Further strengthening of school-based development
  • Rethinking of level of learning as a result of
    project learning
  • Teacher and student participation in knowledge
    construction and reduction of reliance on
    textbooks

26
  • Partnership
  • to be further strengthened policy-making
    bodies, schools and teacher training institutes
  • Partnership required in the curriculum reform
    process, e.g. the new documents extracts examples
    from schools
  • Partnership between teachers and students in the
    process of learning becomes essential

27
  • KLAs and Generic Skills
  • Challenge to CDI substantiation of concepts,
    redefinition, assessment
  • Challenge to HKIEd What does this mean to the
    teacher education curriculum, teacher training
    methods and approaches?
  • Challenge to the community redefining knowledge
    boundary and focus of education
  • -Challenge to schools Do the schools provide a
    reform-induced context for attempts of innovation?

28
  • Thank You
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com