Curriculum Development Handout
Curriculum Development Handout
Curriculum Development Handout
I. CURRICULUM
What is Curriculum?
It is defined as the process of selecting, organizing, executing and evaluating the learning
experiences on the basis of the needs, abilities, and interest of learners, and on the basis of
A. School-based
1. LEARNERS
2. TEACHERS
3. SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS
B. Community-based
1. PARENTS
support and participate in parent-school organizations where priorities for the curriculum are set
2. PUBLISHERS
4. COMMUNITY-AT-LARGE
2. WRITER
content.
writes books, modules, laboratory manuals, instructional guides, and reference materials in paper or
electronic media
3. PLANNER
4. INITIATOR
Implements curriculum to the schools from DepEd, CHED, TESDA, UNESCO, UNICEF or other educational
agencies for improvement of quality education
Implementation of a new curriculum requires the open mindedness of the teacher, and the full belief that the
curriculum will enhance learning
5. INNOVATOR
Creativity and innovation are hallmarks of an excellent teacher. A curriculum is always dynamic, hence keeps
on changing
6. IMPLEMENTER
7. EVALUATOR
B. PHILOSOPHICAL FOUNDATION - influences the school’s goals or aims and content as well as the
organization of its curriculum.
TRADITIONAL PROGRESSIVE
1. INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPMENT
• certain subjects train the mind • liberal arts, sciences and practical arts
• ready-made experiences by written and develop the whole individual
spoken words • education conceived as instruction
• all subjects contribute to intellectual • liberal arts, sciences and practical arts
development develop the whole individual
• acting, acquiring meaning and problem-
solving • education conceive as creative self-learning
2. FUNCTIONED CITIZEN
• intellectual development makes for good • development of good morals and useful skills
Citizenship
• knowledge and discipline prepare pupil to • direct experience in democratic living
exercise freedom
3. LEARNERS AS INDIVIDUALS IN OUR SOCIETY
• follow traditional modes of learning with • develop own learning modes within a
prepared curriculum flexible curriculum
• homogenous grouping and special grouping • segregation of learner as undemocratic
• educated rigorously to accept roles in • educated to non conformity, individuality,
society creativeness
decisions
A. SOCIETAL INFLUENCES
B. SOCIETAL CHANGES
b. improved communication
d. population explosions
e. social mobility
f. value crisis
j. accountability
D. HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS - reflects the educational focus prevalent during a particular period or
HISTORICAL ERAS
A. TECHNICAL-SCIENTIFIC APPROACH - reflects the traditional view on education and formal methods of
I. Behavioral-Rational Approach
FRANKLIN BOBBIT
1. Started curriculum development movement
2. Prepares learners for adult life
3. Objectives and activities should group together when tasks are clarified
WERRET CHARTERS
1. Subject matter or content relates to objectives
2. Objectives and activities should match
WILLIAM KILPATRICK
1. Curricula are purposeful activities which are child-centered
2. Purpose of curriculum is child development
3. Introduced project method where teacher and student plan the activities
HAROLD RUGG
1. Curriculum develop the whole child
2. Produce outcomes
3. Teacher plans the curriculum in advance
HOLLIS CASWELL
1. Curriculum is organized around social functions
2. Instruction and learning are interrelated
3. A set of experience. Subject matter is developed around social functions and learning interests.
PETER OLIVA
1. Teachers and curriculum specialist constitute the professional core of planners.
2. Significant improvement is achieved through group activity
B. Non - Technical/ Non - Scientific Approach
encourages group learning activities which promote cooperation rather than individual competition
2. RECONCEPTUALIST APPROACH
reflects the existentialist orientation
purpose of education is to emancipate society from traditional, outmoded orders through individual free
choice
3. RECONSTRUCTIONISM
considers the school as an agent of change, an institution of social reform
emphasized cultural pluralism, internationalism and pluralism which are beyond individual concerns.
