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Chapter 1:
The Need for a Curriculum 
Framework 
 The implementation of curriculum structure that is 
sari-sari and developed through hula-hula, lakas 
ng kutob or gaya-gaya, becomes problematic 
because of the confusion that it creates, limiting 
its effectiveness in producing the desired 
outcomes. 
 Taking into account the considerable expense for 
major nationwide curricular reforms for basic 
education, it is necessary to underscore the need 
for curriculum developers to pay attention to a 
multitude of concerns during the planning stage 
to avoid wastage.
The Role of Curriculum 
 Curriculum is a crucial factor in the teaching-learning 
process. 
 It means a written plan ( a degree program, a 
syllabus, a textbook, a learning package, a 
lesson)- which is prescriptive definition. 
 Based on Dewey’s (1916) view= “as all the 
experiences of the learner inside and 
outside the school under the guidance of 
the teacher, that is all encompassing.”
Cont. role of curriculum 
 A written plan that is specific and 
prescriptive indicates the objectives, defines 
the scope and sequence of the content, 
identifies the strategies and activities or 
learning, selects materials and describes the 
role of the learner and the teacher. 
 Comprehensive plan include all learning 
experiences that may or my not be 
specifically written but supervised by the 
school.
Learning Experiences constitute 
the: 
CURRICULAR 
(classroom lessons) 
CO- CURRICULAR 
(experiences directly 
related to classroom 
lessons such as 
debates and science 
contests) 
EXTRA-CURRICULAR 
( experiences not 
directly related to 
classroom lessons 
but with educative 
value such as 
athletics and 
leadership training) 
The purpose of plan ( prescriptive or comprehensive ) is to 
enable students to learn knowledge, skills, attitudes, values 
and habits so that they can become competent and productive 
members of society.
Cost- Effectiveness 
 A need to maximize scare resources 
allocated to the educational system for 
obvious reasons.
Phases of Curriculum Development 
Curriculum Dev’t- refers to process that produces a 
written plan. 
Phases: 
1. The curriculum design or structure 
2. The implementation scheme 
3. The evaluation procedure 
Curriculum Designs – are overall frameworks 
which describe the interaction and congruence of 
the four basic elements of aims: objectives, 
content, organization, and evaluation. 
--These frameworks become the bases for the 
dev’t of textbooks, syllabi, and lesson plans.
Figure 1. Phases of Curriculum 
Development 
Curriculum 
Development 
Plan 
* Design ( objectives, content, 
organization, evaluation) 
* Pilot Testing ( deficiencies, 
operational problems) 
* Implementation ( roles, materials, 
schedule) 
* Evaluation ( effectiveness, 
efficiency, impact )
Figure 2. Phases of Curriculum 
Development (Inverted Model) 
Curriculum 
Development 
PHASES 
* Lesson Planning ( individual 
teachers ) 
* Lesson Try-outs ( individual 
teachers ) 
* Curriculum Design ( curriculum 
committee ) 
* Implementation ( wide-scale) 
* Evaluation ( effectiveness )
Areas of Concern in Curriculum 
Development 
1. Shared philosophy, beliefs, behaviors, norms 
and rules of Philippine society. 
2. Knowledge of the nature of the learner in 
terms of development level, learning style, 
normative needs and other philosophical and 
psychological concerns. 
3. Knowledge of teaching-learning theories and 
principles; and 
4. The different domains of knowledge 
(cognitive, affective, psychomotor).
Figure 3. Curriculum Development as a Process of Decision- 
Areas of Concerns 
Curriculum 
Development 
Knowledge 
of Learner 
Knowledge of 
Teaching- 
Learning 
Theories & 
Principles 
Body of 
Knowledge 
Making 
Curriculum 
Design 
Pilot 
Testing 
Implementation Evaluation 
Decision Areas 
Cultural 
Values
Cultural Values 
 A group of people in any given society may be 
defined by its culture which is manifested by 
both visible and non-visible dimensions. 
 Visible dimension- rules, food, dress, language, 
music, dance, means of livelihood, political 
behavior, as well as family, community, and 
institutional norms and practices. 
 Non-visible- such as philosophy, beliefs and 
value system which have far greater influence and 
impact on the way of life of the people.
