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IMPLEMENTING
THE
CURRICULUM
Chapter III
Intesar T. Aba-Conding
Ph.D Science Education Student
No curriculum should
stop planning or
designing phase,
it has to be
IMPLEMENTED
Module 4
The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
• You will put action to what has
been planned and designed.
• You who will add more meaning
to the various activities in the
classroom – teaching styles
• You have to make the day of the
learners
– INTERESTING,
– ENGAGING,
– and UNFORGETTABLE.
Module 4
The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
• In the teaching and learning process, the
other side of the coin is the TEACHER.
• Planning and writing the curriculum are the
PRIMARY ROLES of the teacher.
• A teacher is a CURRICULUM MAKER. He/she
writes curriculum daily through a lesson
plan, unit plan or yearly plan.
• The teachers prepare activities for the
students to do.
Module 4
The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
• The teacher addresses the goals,
needs, interests, of the learners by
creating experiences from where the
students can learn.
• The teacher designs, enriches and
modifies the curriculum to suit the
learner’s characteristics.
Module 4
The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
• As a curriculum developer, teachers are part of
textbooks committees, faculty selection boards,
school evaluation committee or textbook writers
themselves.
• A developed curriculum remains inactive, if it is not
implemented.
• At this point, teachers’ role shifts from a developer
to an implementer. From a designer or technician to
a decision maker.
Module 4
The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
• Being an implementer is very
crucial.
• Oftentimes, unsuccessful
implementation of the
curriculum becomes the root of
the educational failure, thus
some would say that the ROOT
OF THE DUCATIONAL PROBLEM
IS THE TEACHER
Module 4
The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
Following the 3 curriculum
models, the next step is
curriculum implementing.
This is the phase where
teacher action takes
place.
It is one of the most
crucial processes in
curriculum development
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
 Ornstein and Hunkins in 1998 defined curriculum
implementation as interaction between the curriculum that has
been written and planned and the persons (Teachers) who are
in charged to deliver it. To them, curriculum implementation
implies the following:
 Shift from what is the current to a new or enhanced curriculum.
 Change in knowledge, actions, attitudes of the persons involved.
 Change in behavior using new strategies and resources.
 Change which requires efforts hence goals should be achievable.
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
• Loucks and Leiberman (1983)
– Define curriculm implementation as the trying
out os anew practice and what it looks like
when actually used in acshool system.
– It simply means that implementation should
bring the desired change and development.
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
Curriculum Implementation
• Means putting into practice the written
curriculum that has been designed in syllabi,
course of study, curricular guides, and subjects.
• It is a process wherein the learners acquire the
planned or intended knowledge, skills, and
attitudes that are aimed at enabling the same
learners to function in the society. (SADC MoE
Africa, 2000)
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
• In the classroom context
– Curriculum implementation means “teaching”
what has been written in the lesson plan.
– Implementing means using the plan as a
guide to engage with the learners in the
teaching-learning process.
– Involves the different strategies of teaching
with the support instructional materials to go
with the strategy.
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
• In a larger scale
– Curriculum implementation means putting the
curriculum into operation with the different
implementing agents.
– Takes place in a class, a school, a district, a division,
or the whole educational system
– Happens for the course, a degree program, the
institution
– Requires time, money, personal interaction, personal
contacts and support.
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
Kurt Lewin (1951)
 as the father of social
psychology explains the
process
of change.
 The model can be used
to explain curriculum
change and
implementation
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
Concept of Change
• Change is a constant law of nature. It bring
improvements.
• Change is an ongoing process.
• Not all changes lead to improvement, but all
improvement requires change.
• The ability to develop, test, and implement
changes is essential for any individual, group, or
organization that wants to continuously improve.
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
Features of Change
• It’s a PROCESS not an EVENT
• It requires time, energy and resources.
• It is achieved incrementally and entails
development in feelings and skills.
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
• Process of curriculum change
– may be assisted by permissiveness and support
in accordance of with a helpful improvement in
curriculum.
– Changing curriculum changes individuals.
– It must be necessary in consideration that the
resources of implementation of curriculum are
available or not.
