Title: Curriculum Making The What, Who, and Why
1Curriculum MakingThe What, Who, and Why
2Three Traditional Approaches to Curriculum
Development
- Curriculum as Process
- Curriculum as Praxis
- Curriculum as Product
31949 Movement to a Scientific Approach to
Curriculum Making
4Ralph W. TylerRational-Linear Approach
5Ralph W. Tyler
- 1949 became the most prominent name in
curriculum studies - Advocated the evaluation of student behaviors to
determine education failure or success
6Ralph W. Tyler
- Theory is called the dominant model of the
twentieth century - Wrote Basic Principles of Curriculum and
Instruction
7Four Fundamental Questions in Designing Curriculum
- 1. What educational purposes should the school
seek to attain? - 2.What educational experiences can be provided
that are likely to attain these purposes?
8Four Fundamental Questions in Designing Curriculum
- 3. How should learning experiences be organized.
- 4. How can we determine whether these purposes
are being attained?
9Tyler never suggested what the aims or objectives
should be! He did not advocate a particular
curriculum.
10In Tylers view, each school has own set of
values and these are imbedded in the curriculum
of that school.
11Therefore, he proposed that a school develop a
statement of educational philosophy and it be
used to screen the objectives that were developed.
12Controversy over term Objectives
- Tyler used term objectives and suggested we
start with defining our objectives Today these
would be called outcomes - Many thought in behavioral objective terms rather
than goals or aims
13Tyler did advocate the use of objectives and
behavioral objectives have become the cornerstone
of curriculum decision-making and teaching
strategies.
14Since the real purpose of education is not to
have the instructor perform certain activities
but to bring about significant changes in the
students' pattern of behaviour, it becomes
important to recognize that any statements of
objectives of the school should be a statement of
changes to take place in the students. (Tyler
1949 44)
15Tyler in a Nutshell
- State objectives
- Select learning activities
- Organize learning activities
- Develop evaluation
16So, if you have to write daily objectives or
outcomes, thank Ralph W. Tyler
17Criticism
- Focus on objectives
- Many suggest that we start with ideas and beliefs
- Students are not included in process
- Learning can be organized
18John Franklin Bobbitt
19John Bobbitt
- Advocated education that was useful for promoting
society - Advocate of vocational education
- Questioned the need for many traditional courses
20John Franklin Bobbitt
- "As agencies of social progress, schools should
give efficient service. And efficient service,
we are nowadays coming to know, is service
directed, not by guess or whim or special
self-interest, but by science." (Kliebard, p
101)
21John Goodlad
22John Goodlad three levels of curriculum making
- Instructional
- Decisions made by teachers and students
23John Goodlad three levels of curriculum making
- Institutional
- School, school district, state
24John Goodlad three levels of curriculum making
- Societal
- Money supplied by citizens
25 Michael Apple
26Michael Apple
- Each new generation learns the social patterns
and power relations of the prior one - We learn to be part of the system and our proper
role
27Michael Apple
- Knowledge is cultural capital
- Often done through hidden curriculum
28Decker WalkerDeliberative Approach
29Decker Walker
- One of the authors of your textbook
- Studied the process of curriculum development
30Decker Walker
- Used term naturalistic because he described how
curriculum was actually developed rather than how
it should be developed.
31Curriculum Planning has Three Parts
- Platform approach the task with our ideas,
convictions, and beliefs. Everyone gets an
opportunity to talk, discuss, and even argue
32Curriculum Planning has Three Parts
- Deliberation Move away from individual beliefs
to assessing possible points of action- Feelings
can run high and the process can seem chaotic
33Curriculum Planning has Three Parts
- Design Group achieves consensus so that a
course of action is accepted.
34Walkers Model
35Criticism of Walkers Model
- Studied only large scale processes not
individual teachers - Doesnt address what happens after curriculum is
designed and implemented
36Elliott W. EisnerArtistic Approach
37Believes in artistry of teaching and helping
teachers develop that art
- Suggests that process of curriculum development
is convoluted, circuitous, and adventitious
38Eisners Seven Step Approach
- 1. Goals and their priorities
- Does not think it is always possible to define
specific objectives
39Eisners Seven Step Approach
- Content of the Curriculum
- Consider the needs of individual students,
society, and subject matter
40Eisners Seven Step Approach
- Types of Learning Opportunities -
- education imagination must come into play in
order to transform goals and contents into events
that will have educational consequences for
students
41Eisners Seven Step Approach
- 4. Organization of Learning Opportunities Like
a spider web suggest that learning is not
linear
42Eisners Seven Step Approach
- 5. Organization of Content Areas
- Emphasis on cross-curricular organization of
content
43Eisners Seven Step Approach
- 6. Mode of Presentation and Mode of Response
suggests a wide variety of modes of presentation
to meet various learning styles
44Eisners Seven Step Approach
- Types of Evaluation Procedures
- Not viewed as final step but viewed as something
pervades the entire process.