Figure 4. The role of Education in Integrative 
Development 
INTEGRATED 
DEVELOPMENT 
Economic Growth 
International Cooperation 
Environmental Protection 
Social Justice 
Peace & Order 
Health 
C 
O 
M 
M 
U 
N 
I 
C 
A 
T 
I 
O 
N 
E 
D 
U 
C 
A 
T 
I 
O 
N 
CULTURAL VALUES 
Spiritually uplifting 
Socially Integrating 
Sustainable 
Equitable
Knowledge of the Learner 
 The learners are beneficiaries of curricular 
revision efforts, it is necessary to know their 
needs and interests so that the curriculum 
design can respond to their developmental 
needs that impact on the growth of 
knowledge, skills, values, attitudes and habits 
as well as on their expectations in relation to 
the socio- economic realities in their own 
environment.
Cont…Knowledge of the Learner 
 The Program For Decentralized Educational 
Development Program (PRODED) and the 
Secondary Education Development Program 
(SEDP) intended to improve the quality of 
elementary and secondary education 
respectively are focused on the content rather 
than on the learner and the learning processes 
despite their expressed bias for humanist 
orientation.
Factoring of the Economic 
Conditions of the Learners 
 Poverty continues to be pervasive in the 
Philippines. 
 Because the basic needs for food, health, 
and housing of majority of people are not 
met, many children of school age are 
malnourished and sickly. 
 In the 80’s, UNICEF estimated that 1.35 
million Filipino children were out of school.
Recognizing Future Needs of 
the Learners 
 It is necessary to anticipate future needs 
and expectations too, in order to train the 
learners to live in and cope with the 
demands of a world that will certainly be 
unlike the present in many significant ways. 
 Visions about the future outlined in 
documents like Philippines 2000 provide 
information on the kind of curriculum 
needed in the next century.
Knowledge of Teaching- 
Learning Principles 
 Understanding how human beings learn 
requires knowledge of psychological 
theories and principles. 
 Behaviorism, cognitive psychology, and 
cognitive- field psychology.
Behaviorism 
 Behaviorism represents a philosophical and 
scientific orientation which focuses on the 
study of observable events through the use of 
the senses (seeing, hearing, tasting, touching 
and smelling).
Behavioral Theories 
• Constitutes the lowest level of learning which 
is based on the scientific works of Ivan 
Pavlov (1927). 
Classical 
Conditioning 
• Takes places when stimuli are paired such as 
what goes on with the drill instruction and 
practice. 
Contiguity 
learning 
• Based on the work of B.F. Skinner 
(1953),explains learning in terms of the 
effects of reinforcement which strengthens 
behavior. 
Instrumental / 
Operant 
Conditioning
Cognitive Development Psychology 
 Cognitive Dev’t Psychology refers to a 
philosophical and scientific orientation which 
focuses on mental processes ( cognition) that 
are non- observable. 
 Cognition- represents the manner by which a human 
being acquires, stores, processes and uses information 
about the internal and external environment. 
 According to cognitive psychologist, learning 
takes place through the interaction between the 
genetic factors (hereditary), and environmental 
ones (nurture).
Cont…Cognitive Development 
Psychologist 
• The development of the intellect occurring 4 
stages: sensorimotor, pre-operational, concrete 
operational, and formal operational. 
Jean Piaget 
(1948) 
• Intellectual dev’t in stages: from simple to 
complex. 
• Proposed that individuals represent in their 
minds the world around them based on the 
cognitive level they are in particular point in time. 
Jerome 
Bruner 
(1959) 
• Recognized cognitive dev’t as an effect of social 
interaction: children learn from their interaction 
with the people around them from birth. 
Lev 
Vygotsky ( 
1978)
Cont…relation to Classroom 
Instruction 
• C.I should proceed from simple ideas to 
complex ones, from concrete concepts to 
abstract ones and in consideration of the stage 
of the development of the learner. 
Jean Piaget 
(1948) 
• Children represents in their minds the world 
around them at each stage through different 
modes- enactive (through action), iconic 
(through visual images), and symbolic (through 
language and numbers). 
Jerome 
Bruner 
(1959) 
• Exposure and immersion strategies in the 
teaching of many subjects are used by teachers. 
• The social world is the source of all their 
concepts, ideas, facts, skills, and attitudes. 
