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    Structure and Development of Curriculum. ‘Australia’s future depends upon each citizen having the necessary knowledge‚ understanding‚ skills and values for a productive and rewarding life in an educated‚ just and open society’ (Brady & Kennedy 2007) these skills‚ values and knowledge are gained throughout the early years of individual’s lives as they attend schools. The Australian Government ensures that all schools develop students in the appropriate manner by deriving a national curriculum by which

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    and uncertainty as to ¡¥what is the curriculum?¡¦ As such‚ there is a distributing lack of consensus on an all-embracing definition of this comprehensive concept. This is‚ in part‚ due to the various interpretations‚ meanings‚ emphasis and approaches that the scholars of curriculum studies embark upon. This‚ in turn‚ leaves the education practitioners and the general public in the dark as to what constitutes that which should be considered as ¡¥good curriculum practice¡¦ in educational institutions

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    THE CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT PROCESS Curriculum development has no beginning nor end‚ and there is no perfect product for the final curriculum document. Scales (1985) wrote that “in actual practice‚ development and implementation of the curriculum is an integral phenomenon developed in a very integrated and interrelating manner; one component‚ not necessarily springing full grown and naturally from another‚ nor will any single component usually stand without some revision after subsequent parts are

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    not realize was how much was involved in the development of curriculum and the extent to which it has changed in such a short time. It has always been my perception that teachers knew the subjects they taught and that their knowledge was transferred to the students. I had not given much thought to the many other factors that a teacher is responsible for. I now understand that there are many elements involved in planning and implementing a curriculum for each class taught. I am amazed at the magnitude

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     MODELS OF CURRICULUM Mrutyunjaya Mishra Lecturer‚ H.I  2. The Word: Curriculum • Latin: Running course • Scotland 1603: Carriage way‚ road • United States 1906: Course of study • United States‚ 1940: Plan for learning (study)  3. What is curriculum? Curriculum is a design PLAN for learning that requires the purposeful and proactive organization‚ sequencing‚ and management of the interactions among the teacher‚ the students‚ and the content knowledge we want students to acquire.  4

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    MODULE 5 Models in Curriculum Development INTRODUCTION Curriculum development is concerned with the drawing up of plans for teaching and learning activities in classroom situations that will bring about positive changes in the lives of the learners. It is based on the school’s mission and goals and identifies ways of translating these into a coherent and coordinated program of meaningful experiences and conditions eliciting responses that will lead to the transformation of the learners

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    2. The Taba Model Hilda Taba’s model starts with the curriculum and the teacher’s outlook of what should be taught how‚ and then tests it on the students before declaring it effective. Therefore‚ she believed that teachers who teach or implement the curriculum should participate more than the authority in designing and developing curriculum. She used “grass root approach in her model. So she believed that the teachers should first create specific teaching- learning units‚ and a hospitable environment

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    quality teaching can be achieved and maintained. a. Teaching Model and Principles This book has emphasized the curriculum as a network of interacting system involving teacher‚ learners‚ materials‚ school‚ administrator‚ and curriculum planners‚ and choices ay one level affect other elements in the system. Thus the choice of a particular curriculum philosophy or ideology implies a particular model of teaching. Roberts (1998‚ 103) compares two teaching models implicit in many language

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    INTRODUCTION: The next stage in the curriculum development process according to Tyler‚ Taba and Alexander & Saylor is the implementation of the curriculum plan. The final destination of any curriculum (whether it be a school‚ college‚ university or training organisation) is the classroom involving students‚ teachers‚ administrators and the community. Implementing the curriculum is the most crucial and sometimes the most difficult phase of the curriculum development process. In this unit will focus

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    A REFLECTION ON THE REPORTS Submitted to: RITZCEN A. DURANGO‚ PH. D Submitted by: APIPA U. MASNAR Supervision of Instruction and Curriculum Development 1. THE NATURE OF LEARNING(the learner/multiple intelligence) The theory of multiple intelligences is a theory of intelligence that differentiates it into specific (primarily sensory) "modalities"‚ rather than seeing intelligence as dominated by a single general ability. This model was proposed by Howard Gardner in his 1983 book Frames

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