Title: Curriculum
1Curriculum is everything, both planned and
unplanned that happens in your classroom. Planned
curriculum is based on the knowledge that
government and schools require you to teach. This
is presented as syllabus documents. Syllabus
documents provide you with the detail about what
you need to teach to your students depending on
their age and stage.
Curriculum Knowledge
In NSW there are six syllabus documents in the
Key Learning Areas of English, Mathematics,
Creative Arts, Personal Development, Health and
Physical Education (PDHPE), Science and Human
Society in its Environment (HSIE)
2- Unplanned curriculum is often referred to as the
hidden curriculum. These are things that you
are teaching in your classroom or school without
necessarily meaning to (hence the hidden
curriculum). For example if you tell/accept
racist jokes or sexist comments, you are teaching
your students that this is ok, while also
excluding the butt of the joke/comment. Another
example is how you deal with bullying, which has
the potential to teach your students about forms
of violence and how to deal with them-even if
this is not what you are meaning to do (Ailwood,
J. 2004 CSU Bathurst, Tutorial Notes).
3By our teaching and personal example we must
strive to inculcate in the students an
appreciation for the education system. We as
teachers will be responsible to the students and
the school at large for the provision of quality
education. In saying this we will also be
accountable to the Board of Studies for providing
such education. We could ask the question as to
what should be taught? The answer here would be
that many, many things could be taught, yet there
is insufficient time and resources to teach them
all a selection has to be made.
As things are, there is disagreement about the
subjects. For mankind are by no means agreed
about the things to be taught, whether we look to
virtue or the best of life.- Aristotle
4Perhaps this comes back to how knowledge should
be organised. Do we look at this from a logical
or a pedagogical point of view, or by discipline
or for organisational convenience.
It is in the school that the curriculum makes
contact with the everyday world, that being the
students. The curriculum is the basis for the
outcomes of the knowledge learnt at schools.
Muller (2000) determined that it is the
curriculum that moulds and puts forward the
agenda for the learning and teaching process that
stamps the dominance on curriculum contents.
5- There is also the hidden curriculum of the
classroom, that being what is taught as apart
from what is actually in the curriculum itself.
Does this lead us to where the knowledge is not
up to the standards that is becoming of the set
curriculum, as dictated by the bureaucracy? And
are the teachers being blamed by the bureaucrats
for the drop in the educational performance of
our students. Is this due to a lack of ability by
the teachers, or due to a lack of quality
assurance being performed on the teachers by
themselves and their peers on a regular basis. - The questions can continually be asked, but the
answers need to be addressed. Knowledge is
important for us all, we need to be educated by a
guided system, the curriculum indeed needs to be
in place to educate us and to help our knowledge
grow. It is important that the responsibility of
the curriculum lay on the shoulders of the
parents, students and the teachers so as to
assist in the positive growth of our education.
6- a critical view of the curriculum enables a
more flexible construction of the teaching and
learning process, combining features of both the
rational and procedural approaches' as suggested
by (Groundwater-Smith, Ewing Le Cornu
2003,p.89).
7- Language as Social Practice EED 112
- Assignment 2 Power Point Presentation
- essay.ppt
Evidence
8- I used this power point presentation as I feel it
is a good example of curriculum and knowledge.
It shows the different types of discourses
communities that we have looked at this semester
in our Language subject, along with
socio-cultural approaches to language and
learning. - Scaffolding is a teaching method that we have
covered and probably one of the greatest assets
we can leave with in our bid to become great
teachers. - Scaffolding is something that I was unaware of
being apart of each day as a parent. And the
fact that I am bringing my children up in a
discourse community within the family. - I have learnt so much that is apart of our
everyday life that I would not have previously
been aware of.
