Title: web-based and traditional curriculum by Nina Bitskinashvili
1Traditional Curriculum
Nina Bitskinashvili (2014)
2What is curriculum?
There are many definitions that are correct.
but for our purposes I define curriculum as
WHAT is taught to students.
Nina Bitskinashvili (2014)
3How Do We Define Curriculum?
- Curriculum is that which is taught at school.
- Curriculum is a set of subjects.
- Curriculum is content.
- Curriculum is a sequence of courses.
- Curriculum is a set of performance objectives.
Nina Bitskinashvili (2014)
4Which are old curriculum
- Subject Centered curriculum
- Board field curriculum
- Conservative core curriculum
Nina Bitskinashvili (2014)
5Which are modern curriculum
- The child centered curriculum
- Activity and experience centered curriculum
- Community centered curriculum
- Progressive curriculum
- Problem-oriented curriculum
6The newest one, WEB-BASED Curriculum
- Emphasize design and creativity
- Laboratory experience
- Industry-standard modern tools
- More ICT tools and materials
7Traditional Curriculum Development
8Contents
- Step 1 Problem Identification and General Needs
Assessment - Step 2 Needs Assessment for Targeted Learners
- Step 3 Goals and Objectives
- Step 4 Educational Strategies
- Step 5 Implementation
- Step 6 Evaluation and Feedback
9Curriculum for the World Wide Web
Five basic phases
- planning
- research
- development
- refinement
- Implementation
- These five areas work as organizational
frameworks for instruction and - learning, curriculum development and
implementation, student progress - and presentation.
10Benefits of Web-based curriculum
- There are seven important functionalities
- in web-based education
- (1) real time announcements,
- (2) posting of text, html, spreadsheets, videos,
PowerPoint, audio files, - (3) real time grade book,
- (4) external links,
- (5) discussion board and chat rooms,
- (6) automated quizzes,
- (7) emails to individuals and list serves.
11CMS GoalsWeb-based curriculum management system
(CMS).
- Maintain consistency of data
- Link courses to programs systematically
- Streamline process from beginning to publication
- Show curriculum review process
12Academic Dishonesty
- Cheating
- Plagiarism
- Self-plagiarism
- Unpermitted collaboration
- Inappropriate help
- Misrepresentation
13Necessity of Web-based curriculum
- A students success in todays world requires not
- only basic academic skills but also social and
- collaboration skills, higher order and critical
thinking - skills, problem solving skills, fluency in
- communicating in many modes and media,
- technical skills and the skill to initiate action
- (Fulton Honey, 2002).
14Positive aspects of E-learning
- anywhere, any time, any place (Honey, 2001)
- Technologically trained personnel
15Benefits
- Within instructor decided limits, the student now
picks the place and time to learn. -
- The student can look at the lecture not once but
see it as many times as the student wishes. - Web-based education permits the professor to
introduce the student to a much richer variety of
text, external links, audios, and videos to the
virtual classroom.
16Critics
- Criticism One.
- The academy has not prepared professors to
teach online classes (Speck, 2000 75). - Criticism Two.
- Web-based education is biased against liberal
learning that requires a give and take
communication between and among students and the
teacher (Carsten and Worsfold, 2000 83).
17Criticism
- Criticism Three.
- The online approach eliminates the value of
personal relationships in the name of efficiency
(Carsten and Worsfold, 2000 84). - Criticism Four.
- The online approach merely eliminates a
students literacy because of the over reliance
on visual culture (videos, audios, automated
quizzes, and so on).
18-
- In summary, teachers can abuse both web-based
education and traditional education but both can
also provide the necessary quality rigorous
education.
19Web-based education is a reality but it is also a
changing reality