A. CURRICULUM
Involves:
1. situation analysis
3. budget determination,
3. grade placement
4. time allotment
5. sequence of content/activities
Answers :
1) what is to be done?;
4) What methods and instruments will be used to appraise the results of the curriculum?
B.1 Criteria for selecting content
3. INTEGRATION - brings to a close relationship all concepts, skills, and values contained in the curriculum, linking
of all types of knowledge and experiences contained within the curriculum plan.
4. UTILITY - helpful to student in coping with real life activities, usefulness of content
5. SCOPE - breadth of the curriculum at a given time or coverage.
6. INTEREST (LEARNABILITY) - easily learnable; adjustable to learner’s ability
7. CONTINUITY - recurrence and repetition of content and depth with a skill or content building on the preceding
ones
3. BALANCE appropriate weight be given to each aspects of the design so that distortions do not occur
4. ARTICULATION Interrelatedness of various aspects of the curriculum.
5. FOCUS content items that are more important to cover
C. CURRICULUM IMPLEMENTATION
curricula are used in schools
D. CURRICULUM EVALUATION
process of delineating, obtaining, and providing useful information for judging decision alternatives
Involves:
Involves:
3. Curriculum changes made at an earlier period of time can exist concurrently with newer curriculum changes
at a later period of time.
5. Curriculum change is effected as a result of cooperative endeavor in the part of the group.
10. The curriculum planners start from where the curriculum is, just as the teacher starts where the students
are.
More time allotted to the development of the basic skills specifically the 3r's especially in the lower grades
Greater emphasis on the development of intellectual skills which are as important as work skills
Health values development of competencies and values for social living reflected in the new dimension in
civics and culture for grades i and ii; civics and culture expanded to include history, geography and work ethics for
grade iii, and an in depth learning of history, geography and civics in grade iv to vi.
provides for the development of critical thinking, creativity, innovativeness and communicative competence.
ideal Filipino learners are empowered learners, who are competent in learning how to learn and have life
skills so that they become self-developed persons who are makabayan (patriotic), makatao (mindful of humanity),
makakalikasan (respectful of nature), and maka-Diyos (godly).
Functional literacy is the essential ability for lifelong learning in our dynamically changing world.
ideal teacher of the 2002 Curriculum is not the authoritarian instructor but the trustworthy facilitator or
manager of the learning process. She enables the learners to become active constructors of meaning and not passive
recipients of information.
ideal teaching-learning process is interactive where the learners, the teachers, instructional materials and
information technology interact with one another reciprocally.
Content-Based Instruction is the integration of the content of learning areas in language teaching. The 2002
Secondary Curriculum
Anchored on three interrelated academic goals: acquiring knowledge, understanding content, and
transferring or applying knowledge as it is understood.
Coming together of several teaching approaches and strategies such as higher order thinking
Level 2: NC II
Level 3: NC III
Level 4: NC IV
Level 5: Diploma
Marginalized students
Syllabus Written
guide
Course study
Heart of teaching
Forces preparationofT
GuideforT
instruction
Plan
CURRICULARIST
• Knower
• Implementor
• Writer
• Initiator
• Planner
• Innovator
• Evaluator
1. SOCIETAL
• Develop
• Politicians
• Prof.Groups
• Administrators
2. INSTITUTIONAL
Modification
Local Educator
Lay People
3. INSTRUCTIONAL
Teachers’ Methods
Based of T’s Philos/Perspective
2. Written
3. Taught
4. Supported
5. Learned
6. Assessed
7. Hidden
8. Separated
CURRICULUM DESIGN
1. SUBJECT-CENTERED
Subject
Discipline
Correlated
Fused
Broad field
SPIRAL
MASTERY
OPEN EDUCATION
- Allowed to discover
PROBLEM SOLVING
- Guided to discovery
FEATURES
Focus:
Rigid
Central Task :
Uniformity of exposures
What : Subject
2. LEARNER-CENTERED
o Process
Experience
Activity
Child-centered
Humanistic
PWD (Non-discriminatory)
-With Exceptionalities
FEATURES
Flexible
3. PROBLEM-BASED
Life-situations
Core
(social function)
-reflective thinking