Justification
9- Maths and Numeracy EMM 111
- Assignment 2 Power Point Presentation
Investigations Seminar - mathsppt
-
Evidence
10- I chose this assignment also as it has covered
basically everything we have done in this subject
this semester. Everything from numbers to shapes
to problem solving was encountered in this task. - As we were taught in our tutorials in an attempt
to solve problems we should
Draw a picture. Use a table. Guess and
check. Look for a pattern. Make it
simpler. Brainstorm.
Justification
I found this to be one of the most tedious tasks
I was given this semester and found it to be one
of the most time consuming also. I used
everything from the list above to complete this
assignment. I found that what we are taught does
help to succeed in yor work.
11Language as Social Practice
- Assignment 2, Essay
- Gemma Seedsman
- Student Number 9402 1072
12Introduction
- This subject sees language as social practice
which is learned as part of our wider
socio-cultural activities in which we are engaged
as we become members of our families and
communities. That is, we learn to do literacy
as we learn how to behave and belong in our
families and communities. - Discuss this statement in relationship to the
concept of Discourse communities and the
socio-cultural approaches to language and
learning introduced in this subject. How can
these theoretical understandings be applied to
language development and learning in context of
schooling?
13Sociocultural Approaches to Language and Learning
- Zone of Proximal Development
- Protolanguage
- Modelling
- Scaffolding
- Modelling
- Text types or genres
- Text Structure and Language Choices
14Discourse Communities
- Definition this refers to a group of people who
share the same beliefs and values, which are
reflected to a certain extent in their various
meaning making systems (Love, Pigdon Baker
2002). - How we become members or insiders?
- Primary discourse
- Secondary discourse
15Schooling
- A new discourse community- definition
- Key learning areas- definition
- New language-definition
16Conclusion
- Language is a part of social practice
- Language is an integral part of culture
- Language is our way of social interaction
17Reference List
- Berk, L 1994 Child Development, A division of
Paramount Publishing, Massachusotts - Derewianka, B 1998, A grammar companion for
primary teachers. Primary English Teaching
Association, Sydney -
- Hartley, R McDonald, P 1994, The many faces of
families Diversity among Australian famlies and
its implications. - Dwyer, J 1989 A sea of talk Primary English
Teaching Association, Sydney - Gee, J P in C Mitchell Weiler (eds) 1991.
Rewriting literacy, New York Beigin Gurey 1-11 - Hanlan, W 1998, Same Language different lingo. EQ
Australia. Primary English Teaching Association,
Sydney - Jones, P 1996 Talking to Learn, Primary English
Teaching Association, Sydney - Love, K, Pigdon, K Baker, G, with Hamston, J,
2002, BUILT building understandings in
literacyand teaching. 2nd edn. CD-ROM. University
of Melbourne, Melbourne - Knobel, M 1999, Everyday literacies Students,
discourse and social practice. Peter Lang, New
York. - Winch,G, Hoogstad, V, 1985, Teaching Reading, A
Language Experience. The McMillan Company of
Australia Pty Ltd, South Melbourne
18- Investigate shapes made from squares joined by
common sides
SHAPES
Presented by Kathy and Gemma
19- Range of aspects investigated
-
- Firstly how many shapes were made by each number
of squares? - Is there a pattern forming from the number of
squares? - Have we the right amount of shapes for the number
of squares or are there more? - Is there a pattern forming in the way we actually
make the shapes? - Perhaps there is a mathematical sum for working
this out. -
20A look at how many shapes can be made from1, 2,
3 4 ..squares
3
2
1
4
2 8 1
5
21A look at how many shapes can be made from6
..squares
3 13 16 2
22Investigating Shapes
- Is there a Pattern?
- Is there a multiplication pattern?
- Does the pattern have to do with Fibonaccis
sequence? - Does the amount of shapes in one number have
something to do with the next? - Do all even numbers have an odd amount of
shapes? - Does this mean anything?
23Are there any patterns forming from the number of
squares ?