Lev 
Vygotsky ( 
1978)
Cognitive- field Psychology 
 Based on the German concept of Gestalt that 
connotes patterns, shapes, forms and 
configuration._.....personal meanings or private 
views referred to as perception. 
 the theory was started by three German 
psychologist: Koffka (1935), Wertheimer (1945), 
and Kohler (1947). According to the theory, “what 
individuals perceives and what they pay attention 
to, determine the meaning they give to the field 
(environment)”. 
 The field represents how the individual perceives 
himself in relation with the environment (perceptual 
organization).
Table 1. Comparison Among Behaviorism, Cognitive 
Psychology, and Cognitive Psychology 
Behaviorism 
Cognitive 
Development 
Psychology 
Cognitive- Field 
Psychology 
Basis for learning Stimulus- Response (S-R) 
Interaction between 
genetic factors and the 
environment 
Perception 
Philosophical Basis Realism Pragmatism Existentialism/ 
Phenomenology 
Learning Mode Passive Interactive Interactive 
Knowledge 
Structure 
Linear Developmental Pattern 
View about reality Congruent with what is 
observed 
Constructed Constructed 
Key Concepts Conditioning, 
Reinforcement 
Measurable, Association 
Developmental stage, 
Interactions, Mental 
structure or schemas 
Insights, Mental 
structures, Patterns 
of Relationship 
View of the Whole Sum of all the parts Stage-bound Greater than the 
sum of all parts
Universal Development and the 
Theory of Multiple Intelligences 
 Piaget’s concept of universal dev’t may no 
longer tenable. 
 Sperry’s (in De Tagle, 1992) neuroscientific 
research describes how the left and right 
hemisphere of the brain for majority of 
individuals. 
 Howard Gardner (1983), proposed the theory 
of Multiple Intelligences (MI)
Figure 5. the Split-Brain Model and the Dominant 
Characteristics for Each Hemisphere of the Human 
Brain 
LEFT BRAIN 
(Analytic) 
• Symbols (Letters, 
words, numbers, 
formula) 
• Logic 
• Sequence 
• Linearity 
• Analysis 
• Scientific process 
RIGHT BRAIN 
(Global) 
• Forms and Patterns 
(gestalt) 
• Images and Pictures 
• Rhythm, tune, and 
Harmony 
• Spatial Manipulation 
• Integration 
• Scientific process 
• Imagination and Intuition
Figure 6. Paradigm Shift on the Concept of 
Intelligence 
Paradigm- a model or pattern for something that may be copied
Table 2. Abilities and Sensitivities of Each of the Seven Intelligences Based 
on the Gardner Model 
DOMAINS ABILITIES SENSITIVITIES 
Logico-mathematico 
Reason logically and coherently, apply 
the scientific method in problem-solving 
Pattern, sequence, 
system, order 
Linguistic Deal with verbal symbols Sounds, meanings, and 
arrangement of words 
Musical Produce and appreciate rhythm, pitch 
and timbre 
Musical expressiveness, 
tone ,, rhythm 
Spatial Perceive relations of objects in space 
with precision, transform and create 
visual experience 
Visual experiences 
Bodily- 
Kinesthetic 
Control body movements Coordinating between and 
among body parts 
Interpersonal Discern and respond appropriately to 
the moods, temperaments, 
motivations, and desires of others 
Needs and feelings of 
others 
Intrapersonal Understand personal feeling and draw 
upon them to guide behavior 
Personal feeling and 
needs
A Proposed Emerging Learning 
Paradigm 
 The emerging paradigm suggest that’s 
that it is the learner who has stellar role 
in the learning process; the teacher’s 
role although important is only a 
supporting one.
Figure 7. the Emerging Learning 
Paradigm 
Social Processes: 
•Interaction 
•Collaboration 
•Transaction 
•Group Dynamics 
Context: 
• Real- life Situation 
• Learning 
environments 
TEACHERS GOAL LANGUAGE
Body of Knowledge 
 What knowledge is of most worth and therefore 
should be taught…….since the time of Plato and 
Aristotle. 
 The early Romans decided that the ideal 
curriculum to produce an educated man 
consisted of the seven liberal arts: grammar, 
rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy 
and music. 
