a Balanced Curriculum for the 21st Century Throughout history the purposes and components of a school’s curriculum have incorporated a variety of elements. The goals of education have varied from creating a productive citizen to producing a respectful and moral person to generating a basic knowledge of subject areas to preparing the student for skilled employment. With the fast paced changes in technology in the 21st century the need for a meaningful and well-developed curriculum has come to
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ABSTRACT Prospective student teachers were required to choose a curriculum document from either the primary or secondary school sector for evaluation. They were required to conduct such an evaluation using the Daniel Stufflebeam’s CIPP (Context‚ Input‚ Process and Product) Model. The CIPP Model would be used to determine the usefulness of the curriculum in meeting the needs of the Trinidad and Tobago society. Based on possible weaknesses found in the document‚ prospective teachers were to
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Education Department S. Y. 2011-2012 Submitted by: JUSHABETH G. GARCERA BSEd-III Submitted to: DR. BELEN DOMINGUIANO Instructor FS4 Exploring the Curriculum FIELD STUDY ------------------------------------------------- Episode 1 ------------------------------------------------- LOOK DEEPER INTO THE CONCEPTS‚ NATURE AND PURPOSES OF THE CURRICULUM Name of FS Student Jushabeth G. Garcera________________________________ Course BSEd (Bachelor of Secondary Education Year & Section III___
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Brett Childers Coffman April 22‚ 2002 Curriculum Paper Curriculum‚ in my opinion‚ is the whole picture of education. It includes the teaching philosophy of a school and a teacher‚ the way the subject is taught in the classroom‚ the supplements used in assistance of teaching‚ the attitudes the school‚ the teachers and the administrators bring to the table‚ and the knowledge of the subject areas in the minds of the teachers. Curriculum can also be described as “a desired goal or set of
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Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Antonio Hogan Grantham University January 06‚ 2015 Abstract The hierarchy of needs is known for the theories of human motivation. Created by psychologist Abraham Maslow‚ the hierarchy of needs is often shown as a pyramid‚ with the more basic need at the bottom and the more complex need at the peak. The lowest-level are referred as the deficiency needs that are due to the lack of something and needs to be satisfied in order to avoid an unwanted feelings
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S. Austria Submitted by: Andadi‚ Glena Ray Ann Shermyn E. Chan‚ Jessica F. Kinomes‚ April Joy (7:30-11:45 Saturday) October 6‚ 2012 COMPARISON AND CONTRAST IN THE CURRICULUM OF THE UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS AND BENGUET STATE UNIVERSITY I.GRAPH II.OBSERVATION: | SUGGESTED CURRICULUM | UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS | BENGUET STATE UNIVERSITY | GENERAL EDUCATION | 63 | 71 | 63 | PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION | 51 | 57 | 57 | FIELD OF SPECIALIZATION | 60 | 60 | 57
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Introduction Curriculum has numerous definitions‚ which can be slightly confusing. In its broadest sense a curriculum may refer to all courses offered at a school. This is particularly true of schools at the university level‚ where the diversity of a curriculum might be an attractive point to a potential student. A curriculum may also refer to a defined and prescribed course of studies‚ which students must fulfill in order to pass a certain level of education. For example‚ an elementary school
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Pedagogy‚ Culture & SocietyAquatic Insects Vol. 19‚ No. 2‚ July 2011‚ 221–237 Whatever happened to curriculum theory? Critical realism and curriculum change Mark Priestley* School of Education‚ University of Stirling‚ Stirling‚ UK In the face of what has been characterised by some as a ‘crisis’ in curriculum – an apparent decline of some aspects of curriculum studies combined with the emergence of new types of national curricula which downgrade knowledge – some writers have been arguing for
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The hidden curriculum American Marxist economists and sociologists Bowles and Gintis (1976) believed that through education there is a “Hidden Curriculum” which helped to achieve the objectives of the capitalists. (To provide capitalists with a hardworking‚ subservient‚ docile and obedient work force.) The hidden curriculum consists of those things that pupils learn through the experience of attending school‚ not educational objectives. Bowles and Gintis state that the hidden curriculum shapes the
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questions the Namibian curriculum in light of Eisner’s statement. From Eisner ’s perspective the null curriculum is simply that which is not taught in schools. Somehow‚ somewhere‚ some people are empowered to make conscious decisions as to what is to be included and what is to be excluded from the overt (written) curriculum. Since it is physically impossible to teach everything in schools‚ many topics and subject areas must be intentionally excluded from the written curriculum. But Eisner ’s position
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