- Because we had a pattern forming with 1,1,2,3,5,
we thought maybe the Fibonacci sequence, but this
was not the case - By looking ahead we are told that 7 squares gives
us 108 shapes, at that stage we thought the
pattern was 1,1,2,4,12 so we looked at maybe
3x412 - 3x1236
- 3x36108
24- But this attempt at a formula was also
unsuccessful, hence we concluded that there was
no pattern to this topic and looked at it from
another angle.
After considerable searching we came up with the
thought that it was similar to the TETRIS game.
25- This then headed our search in the direction of
polominos- - A polomino is a shape that is made when a
particular number of squares of the same size in
particular locations on a plane in a way that one
edge of each square matches to the edge of one of
the other squares. - 1 square is a monomino 1 configuration
- 2 squares is a domino 1 (we can relate this
word to the game dominos) - 3 squares is a triomino 2
- 4 squares is a tetromino 5 (we can relate this
to the tetris game) - 5 squares is a pentomino 12
- 6 squares is a hexomino 35
- 7 squares is a heptomino and this is the one that
makes 108 shapes.
26- A hexomino is as far as we went with the shape
making-
The following page shows all possible hexominoes
35 is the number of shapes here
27- The 20 hexominoes,coloured black, have no symmetry
- 6 hexominoes, coloured red, have an axis of
mirror symmetry aligned with the gridlines.
- 2 hexominoes, coloured green, have an axis of
mirror symmetry at 45 degrees to the gridlines.
- 5 hexominoes, coloured blue, have rotational
symmetry.
- 2 hexominoes, coloured purple, have two axes of
mirror symmetry, both aligned with the gridlines
28L
T
V
N
Z
X
F
P
W
Y
I
U
There are 12 shapes in the set of unique
pentomines, named T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z, F, I, L, P
and N. As a mnemonic device, we only need
remember the end of the alphabet TUVWXYZ and
the word FILiPiNO. This will make a set of
unique pentomines.
29Further Investigations
- Shapes Surrounded By Other shapes
- What shapes can be used as inner shapes which
layers of squares can be place around? - For a given inner shape can we predict the number
of squares needed for each successive layer
around it? - What if different inner shapes from the same
number of squares are used? - What about double layers?
30Shapes with layers squares
                Â
               Â
            Â
            Â
            Â
            Â
            Â
            Â
1 x 1
2 x 2
4 x 4
3 x 3
31Shapes with layers Squares
The number of squares in each layer of a square
surrounded by other squares
1 x 1
The difference between the number squares in the
first layer and the next layer is 8.
Therefore l2 l1 8
32Shapes with layers rectangles
1 x 1
1 x 2
            Â
            Â
            Â
            Â
            Â
2 x 3
2 x 4
1 x 3
33Shapes with layers Rectangles
The number of squares in each layer of a square
surrounded by other squares
1 x 3
The difference between the number squares in the
first layer and the next layer is 8.
Therefore l2 l1 8
34Shapes with layer Rectangles
1 x 1 8 outer squares 1 x 2 10 outer
squares 1 x 3 12 outer squares 1 x 4 14 outer
squares 1 x 5 16 outer squares 1 x 6 18 outer
squares 1 x 7 20 outer squares
2 x 3 14 outer squares 2 x 4 16 outer
squares 2 x 5 18 outer squares 2 x 6 20
outer squares 2 x 7 22 outer squares
3 x 4 18 outer squares 3 x 5 20 outer
squares 3 x 6 22 outer squares 3 x 7 24 outer
squares
Shapes with layer Squares
1 x 1 8 outer squares 2 x 2 12 outer
squares 3 x 3 16 outer squares 4 x 4 20 outer
squares 5 x 5 24 outer squares
35Problem Solving Process
- Draw a picture.
- Use a table.
- Guess and check.
- Look for a pattern.
- Make it simpler.
- Brainstorm.
36Problems We Found
- Knowing if we had the right amount of shapes.
- Drawing the same shape twice.
- There was no pattern to the polonimoes.
- Our eyes were going square!
37Reference
- http//encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/tetromin
o - www.google.com.au