 In modern times, as a consequences of 
discoveries in science, new ideas about human 
beings, nature and life, there had been a 
tremendous explosion of knowledge that 
necessitated the inclusion of other subjects in he 
curricula.
Cont….Body of Knowledge 
 Several branches in the field of science are 
now included in the school curriculum. 
 Social science courses which were not 
deemed essential before are now standard 
components of the curricula. 
 As new knowledge and information as well 
as technological inventions are introduced 
and validated….
Decision- Making 
 The concerns on cultural values, learner 
characteristics, teaching- learning principles 
and worthwhile knowledge guide the 
curriculum developers in making decisions 
regarding the curriculum design, on how to 
conduct a pilot study of the curriculum to 
determine deficiencies in the design that 
should be corrected prior to its full 
implementation, and on the procedure for 
evaluation.
Source: Curriculum Development: The Philippine Setting by 
Adelaida L. Bago, 2001.

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Chapter 1 principles and theories in curriculum development

  • 2. The Need for a Curriculum Framework  The implementation of curriculum structure that is sari-sari and developed through hula-hula, lakas ng kutob or gaya-gaya, becomes problematic because of the confusion that it creates, limiting its effectiveness in producing the desired outcomes.  Taking into account the considerable expense for major nationwide curricular reforms for basic education, it is necessary to underscore the need for curriculum developers to pay attention to a multitude of concerns during the planning stage to avoid wastage.
  • 3. The Role of Curriculum  Curriculum is a crucial factor in the teaching-learning process.  It means a written plan ( a degree program, a syllabus, a textbook, a learning package, a lesson)- which is prescriptive definition.  Based on Dewey’s (1916) view= “as all the experiences of the learner inside and outside the school under the guidance of the teacher, that is all encompassing.”
  • 4. Cont. role of curriculum  A written plan that is specific and prescriptive indicates the objectives, defines the scope and sequence of the content, identifies the strategies and activities or learning, selects materials and describes the role of the learner and the teacher.  Comprehensive plan include all learning experiences that may or my not be specifically written but supervised by the school.
  • 5. Learning Experiences constitute the: CURRICULAR (classroom lessons) CO- CURRICULAR (experiences directly related to classroom lessons such as debates and science contests) EXTRA-CURRICULAR ( experiences not directly related to classroom lessons but with educative value such as athletics and leadership training) The purpose of plan ( prescriptive or comprehensive ) is to enable students to learn knowledge, skills, attitudes, values and habits so that they can become competent and productive members of society.
  • 6. Cost- Effectiveness  A need to maximize scare resources allocated to the educational system for obvious reasons.
  • 7. Phases of Curriculum Development Curriculum Dev’t- refers to process that produces a written plan. Phases: 1. The curriculum design or structure 2. The implementation scheme 3. The evaluation procedure Curriculum Designs – are overall frameworks which describe the interaction and congruence of the four basic elements of aims: objectives, content, organization, and evaluation. --These frameworks become the bases for the dev’t of textbooks, syllabi, and lesson plans.
  • 8. Figure 1. Phases of Curriculum Development Curriculum Development Plan * Design ( objectives, content, organization, evaluation) * Pilot Testing ( deficiencies, operational problems) * Implementation ( roles, materials, schedule) * Evaluation ( effectiveness, efficiency, impact )
  • 9. Figure 2. Phases of Curriculum Development (Inverted Model) Curriculum Development PHASES * Lesson Planning ( individual teachers ) * Lesson Try-outs ( individual teachers ) * Curriculum Design ( curriculum committee ) * Implementation ( wide-scale) * Evaluation ( effectiveness )
  • 10. Areas of Concern in Curriculum Development 1. Shared philosophy, beliefs, behaviors, norms and rules of Philippine society. 2. Knowledge of the nature of the learner in terms of development level, learning style, normative needs and other philosophical and psychological concerns. 3. Knowledge of teaching-learning theories and principles; and 4. The different domains of knowledge (cognitive, affective, psychomotor).