Concerns FEATURES
ASSESSMENT
K – Checklist / portfolio reported to parents
REPORTING
Outstanding
Very Satisfactory
Satisfactory
Fairly Satisfactory
Did not meet expectations
INCLUSIVE K2
• PGT
• PCSN
• Madrasa
• IP Education Program
• Programs for Learners under Difficult Circumstances
GUIDING PRINCIPLES
LID
RRR
GCS
CG
CIRCI
MTB-MLE
SPA
Flexible
Learner Centered, Relevant, responsive Research base Gender and Culture Sensitive Contextualized
and global
Constructive, Inquiry based, Reflective, Collaborative Integrative
MTB-MLE a kind of formal or non formal that starts from
known to unknown
Spiral
Flexible
PHASES
2013 - RA10533
SY 2012-2013 - Kindergarten
SY 2016-2017 - Grade 11
SY 2017-2018 - Grade 12
2018 Graduates
STRUCTURE
1. Kindergarten
2. Elementary-Secondary
3. JHS
4. SHS
CHARACTERISTICS
1. Stronger Early Childhood Education
2. Relevant Curriculum
3. Building skills through the use of Second language and Mother tongue
• Follows a process
-Syllabus
• Accessible
-Anywhere - anytime
• Sponsors a seminar workshop for teachers and admins on the use latest
the learning experiences and intended outcomes formulated through systematic reconstruction of
knowledge and experiences, under the auspices of the school for the learners’ continuous and willful growth in
personal-social competence; the cumulative tradition of organized knowledge (Tanner, D. and Tanner, L.)
the sum total of all learning content, experiences and resources that are purposely selected, organized and
implemented by the school in pursuit of its peculiar mandate as a distinct institution of learning and human
development.
that what is taught in school; set of subjects, materials and performance objectives;
everything that goes on within the school, including extra-class activities, guidance and
The planned and guided learning experiences and intended learning outcomes,
under the auspices of the school, for the learners’ continuous and willful growth in
3. Distinguish the roles of stakeholders in the delivery of the curriculum For Educational
Technology
6. Apply principles in the preparation and utilization of the conventional and non-
SOCIETAL LEVEL OF CURRICULUM–the farthest from the learners since this is where the
public stakeholders (politicians, special interest groups, administrators, professional
INSTITUTIONAL LEVEL OF CURRICULUM – refers to the curriculum derived from the societal
level, with modification by local educators or lay people; often organized according to
subjects and includes topics and themes to be studied; may also include standards,
materials used.
student and may, therefore, vary among learners because of individual differences.
SUBJECT DESIGN: the oldest and so far the most familiar design for teachers, parents and
other laymen; easy to deliver since complementary books are written and support
instructional materials are commercially available; teachers are familiar with the
format because they were also educated using the design; the drawback of this design
DISCIPLINE DESIGN (Separate/Single Subject): related to the subject design, but it focuses
only on academic discipline (or organized subject matter area) which is referred to
specific knowledge learned through a method which the scholars use to study a
specific content of their fields; teachers should teach how the scholars in the discipline
will convey the particular knowledge. It is often use in the college in which discipline
CORRELATED DESIGN: comes from a core, correlated curriculum that links separate
subject design in order to reduce fragmentation, isolation or compartmentalization,
that is, subjects in two or more areas are related in content and time: maybe factual
(facts relate subjects), descriptive, normative, but the subject identities remain
literature may be corrected with history of a given era; when science subject becomes
the core Mathematics is related to it, as they are taken in chemistry, physics and
biology).To use this design, teachers should come together and plan their lessons
cooperatively.
FUSED SUBJECTS: similar to correlated subjects but the individual identity of each subject
is lost (example: social studies, which is a combination of geography, and culture,
history; Language arts, where reading, speaking, listening and writing are all taught)
chemistry and Physics). It combines two or more related subjects into a single broad
field of study like Language Arts combines the separate but related subjects of
experiences.