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
• There are always two forces that oppose each other.
These are the DF and RF.
• When these two forces are equal, the state is
equilibrium or balance.
• There will be status qou, hence there will be no change
.
• The situation or condition will stay the same.
• However, when the DF overpowers the RF, then change
will occur.
• If the opposite happens, change is prevented. This is
the idea of kurt Lewin in his force field theory
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
• The illustration below shows that there are DF on the left
and RF on the right. If you look at the illustration there is
equilibrium.
• Do you think, there will be curriculum change in this
situation? Why?
• According to Lewin, change will be better if the restraining
forces shall be decreased, rather than increasing the DF.
• As a curricularist, how would you do this?
• Let us look at first at the different changes that occur in the
curriculum.
• It is important to identify these as part of our
understanding of curriculum implementation.
Categories of Curriculum Change
 Substitution:
In this type of change one element is substituted by the other,
i.e. one course paper/one unit is replaced with another. Mostly,
this kind of change is easily implemented
 Alternation:
If some material, content, item or procedure is introduced into
the existing material and is adopted, it is considered alteration.
 Restructuring
These changes lead to modification of the system itself. For
instance,team teaching, project method or competency-based
teaching and evaluation. This change is like restructuring.
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
Categories of Curriculum Change
 Perturbation:
Some changes when introduced disturb the programme for
sometime and then later on they get adjusted or adopted into
the programme.
 Value-oriented change:
This change basically brings a shift from ones philosophy or
basic ideology towards a particular auricular prescription or
orientation. Most of them who resist should adjust with the
changes and accept the same. The teachers who cannot adjust
their values to such changes may not be retained for long.
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
Elements of Change
1. Developmental
It should develop multiple perspectives, increase
integration and make learning autonomous, create a
climate of openness and trust and appreciate and
affirm strengths of the teacher.
Orientation and preparation
Refinement
Reflection
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
Elements of Change
2. Participatory
Participation builds a learning community
3. Supportive
Material support like supplies, equipment, conductive
learning environment like classrooms and laboratory
should be made available.
Human support is very much needed
Lesson 1
Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a
Change Process
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Starting the Class Right:
Laying Down the Curriculum Plan
The main parts of a lesson plan are:
1. Objectives or Intended learning
outcomes(ILO)
2. Subject matter (SM),
3. Procedure or Strategies of teaching,
4. Assessment of Learning Outcomes
5. Assignment or Agreement
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
I. Intended Learning Outcomes
Learning outcomes are based on
Taxonomy of Objectives presented to
us as cognitive, affective and
psychomotor.
Bloom’s Taxonomy has revisited by his
own student Lorin Anderson and David
Krathwohl.
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy:
A Quick Look
a. Changing the names in the six
categories from nouns to verbs.
b. Rearranging these categories.
c. Establishing the levels of the
knowledge level in the original version.
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
II. Subject Matter or Content
Comes from a body of
knowledge that will be learned
through the guidance of the
teacher.
It is the WHAT in teaching.
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
III. Procedure or Methods and
Strategies
This is the crux of curriculum
implementation.
How a teacher will put to the
intended outcomes and the subject
matter to be used depends to on this
component.
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
1. Direct Demonstration Methods: Guided Exploratory/Discovery
Approach, Inquiry Method, Problem-based Learning , Project
Method.
2. Cooperative Learning Approaches: Peer Tutoring, Learning
Action cells, Think-Pair Share
3.Deductive or Inductive Approaches: Project Teaching, Inquiry-
based Learning
4.Other Approaches: Blended learning, Reflective Teaching,
Integrated Learning, Outcomes-based Approach
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Students Different Learning Style
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Teaching and Learning must be
supported by Instructional Materials
GUIDELINES FOR INSTRUCTIONAL
SUPPORT MATERIALS
1. Use of direct purposeful experience through
learning by doing retains almost all of the learning
outcomes. Ninety percent of learning is retained.
2. Participation in class activities, discussion, reporting
and similar activities where learners have the
opportunity to say and write. Seventy percent of
learning is remembered.
3. Passive participation as in watching a movie, viewing
exhibits, watching demonstration will retain around
50% of what has been communicated.