  • 11. Figure 3. Curriculum Development as a Process of Decision- Areas of Concerns Curriculum Development Knowledge of Learner Knowledge of Teaching- Learning Theories & Principles Body of Knowledge Making Curriculum Design Pilot Testing Implementation Evaluation Decision Areas Cultural Values
  • 12. Cultural Values  A group of people in any given society may be defined by its culture which is manifested by both visible and non-visible dimensions.  Visible dimension- rules, food, dress, language, music, dance, means of livelihood, political behavior, as well as family, community, and institutional norms and practices.  Non-visible- such as philosophy, beliefs and value system which have far greater influence and impact on the way of life of the people.
  • 13. Figure 4. The role of Education in Integrative Development INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT Economic Growth International Cooperation Environmental Protection Social Justice Peace & Order Health C O M M U N I C A T I O N E D U C A T I O N CULTURAL VALUES Spiritually uplifting Socially Integrating Sustainable Equitable
  • 14. Knowledge of the Learner  The learners are beneficiaries of curricular revision efforts, it is necessary to know their needs and interests so that the curriculum design can respond to their developmental needs that impact on the growth of knowledge, skills, values, attitudes and habits as well as on their expectations in relation to the socio- economic realities in their own environment.
  • 15. Cont…Knowledge of the Learner  The Program For Decentralized Educational Development Program (PRODED) and the Secondary Education Development Program (SEDP) intended to improve the quality of elementary and secondary education respectively are focused on the content rather than on the learner and the learning processes despite their expressed bias for humanist orientation.
  • 16. Factoring of the Economic Conditions of the Learners  Poverty continues to be pervasive in the Philippines.  Because the basic needs for food, health, and housing of majority of people are not met, many children of school age are malnourished and sickly.  In the 80’s, UNICEF estimated that 1.35 million Filipino children were out of school.
  • 17. Recognizing Future Needs of the Learners  It is necessary to anticipate future needs and expectations too, in order to train the learners to live in and cope with the demands of a world that will certainly be unlike the present in many significant ways.  Visions about the future outlined in documents like Philippines 2000 provide information on the kind of curriculum needed in the next century.
  • 18. Knowledge of Teaching- Learning Principles  Understanding how human beings learn requires knowledge of psychological theories and principles.  Behaviorism, cognitive psychology, and cognitive- field psychology.
  • 19. Behaviorism  Behaviorism represents a philosophical and scientific orientation which focuses on the study of observable events through the use of the senses (seeing, hearing, tasting, touching and smelling).
  • 20. Behavioral Theories • Constitutes the lowest level of learning which is based on the scientific works of Ivan Pavlov (1927). Classical Conditioning • Takes places when stimuli are paired such as what goes on with the drill instruction and practice. Contiguity learning • Based on the work of B.F. Skinner (1953),explains learning in terms of the effects of reinforcement which strengthens behavior. Instrumental / Operant Conditioning
  • 21. Cognitive Development Psychology  Cognitive Dev’t Psychology refers to a philosophical and scientific orientation which focuses on mental processes ( cognition) that are non- observable.  Cognition- represents the manner by which a human being acquires, stores, processes and uses information about the internal and external environment.  According to cognitive psychologist, learning takes place through the interaction between the genetic factors (hereditary), and environmental ones (nurture).
  • 22. Cont…Cognitive Development Psychologist • The development of the intellect occurring 4 stages: sensorimotor, pre-operational, concrete operational, and formal operational. Jean Piaget (1948) • Intellectual dev’t in stages: from simple to complex. • Proposed that individuals represent in their minds the world around them based on the cognitive level they are in particular point in time. Jerome Bruner (1959) • Recognized cognitive dev’t as an effect of social interaction: children learn from their interaction with the people around them from birth. Lev Vygotsky ( 1978)
  • 23. Cont…relation to Classroom Instruction • C.I should proceed from simple ideas to complex ones, from concrete concepts to abstract ones and in consideration of the stage of the development of the learner. Jean Piaget (1948) • Children represents in their minds the world around them at each stage through different modes- enactive (through action), iconic (through visual images), and symbolic (through language and numbers). Jerome Bruner (1959) • Exposure and immersion strategies in the teaching of many subjects are used by teachers. • The social world is the source of all their concepts, ideas, facts, skills, and attitudes. Lev Vygotsky ( 1978)
  • 24. Cognitive- field Psychology  Based on the German concept of Gestalt that connotes patterns, shapes, forms and configuration._.....personal meanings or private views referred to as perception.  the theory was started by three German psychologist: Koffka (1935), Wertheimer (1945), and Kohler (1947). According to the theory, “what individuals perceives and what they pay attention to, determine the meaning they give to the field (environment)”.  The field represents how the individual perceives himself in relation with the environment (perceptual organization).
