Curriculum Development Keywords1




1. ESSENTIALISM
 ðŸ’šThe teacher is the sole athourity in her subject area or field of specialization
 ðŸ’šExcellence in education ,back to basics and cultural literacy

2. PERENNIALISM
 ðŸ’šTeachers help students think with reason based on socratic methods of oral exposition or recitation ,explicit or deliberate teaching of traditional values
 ðŸ’šUse of great books and return to liberal arts

3. PROGRESSIVSM
 ðŸ’šSubjects are interdisciplinary,integrative and interactive
 ðŸ’šCurriculum is focused on students interest,human problems and affairs
 ðŸ’šSchool reforms ,relevant and contextualized curriculum,humanistic education

4. RECONSTRUCTIONISM
 ðŸ’šTeacher act as agents of change and reform in various educational projects including research
 ðŸ’šEquality of educational opportunities in education,access to global education

5. CURRICULUM
a. It is based on students needs and interest
b. It is always related to instruction
c. Subject matter is organized in terms of knowledge ,skills and values
d.the process emphazise problem solving
e. Curriculum aims to educate generalist and not specialist

6. BEHAVIORIST PSYCHOLOGY
 ðŸ’šLearning should be organized so that students can experience success in the process of mastering the subject matter

7. COGNITIVE PSYCOLOGY
 ðŸ’šLearning constitutes a logical method for organizing and interpreting learning

8. HUMANISTIC PSYCHOLOGY
 ðŸ’šCurriculum is concerned with the process not the products
 ðŸ’špersonal needs not subject matter
 ðŸ’špsychological meanings and environmental situations

9. SOCIAL FOUNDATION OF CURRICULUM
 ðŸ’šSociety as ever dynamic,is a source of very fast changes which are difficult to cope with

10. PHILOSOPHICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL FOUNDATION OF CURRICULUM
 ðŸ’šHelps in answering what school are for ,what subject are important, how students should learn,and what materials and methods should be used

11. HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM
 ðŸ’šShows different changes in the purposes ,principles and content of the curriculum

12. GOOD CURRICULUM
 ðŸ’šComplements and cooperates with other programs of the community
 ðŸ’šProvides for the logical sequence of subject matter
 ðŸ’šContinuosly involving
 ðŸ’šComplex of detail

13. WRITTEN CURRICULUM
 ðŸ’šTeacher Charisse implements or delivers her lessons in the classroom based on a curriculum that appear in school,district or division documents

14. RECOMMENDED CURRICULUM
 ðŸ’šProposed by schoolars and professional organization

15. HIDDEN CURRICULUM 
 ðŸ’šUnintended curriculum which is not deliberately planned but may modify behavior or influence learning outcomes

16. TAUGHT CURRICULUM
 ðŸ’šTeachers implement or deliver in the classrooms or schools

17. OBJECTIVES
 ðŸ’šImplement or component of the curriculum provides the bases for the selection of content and learning experience which also set the criteria against which learning outcomes will be evaluated

18. LEARNING EXPERIENCE
 ðŸ’šWhat instructional strategies resources and activities will be employed

19. CONTENT 
 ðŸ’šWhat subject matter is to be included

20. EVALUATION APPROACHES
 ðŸ’šWhat methods and instruments will be used to asses the results of curriculum

21. INTEREST 
 ðŸ’šA learner will value the content or subject matter if it is meaningful to him/her

22. SIGNIFICANCE
 ðŸ’šWhen content or subject matter will contribute the basic ideas,concepts,principles and generalization to achieve the overall aim of the curriculum then it is significant

23. LEARNABILITY
 ðŸ’šSubject matter is the curriculum should be within the range of the experience of the learners

24. UTILITY
 ðŸ’šUsefulness of the content or subject matter may be relative to the learner who is going to use it.

25. LEARNING CONTENT OF A CURRICULUM
 ðŸ’šFrequently and commonly used in daily life
 ðŸ’šSuited to the maturity levels and abilities of students
 ðŸ’šValuable in meeting the needs and the competences of a future career

26. LEARNING EXPERIENCES
 ðŸ’šElements or components of the curriculum includes instructional strategies and methods that put in action the goals and use the contents in order to produce the outcome

27. AIMS,GOAL and OBJECTIVES
 ðŸ’šThey provide the bases for the selection of learning content and learning experiences
 ðŸ’šThey also set the criteria against which learning outcomes will be evaluated

28. SUBJECT MATTER/CONTENT
 ðŸ’šIt is the compendium of facts ,concepts,generalization,principles and theories.
 ðŸ’šIt is individuals personal and social world and how he or she defines reality

29. EVALUATION APPROACHES
 ðŸ’šRefer to the formal determination of the quality,effectiveness or value of the program,process and product of the curriculum

30. INPUT
 ðŸ’šIn the CIPP Model by Stufflebeam the goals,instructional strategies ,the learners ,the teachers the content and all materials needed in the curriculum

31. CONTEXT
 ðŸ’šReferes to the environment of the curriculum or the real situation where the curriculum is operating

32. PROCESS
 ðŸ’šRefers to the ways and means of how the curriculum has been implemented

33. PRODUCT
 ðŸ’šIndicates if the curriculum accomplishes its goal

34. HILDA TABA
 ðŸ’šGrassroots approach-teachers who teach or implement the curriculum should participate in developing it