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
GUIDELINES FOR INSTRUCTIONAL
SUPPORT MATERIALS
4. By just looking at still pictures, painting, illustration
and drawings, will allow the retention of around 30% of
the material content.
5. By hearing as in lecture, sermon, monologues, only
20% is remembered.
6. Reading, will assure 10% remembered of the material.
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Regardless of the amount of remembering from the
concrete to abstract, each layer contributes to learning
and requires instruction support materials
 Visual: Concrete (flat, 3 dimensional, realias, models, etc.) or
abstract ( verbal symbols, words)
 Audio : recordings of sounds, natural or artificial
 Audio-Visual : Combination of what can be seen and heard
 Kinesthetic : Manipulative materials like modeling clay, rings,
dumb bells, equipments, other
 Experiential : utilize all modalities
Lesson 2
Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
Lesson 2
The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
Lesson 2
The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
Lesson 2
The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
Lesson 2
The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
Lesson 2
The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
Lesson 2
The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
Lesson 2
The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
CURRENT TRENDS THAT COULD CARRY ON THE
NATURE OF EDUCATION IN THE FUTURE!
1. The first trend is the paradigm shift from the
teacher centered to student-centered approach
to learning.
2. The second is the broadening realization that
education is not simply a delivery of facts and
information, but an educative process of
cultivating the cognitive, affective, psychomotor,
and much more the contemplative intelligence
of the learners of a new age.
3. Is the increase in the use of new information and
communication technology or ICT.
Lesson 2
The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
The Role of Technology in Curriculum Delivery
 Upgrading the quality of teaching-and learning in
schools
 Increasing the capability of the teacher to effectively
inculcate learning, and for students to gain
mastery of lessons and courses
 Broadening the delivery of education outside schools
through non-traditional approaches to formal and
informal learning, such as Open Universities and
lifelong learning to adult learners
 Revolutionizing the use of technology to boost
educational paradigm shifts that give
importance to student-centered and holistic
learning
Lesson 2
The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
CRITERIA ON ASSESSING A VISUAL
MATERIAL OR PRESENTATIONS
1. Lettering style or font---consistency and
harmony
2. Number of lettering style---no more than
2 in a static display (chart, bulletin board )
3. Use of capitals---short titles or headlines
should be no more than 6 words
4. Lettering colors---easy to see and read.
Use of contrast is good for emphasis
5. Lettering size---good visibility even for
students at the back of the classroom).
Lesson 2
The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
CRITERIA ON ASSESSING A VISUAL
MATERIAL OR PRESENTATIONS
6. Spacing between letters---equal and
even spacing
7. Spacing between lines---not too close as
to blur at a distance
8. Number of lines---No more than 8 lines
of text in each transparency/slide
9. Appeal---unusual/catchy, two
dimensional, interactive ( use of overlays
or movable flaps )
10. Use of directionals---devices ( arrows,
bold letters, bullets, contrasting
color and size, special placement of an
item ).
Lesson 2
The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
STAKEHOLDERS
 are individuals or
institutions that are
interested in school
curriculum.
 These stakeholders shape
the school curriculum
implementation.
 Learners make the curriculum alive.
 A written curriculum that does not consider
the students, will have little chance to succeed.
Teacher :
 as a curriculum maker, he/she writes a curriculum daily through a lesson plan , a
unit plan or a yearly plan. The teacher addresses the goals, needs, interests of the
learners by creating experiences from where the students can learn. The teacher
designs, enriches and modifies the curriculum to suit the learner’s characteristics.
 as a curriculum developer, part of textbooks committees, faculty selection
boards, school evaluation committee or textbook writers themselves. Empowered
to develop their own school curricula. And they become architect of the school
curriculum.
 as a curriculum implementer , which of the plans should be put in to action and
how should it be done and what are the decisions teachers should make.
Curriculum implementation is now giving life to the written material. Guiding,
facilitating and directing activities which will be done by the students.