SPIRAL CURRICULUM: A spiral concept of the curriculum provides for both horizontal
(widening of knowledge) and vertical (deepening of knowledge) aspects of the
curriculum design simultaneously. It recognizes that students are not ready to learn
certain concepts until they reach the required level of development and maturity and
have the necessary experiences; some topics treated with corresponding degree of
cooperative planning
(ex. Group projects).It is anchored on the needs and interests of the child; the learner
is not considered as a passive individual but as one who engages with his/her
environment; one learns by doing; learners interact with the teachers and the
needs of learners cannot be pre-planned; learners are made to choose from various
activities that the teacher provides; the learners are empowered to shape their own
learning from the different opportunities given by the teacher; the activities revolve
etc.; hence, the emergence of multiple intelligence theory blends well in this design.
planning, etc.); emphasizes development of skills and traits that will serve the learner
for life; there is a higher degree of carry-over into everyday living experiences than in
also is the development of positive self-concept and interpersonal skills; the concept of
LIFE-SITUATIONS DESIGN (Social Process and Life Functions-Focused): uses the past and
present experiences of the learners as a means to analyze the basic areas of living; the
pressing immediate problems of the society and the students’ existing concerns are
utilized; focuses heavily on society, that is, social processes, functions, or problems
become the center for the design of the curriculum. Centers around major cultural life
activity of mankind; based on analysis of life activities; relates learners and society;
uses experiential learning and social process approach; structured around the various
society. A major goal is the improvement of society through the direct involvement of
the schools.
CORE (SOCIAL FUNCTION): focuses on the set of learning experiences that are felt to be
essential for all students that includes common needs, problems, concerns; centers on
general education and the problems are based on common human activities; its
PHILOSOPHIES:
1. SOCIOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS
- Society and culture relate to curriculum in the sense that they are part of the bases and
sources of many curriculum matters and decisions. Whatever changes there are in them,
The societal changes/forces affect the school, and hence, the curriculum: these
2. PHILOSOPHICAL FOUNDATIONS
- Philosophy is the starting point in any curriculum decision making and is the basis for all
becomes the criteria for determining the aims, selection, organization and implementation of
the curriculum in the classroom and the school in general; the schools’ underlying beliefs and
values have impact on curriculum content and choices of appropriate strategies activities in
implementing the curriculum. Philosophy helps us answer the general questions such as:
“What are schools for?”, “What subjects are of value?”, “How should students learn the
content?”
form.
highest form
choice
subject matter
3. HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS:
- The historical foundation of curriculum reflects the educational focus prevalent during a
particular period or event in Philippine history. This focus could be made basis or model for
PERIOD CHARACTERISTICS
centralized
and punishment
NEW SOCIETY Focused on national development goals; manpower training; high level professions; self
actualization
FOURTH REPUBLIC Focused on promotion of the rights of all citizens to quality education
4. EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHY
middle age
What we know?
CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT B
WRITTEN CURRICULUM
-All paper works and documents done by the teacher.
ASSESSED CURRICULUM
-These are the assessments that are tested and evaluated to determine if there is progress in learning.
-example ( Pencil and paper test, Performative assessment and Authentic assessments )
SUPPORTED CURRICULUM
-resources like textbooks, computers, audio-visual materials, which support and help in the implementation of
the curriculum.
HIDDEN CURRICULUM
- unintended curriculum but plays a vital role in learning.
-peer influence, school environment, physical condition and many factors made up the hidden curriculum.
LEARNED CURRICULUM
-learning outcomes of students which are indicated by the results of the tests.
TAUGHT CURRICULUM
-planned activities which are put into action in the classroom. This is done by the teacher.
RECOMMENDED CURRICULUM
-curriculum that may come from a national agency like DepEd, CHED, DOST or any professional organization
and stakeholders.