35. RALPH TYLERS MODEL of CURRICULUM
 ðŸ’šPurpose of the school
 ðŸ’šEducational experience related to the purpose
 ðŸ’šOrganization of the experience
 ðŸ’šEvaluatiom of the experience

36. PLANNING PHASE in curriculum development
 ðŸ’šThe needs of the learners
 ðŸ’šThe achievable goals and objectives to meet the needs
 ðŸ’šThe selection of the content to be taught
 ðŸ’šThe motivation to carry out the goals
 ðŸ’šThe strategies most fit to carry out the goals
 ðŸ’šThe evaluation process to measure learning outcomes

37. IMPLEMENTATION PHASE in curriculum develoment
 ðŸ’šRequires the teacher to implement what has been planned

38. EVALUATION PHASE in curriculum development
 ðŸ’šA match of the objectives with the learning outcomes will be made

39. CHILD CENTERED DESIGN
 ðŸ’šDesign model in developing curriculuk is attributed to Dewey,Rouseau,Pestallozi and Froebel
 ðŸ’šCurriculum is ancored on the needs and interest of child

40. HUMANISTIC DESIGN
 ðŸ’šAbraham Mashlow and Carl Rogers
 ðŸ’šwho said the development of the self is the ultimate objective of learning

41. EXPERIENCE CENTERED DESIGN
 ðŸ’šExperiemces of the learners become the starting point of the curriculum

42. PROBLEM CENTERED DESIGN
 ðŸ’šDraws on social problems ,needs,interestand abilities of the learners

43. MANAGERIAL APPROACH
 ðŸ’šSchool principal is the curriculum leader and at the same time instructional leader

44. SYSTEM APPROACH
 ðŸ’šInfluenced by system theory,where the parts of total school district or school are determined in terms of how they related to each other

45. BEHAVIORAL APPROACH
 ðŸ’šChagce of behavior indicates the measure of the accomplishment

46. HUMANISTIC APPROACH
 ðŸ’šConsider the whole child
 ðŸ’šbelieves that in a curriculum the total developmemt of the individual is the prime consideration
 ðŸ’šThe learner is the center of the curriculum

47. SYSTEMS APPROACH
 ðŸ’šThe organizational chart of the school shows the line staff relationships of personnel and how decision are made

48. PROCESS OF FEEDBACK AND REFLECTION
 ðŸ’šTo give information as to whether the three phases were appropriately done and gave good results

49. EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY'S ROLE
 ðŸ’šUpgrading the quality of teaching and learning in school
 ðŸ’šIncreasing the capability of the teacher to effectively inculcate learning and for students to gain mastery of lessons and courses
 ðŸ’šBroadening the delivery of education outside school through non traditional approaches to normal and informal learning such as open universities and lifelong learning to adult learners

50. CURRICULUM ASSESSMENT
 ðŸ’šTeacher gathers information about his students know and can do.

51. PILOT TESTING
 ðŸ’šA process of gathering empirical data to support wheter tje material or the curriculum is useful,relevant,reliable and valid

52. MONITORING
 ðŸ’šA periodic assessment and adjusment during the try out period

53. CURRICULUM EVALUATION
 ðŸ’šSystematic process of judging the value effectiveness and adequacy of a curriculum
 ðŸ’šprocess of obtaining informationfor judging the worth of educational program,product,procedure ,educational objectives or the potential utility orlf alternative approaches design to attain specified objects

54. CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT
 ðŸ’šThe process of selecting organizing executing and evaluating the learning experience on the basis of the needs abilities and interest of the learners and on the basis of the nature of the society or community for the possibilities of improving the teaching learning situation

55. CURRICULUM DESIGN
 ðŸ’šFocuses on the content and porpuses of the curicculum

56. BACKWARD DESIGN (UbD-Based curriculum)
 ðŸ’šStage 1:IDENTIFYING RESULTS/DESIRED OUTCOMES
 ðŸ‘‰Content/Performance standard
 ðŸ‘‰Essential understanding
 ðŸ‘‰Objevtives-KSA
 ðŸ‘‰Essential Question

 ðŸ’šStage 2:DEFINING ACCEPTABLE EVIDENCE/ASSESSMENT
 ðŸ‘‰Assessment-Product
 ðŸ‘‰Performance
 ðŸ‘‰Assessment criteria/tools
 ðŸ‘‰Six facets of understanding
 ðŸ‘‡
Explain
Interpret
Apply
Perspective
Empathy
Self knowledge

 ðŸ’šStage 3:LEARNING PLAN/INSTRUCTION
 ðŸ‘‰Explore
 ðŸ‘‰Firm up
 ðŸ‘‰Deepen
 ðŸ‘‰Transfer

57. K-12 CURRICULUM
 ðŸ‘‰1. Universal Kindergarten
 ðŸ‘‰2. Contextualization and Enhancement
 ðŸ‘‰3. Spiral Progression
 ðŸ‘‰4. Mother Tounge-Based Multilingual Education
 ðŸ‘‰5. Senior High School
 ðŸ‘‰6. College and Livelihood readiness,21st Century Skills

58. MEDIUM OF INSTRUCTION RATIONALIZED
 ðŸ’šPresident Aquinos 10 ways to fix Phil education refers to the use of mother tounge as a medium of instruction from pre-school to grade 3

59. EVERY CHILD A READER BY GRADE 1
 ðŸ’šBy the end of SY 2015-2016 every child passing preschool must be reader by grade 1

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