Government represented by the following:
Gawad Kalinga
Synergiea
Metrobank Foundation
Non-Government represented by the following:
Implementation of curriculum
Implementation of curriculum

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Implementation of curriculum

  • 1. IMPLEMENTING THE CURRICULUM Chapter III Intesar T. Aba-Conding Ph.D Science Education Student
  • 2. No curriculum should stop planning or designing phase, it has to be IMPLEMENTED Module 4 The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
  • 3. • You will put action to what has been planned and designed. • You who will add more meaning to the various activities in the classroom – teaching styles • You have to make the day of the learners – INTERESTING, – ENGAGING, – and UNFORGETTABLE. Module 4 The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
  • 4. • In the teaching and learning process, the other side of the coin is the TEACHER. • Planning and writing the curriculum are the PRIMARY ROLES of the teacher. • A teacher is a CURRICULUM MAKER. He/she writes curriculum daily through a lesson plan, unit plan or yearly plan. • The teachers prepare activities for the students to do. Module 4 The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
  • 5. • The teacher addresses the goals, needs, interests, of the learners by creating experiences from where the students can learn. • The teacher designs, enriches and modifies the curriculum to suit the learner’s characteristics. Module 4 The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
  • 6. • As a curriculum developer, teachers are part of textbooks committees, faculty selection boards, school evaluation committee or textbook writers themselves. • A developed curriculum remains inactive, if it is not implemented. • At this point, teachers’ role shifts from a developer to an implementer. From a designer or technician to a decision maker. Module 4 The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
  • 7. • Being an implementer is very crucial. • Oftentimes, unsuccessful implementation of the curriculum becomes the root of the educational failure, thus some would say that the ROOT OF THE DUCATIONAL PROBLEM IS THE TEACHER Module 4 The Teacher as Curriculum Implementor and Manager
  • 8. Following the 3 curriculum models, the next step is curriculum implementing. This is the phase where teacher action takes place. It is one of the most crucial processes in curriculum development Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 9. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 10. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 11.  Ornstein and Hunkins in 1998 defined curriculum implementation as interaction between the curriculum that has been written and planned and the persons (Teachers) who are in charged to deliver it. To them, curriculum implementation implies the following:  Shift from what is the current to a new or enhanced curriculum.  Change in knowledge, actions, attitudes of the persons involved.  Change in behavior using new strategies and resources.  Change which requires efforts hence goals should be achievable. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 12. • Loucks and Leiberman (1983) – Define curriculm implementation as the trying out os anew practice and what it looks like when actually used in acshool system. – It simply means that implementation should bring the desired change and development. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 13. Curriculum Implementation • Means putting into practice the written curriculum that has been designed in syllabi, course of study, curricular guides, and subjects. • It is a process wherein the learners acquire the planned or intended knowledge, skills, and attitudes that are aimed at enabling the same learners to function in the society. (SADC MoE Africa, 2000) Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 14. • In the classroom context – Curriculum implementation means “teaching” what has been written in the lesson plan. – Implementing means using the plan as a guide to engage with the learners in the teaching-learning process. – Involves the different strategies of teaching with the support instructional materials to go with the strategy. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 15. • In a larger scale – Curriculum implementation means putting the curriculum into operation with the different implementing agents. – Takes place in a class, a school, a district, a division, or the whole educational system – Happens for the course, a degree program, the institution – Requires time, money, personal interaction, personal contacts and support. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 16. Kurt Lewin (1951)  as the father of social psychology explains the process of change.  The model can be used to explain curriculum change and implementation Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 17. Concept of Change • Change is a constant law of nature. It bring improvements. • Change is an ongoing process. • Not all changes lead to improvement, but all improvement requires change. • The ability to develop, test, and implement changes is essential for any individual, group, or organization that wants to continuously improve. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 18. Features of Change • It’s a PROCESS not an EVENT • It requires time, energy and resources. • It is achieved incrementally and entails development in feelings and skills. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 19. • Process of curriculum change – may be assisted by permissiveness and support in accordance of with a helpful improvement in curriculum. – Changing curriculum changes individuals. – It must be necessary in consideration that the resources of implementation of curriculum are available or not. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 20. • There are always two forces that oppose each other. These are the DF and RF. • When these two forces are equal, the state is equilibrium or balance. • There will be status qou, hence there will be no change . • The situation or condition will stay the same. • However, when the DF overpowers the RF, then change will occur. • If the opposite happens, change is prevented. This is the idea of kurt Lewin in his force field theory
  • 21. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 22. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 23. • The illustration below shows that there are DF on the left and RF on the right. If you look at the illustration there is equilibrium. • Do you think, there will be curriculum change in this situation? Why? • According to Lewin, change will be better if the restraining forces shall be decreased, rather than increasing the DF. • As a curricularist, how would you do this? • Let us look at first at the different changes that occur in the curriculum. • It is important to identify these as part of our understanding of curriculum implementation.