KNOWER
-Has mastery of curriculum content
INITIATOR
-Open-mindedness and full belief in the implementation of new curriculum
WRITER
-published books, author
INNOVATOR
-Creates Out-of-the box changes in the curriculum , creativeness
PLANNER
-Makes daily, monthly or yearly curriculum plan.
FACTORS TO CONSIDER:
1. Objectives
2. Learner
3. Learner's context
4. Content
5. Time
6. Material
IMPLEMENTER
-Gives life to curriculum plan -Teaching, guiding, facilitating skills at highest level
EVALUATOR
-Conducts assessment to know if desired objectives are achieved
PLANNING
-Advanced arrangement of learning opportunities for learners is created.
ORGANIZING
-Sequencing of the content
IMPLEMENTING
-Putting the written curriculum into action
EVALUATING
-Assessment of achievement of the specified curriculum objectives
MONITORING
-Determines if the curriculum is still relevant and effective and if there are aspects of curriculum to be
retained, improved or modified
CHANGE/IMPROVEMENT
-Making revisions in the existing curriculum .
IV. DIMENSIONS OF CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT (BASICS)
BALANCE
-Appropriate weight to be given to each aspect of design
-fairness
ARTICULATION
-Interrelatedness of different aspects of curriculum
SCOPE
-Breadth and depth of content
INTEGRATION
-Linking all knowledge and experience with the curriculum
CONTINUITY
-Vertical repetition of curriculum content
SEQUENCE
-Local arrangement of content
V. CURRICULUM REFORMS
desired result rather than the traditional method of constructing the curricula.
-Stage 3 of the backward design of the UbD-Based curriculum is when a teacher would
1. Explore
2. Firm-up
3. Deepen
4. Transfer
● Be globally competitive.
The K-12 Career Tracks are Academic Track, Technical-Vocational Track, Sports track and Arts and Design
Track.
ACADEMIC TRACK has the following strands: General Academic, ABM (Accountancy,
Business and Management), STEM (Science, Technology and Engineering and Mathematics
- Through UNIVERSAL KINDERGARTEN, every Filipino child now has access to early childhood
education.
- With K-12 children begin SCHOOL AT THE AGE OF FIVE and are given the tools they need to
ENHANCEMENT.
-SPIRAL CURRICULUM shows progression and ensures integrated and seamless learning
which ensures mastery of knowledge and skills after each level.
VII.
TRENDS IN CURRICULUM
● Encourage the development of qualifications frameworks that can facilitate lifelong learning
-7 domains
-4 career stages
-37 strands
CAREER STAGES
5. Strategies for developing critical and creative thinking, as well as other higher-order thinking skills
5. Use of assessment data to enhance teaching and learning practices and programs
2. Engagement of parents and the wider school community in the educative process
3. Professional ethics
-Its objective is to establish national standards and levels of qualifications to assist andsupport academic and
worker mobility and to address job skills mismatch.
-It outlines what an individual has learned and can do based on qualification type, levels and degrees of
competency.
CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT
CURRICULUM - totality of student experiences
CURRICULUM PERSPECTIVES
A. PROGRESSIVE
JOHN DEWEY
-Believes that education is experiencing
-Reflective thinking is a means to unify curricular elements that are tested by application
B. TRADITIONAL
ROBERT HUTCHINS
-views curriculum as permanent studies
ARTHUR BESTOR
-mission of the school should be intellectual training on disciplines of grammar, literature and writing
PHILLIP PHENIX
-Curriculum should consist entirely of knowledge which comes from various disciplines
1. Objectives
2. Subject Matter
3. Learning Activity
4. Evaluation
5. Assignment
LEVELS OF CURRICULUM
Balanced
Articulation
Scope
Integration
Continuity
Sequence
1. SUBJECT-CENTERED
a. Subject
b. Discipline
c. Correlation
d. Broad Field
2. LEARNER-CENTERED
a. Child-centered
b. Experience-centered
c. Humanistic
3. PROBLEM-CENTERED
a. Life-Situations
b. Core Problem