  • 25. Table 1. Comparison Among Behaviorism, Cognitive Psychology, and Cognitive Psychology Behaviorism Cognitive Development Psychology Cognitive- Field Psychology Basis for learning Stimulus- Response (S-R) Interaction between genetic factors and the environment Perception Philosophical Basis Realism Pragmatism Existentialism/ Phenomenology Learning Mode Passive Interactive Interactive Knowledge Structure Linear Developmental Pattern View about reality Congruent with what is observed Constructed Constructed Key Concepts Conditioning, Reinforcement Measurable, Association Developmental stage, Interactions, Mental structure or schemas Insights, Mental structures, Patterns of Relationship View of the Whole Sum of all the parts Stage-bound Greater than the sum of all parts
  • 26. Universal Development and the Theory of Multiple Intelligences  Piaget’s concept of universal dev’t may no longer tenable.  Sperry’s (in De Tagle, 1992) neuroscientific research describes how the left and right hemisphere of the brain for majority of individuals.  Howard Gardner (1983), proposed the theory of Multiple Intelligences (MI)
  • 27. Figure 5. the Split-Brain Model and the Dominant Characteristics for Each Hemisphere of the Human Brain LEFT BRAIN (Analytic) • Symbols (Letters, words, numbers, formula) • Logic • Sequence • Linearity • Analysis • Scientific process RIGHT BRAIN (Global) • Forms and Patterns (gestalt) • Images and Pictures • Rhythm, tune, and Harmony • Spatial Manipulation • Integration • Scientific process • Imagination and Intuition
  • 28. Figure 6. Paradigm Shift on the Concept of Intelligence Paradigm- a model or pattern for something that may be copied
  • 29. Table 2. Abilities and Sensitivities of Each of the Seven Intelligences Based on the Gardner Model DOMAINS ABILITIES SENSITIVITIES Logico-mathematico Reason logically and coherently, apply the scientific method in problem-solving Pattern, sequence, system, order Linguistic Deal with verbal symbols Sounds, meanings, and arrangement of words Musical Produce and appreciate rhythm, pitch and timbre Musical expressiveness, tone ,, rhythm Spatial Perceive relations of objects in space with precision, transform and create visual experience Visual experiences Bodily- Kinesthetic Control body movements Coordinating between and among body parts Interpersonal Discern and respond appropriately to the moods, temperaments, motivations, and desires of others Needs and feelings of others Intrapersonal Understand personal feeling and draw upon them to guide behavior Personal feeling and needs
  • 30. A Proposed Emerging Learning Paradigm  The emerging paradigm suggest that’s that it is the learner who has stellar role in the learning process; the teacher’s role although important is only a supporting one.
  • 31. Figure 7. the Emerging Learning Paradigm Social Processes: •Interaction •Collaboration •Transaction •Group Dynamics Context: • Real- life Situation • Learning environments TEACHERS GOAL LANGUAGE
  • 32. Body of Knowledge  What knowledge is of most worth and therefore should be taught…….since the time of Plato and Aristotle.  The early Romans decided that the ideal curriculum to produce an educated man consisted of the seven liberal arts: grammar, rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy and music.  In modern times, as a consequences of discoveries in science, new ideas about human beings, nature and life, there had been a tremendous explosion of knowledge that necessitated the inclusion of other subjects in he curricula.
  • 33. Cont….Body of Knowledge  Several branches in the field of science are now included in the school curriculum.  Social science courses which were not deemed essential before are now standard components of the curricula.  As new knowledge and information as well as technological inventions are introduced and validated….
  • 34. Decision- Making  The concerns on cultural values, learner characteristics, teaching- learning principles and worthwhile knowledge guide the curriculum developers in making decisions regarding the curriculum design, on how to conduct a pilot study of the curriculum to determine deficiencies in the design that should be corrected prior to its full implementation, and on the procedure for evaluation.
  • 35. Source: Curriculum Development: The Philippine Setting by Adelaida L. Bago, 2001.