  • 24. Categories of Curriculum Change  Substitution: In this type of change one element is substituted by the other, i.e. one course paper/one unit is replaced with another. Mostly, this kind of change is easily implemented  Alternation: If some material, content, item or procedure is introduced into the existing material and is adopted, it is considered alteration.  Restructuring These changes lead to modification of the system itself. For instance,team teaching, project method or competency-based teaching and evaluation. This change is like restructuring. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 25. Categories of Curriculum Change  Perturbation: Some changes when introduced disturb the programme for sometime and then later on they get adjusted or adopted into the programme.  Value-oriented change: This change basically brings a shift from ones philosophy or basic ideology towards a particular auricular prescription or orientation. Most of them who resist should adjust with the changes and accept the same. The teachers who cannot adjust their values to such changes may not be retained for long. Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 26. Elements of Change 1. Developmental It should develop multiple perspectives, increase integration and make learning autonomous, create a climate of openness and trust and appreciate and affirm strengths of the teacher. Orientation and preparation Refinement Reflection Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 27. Elements of Change 2. Participatory Participation builds a learning community 3. Supportive Material support like supplies, equipment, conductive learning environment like classrooms and laboratory should be made available. Human support is very much needed Lesson 1 Implementing the Designed Curriculum as a Change Process
  • 28. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 29. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 30. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 31. Starting the Class Right: Laying Down the Curriculum Plan The main parts of a lesson plan are: 1. Objectives or Intended learning outcomes(ILO) 2. Subject matter (SM), 3. Procedure or Strategies of teaching, 4. Assessment of Learning Outcomes 5. Assignment or Agreement Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 32. I. Intended Learning Outcomes Learning outcomes are based on Taxonomy of Objectives presented to us as cognitive, affective and psychomotor. Bloom’s Taxonomy has revisited by his own student Lorin Anderson and David Krathwohl. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 33. Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy: A Quick Look a. Changing the names in the six categories from nouns to verbs. b. Rearranging these categories. c. Establishing the levels of the knowledge level in the original version. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 34. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 35. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 36. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 37. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 38. II. Subject Matter or Content Comes from a body of knowledge that will be learned through the guidance of the teacher. It is the WHAT in teaching. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 39. III. Procedure or Methods and Strategies This is the crux of curriculum implementation. How a teacher will put to the intended outcomes and the subject matter to be used depends to on this component. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 40. 1. Direct Demonstration Methods: Guided Exploratory/Discovery Approach, Inquiry Method, Problem-based Learning , Project Method. 2. Cooperative Learning Approaches: Peer Tutoring, Learning Action cells, Think-Pair Share 3.Deductive or Inductive Approaches: Project Teaching, Inquiry- based Learning 4.Other Approaches: Blended learning, Reflective Teaching, Integrated Learning, Outcomes-based Approach Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 41. Students Different Learning Style Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 42. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom Teaching and Learning must be supported by Instructional Materials
  • 43. GUIDELINES FOR INSTRUCTIONAL SUPPORT MATERIALS 1. Use of direct purposeful experience through learning by doing retains almost all of the learning outcomes. Ninety percent of learning is retained. 2. Participation in class activities, discussion, reporting and similar activities where learners have the opportunity to say and write. Seventy percent of learning is remembered. 3. Passive participation as in watching a movie, viewing exhibits, watching demonstration will retain around 50% of what has been communicated. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 44. GUIDELINES FOR INSTRUCTIONAL SUPPORT MATERIALS 4. By just looking at still pictures, painting, illustration and drawings, will allow the retention of around 30% of the material content. 5. By hearing as in lecture, sermon, monologues, only 20% is remembered. 6. Reading, will assure 10% remembered of the material. Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 45. Regardless of the amount of remembering from the concrete to abstract, each layer contributes to learning and requires instruction support materials  Visual: Concrete (flat, 3 dimensional, realias, models, etc.) or abstract ( verbal symbols, words)  Audio : recordings of sounds, natural or artificial  Audio-Visual : Combination of what can be seen and heard  Kinesthetic : Manipulative materials like modeling clay, rings, dumb bells, equipments, other  Experiential : utilize all modalities Lesson 2 Implementing a Curriculum Daily in the Classroom
  • 46. Lesson 2 The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
  • 47. Lesson 2 The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
  • 48. Lesson 2 The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
  • 49. Lesson 2 The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
  • 50. Lesson 2 The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
  • 51. Lesson 2 The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
  • 52. Lesson 2 The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum CURRENT TRENDS THAT COULD CARRY ON THE NATURE OF EDUCATION IN THE FUTURE! 1. The first trend is the paradigm shift from the teacher centered to student-centered approach to learning. 2. The second is the broadening realization that education is not simply a delivery of facts and information, but an educative process of cultivating the cognitive, affective, psychomotor, and much more the contemplative intelligence of the learners of a new age. 3. Is the increase in the use of new information and communication technology or ICT.
  • 53. Lesson 2 The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum The Role of Technology in Curriculum Delivery  Upgrading the quality of teaching-and learning in schools  Increasing the capability of the teacher to effectively inculcate learning, and for students to gain mastery of lessons and courses  Broadening the delivery of education outside schools through non-traditional approaches to formal and informal learning, such as Open Universities and lifelong learning to adult learners  Revolutionizing the use of technology to boost educational paradigm shifts that give importance to student-centered and holistic learning
  • 54. Lesson 2 The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum CRITERIA ON ASSESSING A VISUAL MATERIAL OR PRESENTATIONS 1. Lettering style or font---consistency and harmony 2. Number of lettering style---no more than 2 in a static display (chart, bulletin board ) 3. Use of capitals---short titles or headlines should be no more than 6 words 4. Lettering colors---easy to see and read. Use of contrast is good for emphasis 5. Lettering size---good visibility even for students at the back of the classroom).
  • 55. Lesson 2 The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum CRITERIA ON ASSESSING A VISUAL MATERIAL OR PRESENTATIONS 6. Spacing between letters---equal and even spacing 7. Spacing between lines---not too close as to blur at a distance 8. Number of lines---No more than 8 lines of text in each transparency/slide 9. Appeal---unusual/catchy, two dimensional, interactive ( use of overlays or movable flaps ) 10. Use of directionals---devices ( arrows, bold letters, bullets, contrasting color and size, special placement of an item ).
  • 56. Lesson 2 The Role of Technology in Delivering the Curriculum
  • 57. STAKEHOLDERS  are individuals or institutions that are interested in school curriculum.  These stakeholders shape the school curriculum implementation.
  • 58.
  • 59.
  • 60.
  • 61.  Learners make the curriculum alive.  A written curriculum that does not consider the students, will have little chance to succeed.
  • 62.
  • 63.
  • 64. Teacher :  as a curriculum maker, he/she writes a curriculum daily through a lesson plan , a unit plan or a yearly plan. The teacher addresses the goals, needs, interests of the learners by creating experiences from where the students can learn. The teacher designs, enriches and modifies the curriculum to suit the learner’s characteristics.  as a curriculum developer, part of textbooks committees, faculty selection boards, school evaluation committee or textbook writers themselves. Empowered to develop their own school curricula. And they become architect of the school curriculum.  as a curriculum implementer , which of the plans should be put in to action and how should it be done and what are the decisions teachers should make. Curriculum implementation is now giving life to the written material. Guiding, facilitating and directing activities which will be done by the students.
  • 65.
  • 66.
  • 67.
  • 68.
  • 69.
  • 70.
  • 71. Government represented by the following: