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LANGUAGE CURRICULUM
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ENGLISH
111
SOUTHERN BICOL COLLEGES
Mabini St., Masbate City
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English 111 - Language Curriculum
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Competencies:
1. Define Curriculum and Syllabus
2. Distinguish Curriculum from Syllabus
3. Discuss the ideology of a curriculum
4. Identify key features of curriculum
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A curriculum is more than a list of topic to be covered by an educational
programme, for which the more commonly accepted word is “syllabus”.
A curriculum is first all policy statement about a piece of education, and
secondly an indication as to the ways in which that policy is to be
realized through a programme of action. It is the sum of all the
activities, experiences and learning opportunities for which an institution
(such as the Society) or a teacher (such as a faculty member) takes
responsibility – either deliberately or by default (Coles, 2003).
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May be defined as an
educational plan that spells
out which goals and
objectives should be
achieved, which topics should
be covered and which
methods are to be used for
learning, teaching and
evaluation (Wojtczak, 2002).
The planned and guided learning
experiences and intended learning
outcomes, formulated through the
systematic reconstruction of
knowledge and experiences, under
the auspices of the school, for
learners’ continuous and willful growth
in personal social competence
(Tanner, 1980).
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The term curriculum refers to
the sum total of organized
learning stated as educational
ends, activities, school
subjects and / or topics
decided upon and provided
within an educational
institution for the attainment of
the students (Garcia, 1976,
SEAMEO RELC).
Is an attempt to communicate the
essential principles and features of an
educational proposal in such a form
that it is open to critical scrutiny and
capable of effective translation in to
practice ‘. A curriculum is rather like a
recipe in cookery (Stenhouse, 1975)
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One aspect of curriculum development but is not identical with it. A
syllabus is a specification of content of a course of instruction and
list of what will be taught and tested. Syllabus design is the process
of developing a syllabus (Richards, 2001).
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A more comprehensive process than syllabus design. It
includes the processes that are used to determine the needs of
a group of learners, to develop aims or objectives for a program
to address those needs, to determine an appropriate syllabus,
course structure, teaching methods and materials, and to carry
out an evaluation of the language program that results from
these processes (Richards, 2001).
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• which prescribe the
content to be covered
by a given course,
form only a small part
of the total school
program.
• is a far broader concept. It is all
those activities in which students
engage under the auspices of
the school. This includes not only
what students learn, but how
they learn it, how teachers help
them learn, using what
supporting materials, styles and
methods of assessment, and in
what kind of facilities (Rodgers,
1989).
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In developing goals for educational programs, curriculum
planners draw on their understanding both of the present
and long-term needs of learners and of society as well as
the planners’ beliefs and values about schools, learners,
and teachers. These beliefs and values are sometimes
referred to as curriculum ideologies, and represent the
philosophical underpinnings for educational programs and
the justification for the kinds of aim they contain.
Each of the five curriculum perspective or ideologies below
emphasizes a different approach to the role of language in
the curriculum (Richards, 2001).
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The justification for the aims of curriculum
stresses the intrinsic value of the subject
matter and its role in developing the learner’s
intellect, humanistic values, and rationality. The
content matter of different subjects is viewed
as the basis for a curriculum and mastery of
content is an end in itself rather than a means
to solving social problems or providing efficient
means to achieve the goals of policy makers.
Academic
Rationalism
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This educational philosophy emphasizes the practical needs
of learners and society and the role of an educational
program in producing learners who are economically
productive. Bobbit (1918), one of the founders of curriculum
theory, advocated this view of the curriculum. Curriculum
development was seen as based on the scientific principles,
its practitioners were “educational engineers” whose job it
was to “discover the total range of habits, skills, abilities,
forms of thoughts…etc., that its members need for the
effective performance of their vocational labors.” In
language teaching, this philosophy leads to an emphasis on
practical and functional skills in a foreign or second language.
Social and
Economic
Efficiency
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In language teaching, this educational
philosophy is leading to an emphasis on
process rather than product, a focus on
learner differences, learner strategies
and on learner self-direction and
autonomy.
Learner-
centeredness
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This curriculum perspective emphasizes the roles
schools and learners can and should play in addressing
social injustices and inequality. Morris (1995) observes:
The curriculum derived from this perspective focuses
on developing knowledge, skills and attitudes which
would create a world where people care about each
other, the environment, and the distribution of wealth.
Tolerance, the acceptance of diversity and peace
would be encouraged. Social injustices and inequality
would be central issues in the curriculum.
Social
Reconstructionism
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This philosophy argues that schools should
prepare students to participate in several
different cultures, and not merely the culture
of the dominant social and economic group.
Cultural pluralism seeks to address racism, to
raise the self-esteem of minority groups and
help children appreciate the viewpoints of
other cultures and religions (Phillips and
Terry, 1999).
Cultural
Pluralism
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Taba’s outline (1962) of the steps
which a course designer must work
through to develop subject matter
courses has become the foundation
for many writer’s suggestions. Her
list of ‘curriculum processes’
includes the following:
Diagnosis of needs
Formulation of objectives
Selection of content
Organization of content
Selection of learning
experiences
Organization of learning
experiences
Determination of what to
evaluate, and the means to
evaluate.
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Curriculum development revolves around three major curricular
elements (Garcia, 1976):
1. Decisions on what to teach which are educational ends
generated at three levels of specificity and immediacy
(educational aims, educational objectives, and instructional
objectives) to the learner;
2. Decisions on how to teach, concerned with strategies in terms
of selecting and organizing learning opportunities, and
3. Decisions concerning the extent to which educational ends are
being attained through the strategies or means provided.
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Learning is planned and guided. What is sought to be achieved and
how it is to be achieved should be specified in advance.
The definition refers to schooling. It should be recognized that current
appreciation of curriculum theory and practice emerged in the school
and in relation to other schooling ideas such as subject and lesson.
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Curriculum as a body
of knowledge to be
transmitted.
Curriculum as an attempt
to achieve certain ends in
students – product.
Curriculum as
process.
Curriculum as
praxis
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Curriculum as a body of knowledge to be
transmitted.
Curzon (1985) points out, those who compile syllabus
tend to follow the traditional textbook approach of an
‘order of contents’, or a patterned by a ‘logical’
approach to the subject, or – consciously or
unconsciously – a the shape of a university course in
which they may have participated. Thus, an approach
to curriculum theory and practice which focuses on
syllabus is only really concerned with content.
Curriculum is a body of knowledge-content and/or
subjects. Education in this sense is the process by
which these are transmitted or ‘’delivered” to students
by the most effective methods that can be devised
(Blenkin et al 1992).
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Curriculum as an attempt to achieve certain ends in students –
product.
The dominant modes of describing and managing education
are today couched in the productive form. Education is most
often seen as technical exercise. Objectives are set, a plan
drawn up, and then applied, and the outcomes (product)
measured. In the late 1980s and the 1990s many of the
debates about the National Curriculum for schools and did not
so much concern how the curriculum was thought about as to
what its objectives and content might be.
Curriculum as product model is heavily on the setting of
behavioral objectives.
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Curriculum as process.
Another way of looking at curriculum theory and
practice is via process. In this sense curriculum is not a
physical thing, but rather the interaction of teachers,
students and knowledge. In other words, curriculum is
what actually happens in the classroom and what
people do to prepare and evaluate.
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Curriculum
as praxis
(a) Curriculum as praxis is, in many respects, a
development of the process model. While the process
model is driven by general principles and places
emphasis on judgment and meaning making, it does
not make explicit statements about the interests it
serves. It may, for example, be used in such a way that
does not make continual reference to collective human
well-being and to the emancipation of the human spirit.
The praxis model of curriculum theory and practice
brings these to the centre of the process and make an
explicit commitment to emancipation. Thus action is not
simply informed, it is also committed. It is praxis.
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Curriculum
as praxis (b) In this approach the curriculum itself develops
through the dynamic interaction of action and reflection.
That is, the curriculum is not simply a set plans to be
implemented, but rather is constituted through an
active process in which planning, acting, and evaluating
are all reciprocally related and integrated into the
process (Grundy 1987). At its centre is praxis:
informed, committed action.
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The Theoretical The Practical The Productive
Syllabus Process Product
Praxis
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Principles underlying the language curriculum
The language curriculum is based on the belief that literacy is
critical to responsible and productive citizenship, and that all
students can became literate. The curriculum is designed to
provide students with the knowledge and skill that they need to
achieve this goal. It aims to help students become successful
language learners, who share the following characteristics.
Successful language learners:
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Understand that language learning is necessary, life-enhancing,
reflective process;
Communicate – that is, read, listen, view, speak, write, and represent –
effectively and with confidence;
Make meaningful connections between themselves, what they
encounter in texts, and the world around them;
Think critically;
Understand that all texts advance a particular point of view that must
be recognized, questioned, assessed, and evaluated;
Appreciate the cultural impact and aesthetic power of texts;
Use language to interact and connect with individuals and
communities, for personal growth, and for active participation as world
citizens.
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Four fundamental questions that must be answered in
developing any curriculum and plan instruction:
1. What educational purposes should the school seek to attain?
2. What educational experiences can be provided that is likely to
attain purposes?
3. How can these educational experiences be effectively
organized?
4. How can we determine whether these purposes are being
attained?
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Reduced to a simpler model:
Aims and objectives
Content
Organization
Evaluation
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Tyler’s model or variations of it soon penetrated wide areas of
educational thought and practice and curriculum and training
manuals were son full of models such as the following (Inglis
1975).
Need
Aims
Objectives
Plan
Strategies
Tactics
Implementation
Methods
Techniques
Review
Evaluation
Consolidation
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Nicholls and Nicholls (1972), for
example, describe curriculum
development as involving four
stages,
The careful examination, drawing on all available sources of
knowledge and informed judgment, of the objectives of
teaching, whether in particular subject courses or over the
curriculum as a whole.
The development and trial use in schools of those methods
and materials which are judged most like to achieve the
objectives which teachers agreed upon.
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The assessment of the extent to which the development
work has in fact achieved its objectives. This part of the
process may be expected to provoke new thought about the
objectives themselves.
The final element is therefore feedback of all the experiences
gained, to provide a starting point for further study.
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Stages, decision-making roles and products in curriculum
development (from Johnson 1989)
Development stages Decision-making roles Products
Curriculum planning Policy makers Policy document
Specification:
Ends
Means
Needs analyst
Syllabus
Methodologists
Programme Implementation Materials writers Teaching materials
Teachers trainers Teacher-training
programme
Classroom implementation Teacher Teaching acts
Learner Learning acts
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The goal and aim are used interchangeably to refer to a description of the general
purposes of a curriculum and objective to refer to a more specific and concrete
description of purposes.
AIMS
An aims refer to a statement of a general change that a program seeks to bring about
in learners. The purposes of aim statements are:
To provide a clear definition of the purposes of a program
To provide guidelines for teachers, learners, and materials writer
To help provide focus for instruction
To describe important and realizable changes in learning
Aims statements reflect the ideology of the curriculum and show how the curriculum
will seek to realize it. (Ranandya and Richards 2002)
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The following are examples of aim statements from different kinds of
language programs (Ranandya and Richards 2002)
A Business English Course:
• To develop basic communication skills for use in business contexts.
• To learn how to participate in casual conversation with other employees in the
workplace
• To learn how to write effective business letters
A Course for Hotel Employees:
• To develop the communication skills needed to answer telephone calls in a hotel
• To deal with guests inquiries and complains
• To explain and clarify charges on a guest’s bill
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Aim statements are generally derived from information gathered during
a needs analysis. For example, the following areas of difficulty were
some of those identified for non-English background students
studying in the English-medium universities:
Understanding lectures
Participating in seminars
Taking notes during lectures
Reading at adequate speed to be able to complete
reading assignments
Present ideas and information in an organized way
in a written assignment
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In developing aim statements, it is important to describe more than
simply the activities that students will take part in. For example the
following are not aims:
Students will learn about business letter writing in
English
Students will study listening skills
Students will practice composition skills in English
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For these to become aims they need to focus
on the changes that will result in the learners.
For example:
Students will know how to write effective business letters for
use in the hotel and tourism industries
Students will learn how to listen effectively in conversational
interactions and how to develop better listening strategies.
Students will learn how to communicate information and
ideas creatively and effectively through writing.
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In order to give a more precise focus to program goals, aims are often
accompanied by statements of more specific purposes. These statements
are known as objectives or also referred instructional objectives or teaching
objectives.
An objective refers to a statement of specific changes a program seeks to
bring about and results from an analysis of the aim into its different
components.
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Objectives generally have the
following characteristics (Renandya
and Richards 2002):
They describe what the aim
seeks to achieve in terms of
smaller units of learning
They provide a basis for
organization of teaching
activities
They describe learning in terms
of observable behavior or
performance
The advantages of describing the aims of a
course in terms of objectives are:
They facilitate planning: once objectives
have been agreed on, course planning,
materials preparation, textbook selection
and related processes can begin.
They provide measurable outcomes and
thus provide accountability: given a set of
objectives, the success or failure of a
program to teach the objectives can be
measured.
They are prescriptive: they describe how
planning should proceed and do away with
subjective interpretations and personal
opinions.
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For example in relation to the activity of “understanding lectures” referred to
above, aims and objectives such as the following can be described:
Aims: Students will learn how to understand lectures given in English
Objectives:
Students will be able to follow an argument, theme or thesis of a lecture.
Students will learn how to recognize the following aspects of a lecture:
Cause and effect relationship
Comparisons and contrast
Premises used in persuasive arguments
Supporting details used in persuasive arguments
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Objectives describe a
learning outcome
Objectives should be consistent
with the curriculum aim
Objectives should
be precise
Objectives should be
feasible
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In writing objectives, expressions like will study, will learn
about, will prepare students for are avoided since they do
not describe the result of learning but rather what students
will do during a course. Objectives can generally be
described with phrases like will have, will learn how to, will
be able to.
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Only objectives that clearly serve to realize an aim should be included. For
example, the objective below is unrelated to the curriculum aim.
Since the aim relates to writing business letters, an objective in the domain of
telephone skills is not consistent with this aim. Either the aim statement should
be revised to allow for this objective or the objective should not be included.
Aim: Students will learn how to write effective business letter for use in the hotel and
tourism industries.
Objective: The student can understand and respond to simple questions over the
telephone.
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Objectives which are vague and ambiguous are not useful. This is seen
in the following objective foe a conversation course.
Students will know how to use useful conversation
expressions.
A more precise objective would be:
Students will use conversation expressions for greeting
people, opening and closing conversations.
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Objectives should describe outcomes that are attainable in the time
available during a course. The following objective is probably not
attainable in a 60 hour English course:
Students will be able to follow conversations spoken by native
speakers.
The following is a more feasible objective:
Students will be able to get the gist of short conversation in
simple English on Topics related to daily life and leisure.
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The course designers’ full responsibility is that of setting not only
broad, general goals but also specifying objectives which are made
accessible to all those involved with the program.
1. A curriculum contains a broad description of general goals by
indicating an overall educational-cultural philosophy which applies
across subjects together with a theoretical orientation to language
and language learning with respect to the subject matter at hand. A
curriculum is often reflective of national and political trends as well.
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A Model L2
Curriculum
An educational
cultural viewpoint
Syllabus A – AUDIENCE
LEVEL (Beginners, interned)
Diagram 1:
The relationship of
a curriculum to the
syllabus which
draw from it.
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2. A syllabus is more detailed and operational statement of teaching
and learning elements which translate the philosophy of the curriculum
into a series of planned steps leading towards more narrowly defined
objectives at each level.
An important reason for differentiating between the two is to
stress that a single curriculum can be the basis for developing a
variety of specific syllabuses which are concerned with logically
defined audiences, particular needs, and intermediate objectives.
(Dubin and Olshtain 1986)
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Since the curriculum is concerned with a general rationale for
formulating policy decisions, it combines educational-cultural goals with
language goals. For example, an overall educational approach could
focus on one of the following major goals:
1. A behavioristic orientation considers the human species to be
passive organism, reacting to external, environmental stimuli;
2. A rational-cognitive orientation considers the human species to be
the source and initiator of all acts;
3. A humanistic orientation is concerned with each individual’s growth
and development, while emphasizing affective factors as well.
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The behavioristic view is an educational-psychological
philosophy which is compatible with a structuralist view of
language and a stimulus response view about human
language learning.
The humanistic orientation has been closely associated with
the communicative view of language.
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Educational view:
behaviorism
An
Audio-lingual
Curriculum
Diagram 2:
The components
of an audio-
lingual
curriculum
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English 111 - Langauge Curriculum
The rational-cognitive orientation became strongly reflected in the
views of human language proposed by transformational-generative
linguistic in the 1960s and was associated with the cognitive-code
approach to language learning.
Contemporary approaches which link a rational-cognitive view with a
communicative orientation towards language use:
a. Silent Way Approach. Developed by Gattegno (1972) have distinct affinities with a
rational-cognitive orientation in the way in which the both emphasize the learning of
language forms.
b. Natural Approach. Developed by Krashen and Terrel (1983). This approach has
much in common with other contemporary views which emphasize the importance of
listening and comprehension at the onset of learning – among them Silent way.
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(Reilley)
Although six different types of language teaching syllabi are treated here as
though each occurred “purely,” in practice, these types rarely occur
independently of each other. Almost all actual language teaching syllabi are
combination of two or more of the types. The characteristics, differences,
strengths, and weaknesses of individual syllabi are defined as follows:
Structural
(formal)
Syllabus
Notional /
Functional
Syllabus
Situational
Syllabus
Skill-based
Syllabus
Task-
based
Syllabus
Content-
based
Syllabus
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Structural (formal) Syllabus The content of language teaching is a collection
of the forms and structures, usually grammatical
of the language being taught.
Examples include nouns, verb, adjectives,
statements, question, subordinate clauses, and
so on.
Notional / Functional Syllabus The content of the language teaching is a
collection of the functions that are performed
when language is used, or of the notions that a
language is used to express.
Examples of the functions includes: informing,
agreeing, apologizing, requesting; examples of
notions includes age, size, color, comparison,
time and so on.
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Situational Syllabus The content of the language teaching is a
collection of real and imaginary situations which
language occurs or is used. A situation usually
involves several participants who are engaged in
some activity in a specific meeting.
The language occurring in the situation involves
number of functions, combined into plausible
segment of discourse.
The primary purpose of a situational language
teaching syllabi is to teach the language that
occurs in the situation.
Examples of the situations includes: seeing the
dentist, complaining to the landlord, buying a
book at the bookstore, meeting a new student,
and so on.
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Skill-based Syllabus The content of the language teaching is a
collection of specific abilities that may play a part
using language.
Skills are the things that people must be able to
do to be competent in a language, relatively
independently of the situation or setting in which
the language use can occur. While the situational
syllabi group functions together into specific
settings of the language use, skill-based syllabi
group linguistic competencies (pronunciation,
vocabulary, grammar, and discourse) together
into generalized types of behavior, such as
listening to spoken language for the main idea,
writing well-informed paragraphs, giving effective
oral presentations and so on.
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The primary purpose of the skill-based instruction
is to learn the specific language skill.
A possible secondary purpose is to develop more
general competence in the language, learning
only incidentally any information that may be
available while applying the language skills.
Task-based Syllabus The content of the teaching is a series of
complex and purposeful tasks that the student
wants or need to perform with the language they
are learning.
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The tasks are defined as activities with a purpose
other than language learning, but, as in the content-
based syllabus, the performance of the tasks is
approached in a way intended to develop second
language ability.
Tasks integrate language (and other) skills in specific
settings of the language.
Task-based teaching differs from situation-based
teaching in that while situational teaching has the goal
of teaching the specific language content that occurs in
the situation (pre-defined products), task-based
teaching has the goal of teaching students to draw on
resources to complete some piece of work (a process).
The students draw on a variety of language forms,
functions, and skills often in an individual and
unpredictable way on completing the tasks.
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Tasks can be used for language learning are,
generally, tasks that the learners actually have to
perform in any case. Examples include: applying
for a job, talking with a social worker, getting
housing information over the telephone, and so
on.
Content-based Syllabus The primary purpose of the instruction is to teach
some content or information using the language
that the students are also learning.
The students are simultaneously language
students and students of whatever content is
being taught.
The subject matter is primary, and the language
learning occurs incidentally to the content
learning.
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The content teaching is not organized around the
language teaching, but vice versa.
Content-based language teaching is concerned
with information, while task-based language
teaching is concerned with communicative and
cognitive processes.
An example of content-based language teaching
is a science class taught in the language the
students need or want to learn, possibly with
linguistic adjustment to make the science more
comprehensible.
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(Richards 2001):
Developing a course rationale
Describing entry and exit levels
Choosing course content
Sequencing course content
Planning the course content (syllabus and
instructional blocks)
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A starting point in course development is a description of the course
rationale. This is a brief written description of the reasons for the
course and the nature of it. The course rationale seeks to answer the
following questions:
Who is this course for?
What is the course about?
What kind of teaching and learning will take place in the
course?
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The course rationale answers these questions by describing the beliefs,
values and goals that underlie the course. It would be normally be a
two- or three- paragraph statement that has been developed by those
planning and teaching a course and that serves to provide the
justification for the type of teaching and learning that will take place in
the course.
Developing a rationale also helps provide focus and direction to some of
the deliberations involved in course planning. The rationale thus serves
the purposes of:
Guiding the planning of the various components of the course.
Emphasizing the kinds of teaching and learning the course should exemplify.
Providing a check in the consistency of the various course components in terms
of the course values and goals.
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In order to plan a language course, it is necessary to know the level at
which the program will start and the level learners may be expected to
reach at the end of the course. Language programs and commercial
materials typically distinguish between elementary, intermediate, and
advanced levels, but these categories are too broad for the kind of
detailed planning that program and materials development involves.
For these purposes, more detailed descriptions are needed of students’
proficiency levels before they enter a program and targeted proficiency
levels at the end of it.
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Information may be available on students’ entry level from their results
on international proficiency tests such as TOEFL or IELTS. Or specially
designed tests may be needed to determine the level of the students’
language skills.
The question of course content is probably the most basic issue in
course design. Given that a course has to develop to address a
specific set of needs to cover a given set of objectives, what will the
content of the course look like? Decisions
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The connection between the general goals at the curriculum level and
specific objectives at the syllabus level is evident in the effect which
goals have on the three concerns of a syllabus:
1. The dimension of the language content
2. Processes or means
3. Product or outcomes
In general, curriculum goals tend to place emphasis on one another of
these dimensions.
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Key questions about language content (based on a particular theory of
language that has been adopted as the foundation upon which to write
a curriculum):
1. What elements, items, units, or themes of language content
should be selected for inclusion in the syllabus?
2. In what order or sequence should the elements be presented in
the syllabus?
3. What are the criteria for deciding on the order of elements in
the syllabus?
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Questions about Process dimension:
1. How should language be presented to facilitate the acquisition process?
2. What should be the roles of teachers and learners in the learning process?
3. How should the materials contribute to the process of language learning in the
classroom?
Product/outcome questions:
1. What knowledge is the learner expected to attain by the end of the course? What
understandings based on analyses of structures and lexis will learners have as an
outcome of the course?
2. What specific language skills do the learners need in their immediate future, or in their
professional lives? How will these skills be presented in the syllabus?
3. What techniques of evaluation or examination in the target language will be used to
assess course outcomes?
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L2
Curriculum
The nature of
language
The nature of
language
learning
Educational
cultural
philosophy
General goals
Language
Content
Product /
outcomesProcess /
Means
Theoretical and
philosophical views:
Syllabus objectives:
Diagram 3:
How goals become
instructional
objectives
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Curriculum polices are usually set forth by the Department of
Education through various orders, circulars, memoranda and bulletins.
They are aligned with national priorities and contribute to the
achievement of development goals. However, several laws passed by
the national legislature specifically to the school curriculum.
The Basic Education Curriculum (BEC) aims to produce more
functionally literate students by empowering them with life skills and
promote more ideal teachers that will perform collaborative teaching
and transcending knowledge in a non-authoritative
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72.
way of instructing. It has reduced the number of subjects from an
average of eight to five, focusing on Filipino, English, Science,
Mathematics which is seen to prepare students for global
competitiveness. A fifth subject, Makabayan also called as the
“laboratory of life,” instruct complete learning to students. Makabayan
intends to develop personal and national identity through adequate
knowledge of Philippine History and its politico-economic system, local
cultures, crafts, arts, music and games. It covers a wide range of
values system that stresses the development of social awareness,
understanding and commitment to the common good.
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73.
The subjects in the new curriculum respond to the individual needs of
the students, and are contextualized in their present conditions.
Reciprocal interaction between student-teacher, among students,
students-instructional materials, students-multi-media sources,
students-teachers of different disciplines is also reinforce. The
approach to the subject is “integrated”. Thus, Filipino and English
would, in addition to reading, writing and grammar, include literature
and current affairs. The school principal is authorized to make
adjustments, but not modification, to the content of the subjects.
(Guzman and Sevilleno 2003)
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74.
Is the responsibility of the Central Office Bureau of Elementary and
Secondary Education Curriculum Development Divisions. This
bureau defines the learning competencies for the different subject
areas; conceptualizes the structure of the curriculum; and formulate
national curricular policies. These functions are exercised in
consultation with other agencies and sectors of society (e.g. industry,
social and civic groups, teacher-training institutions, professional
organizations, school administrators, parents, students, etc.).
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75.
The subject offerings, credit points and time allotments for the
different subject areas are also determined at the national level. In
this sense, a national curriculum exists in the Philippines. However,
while curriculum implementation guidelines are issued at the national
level, the actual implementation is left to school teachers. They
determine the resources to be used; teaching and assessment
strategies and other processes. Furthermore, schools have the
option to modify the national curriculum (e.g. content, sequence and
the teaching strategies) in order to ensure that the curriculum
responds to local concerns.
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76.
The approach of curriculum design in the country is based on content
topic and competency. The Department of Education prescribes
competencies for the subject areas in all the grade / year levels. The
Bureau of Elementary and Secondary Education develops, publishes and
disseminates these learning competencies to the field.
Most of the subject / learning areas have a list of learning competencies
expected to be mastered by the children at the end of each grade / year
level and also at the end of elementary / secondary schooling. Some
subject / learning areas have a combination of both (i.e. a learning
competencies under each content / topic).
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77.
The curriculum is designed to be interpreted by teachers and
implemented with variations. Schools are encouraged to innovate and
enrich or adapt, as long as they have met the basic requirements of the
curriculum.
The curriculum plan (learning competencies) does not present teaching
methods and learning activities that the teachers must follow in
implementing the curriculum. The guiding philosophy is that the creativity
of teachers is stimulated by the option to plan and use the appropriate
teaching / learning activities independently. However, teacher’s manuals
or guides to incorporate higher-level content areas and suggestions for
teaching and assessing. (Marinas and Ditapat 2000).
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78.
Restructuring of the learning areas, reducing them to five (Filipino,
English Math, Science and Makabayan);
Stronger integration of competencies and values within and across
learning areas;
Greater emphasis on the learning process and integrative modes of
teaching; and
Increased time for tasks to gain mastery of competencies of the
basic tool subjects.
The objectives are expressed in terms of competencies, which are
knowledge, skills and attitudes that the learner is expected to
acquire at the end of the program.
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79.
A significant feature of the competencies is the inclusion of the use
of ICTs, articulated in terms of skills in accessing, processing, and
applying information, and using educational software in solving
mathematical problems and conducting experiments.
Content is delivered using a variety of media and resources.
The teaching-learning process considers the learner an active
partner rather than an object of pedagogy.
The learner takes on the role of constructor of meaning, while the
teacher serves as facilitator, enabler and manager of learning.
(Department of Education 2002)
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80.
The main objectives of Secondary Education Development Program
(SEDP) are to strengthen the Ministry of Science, Technology,
Education and Culture (MOSTEC), develop the quality and coverage of
basic, non-formal and secondary education, and create a market-
driven Technical Education and Vocational Training (TEVT) program
and fortify the Science and Technology (S & T) capacity at the tertiary
level. SEDP will also direct the Government’s poverty alleviation
strategy in the education sector.
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81.
The SEDP contains the New Secondary Education Curriculum (NSEC)
implemented in 1989, which changed the 1973 Revised Education
Program (RSEP). The program was applied in response to the
following needs: continuation of the Program for Decentralized
Education (PRODED) giving emphasis on science and technology,
mathematics, reading, and writing, improve the values of high school
graduates; and develop access to quality education.
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82.
SEDP said to be overcrowded, putting together too many competencies and
topics. This results to the loss of mastery of basic skills, narrow opportunity to
process and contextualize major concepts and weak interconnections of
competence.
On the other hand, BEC had encountered various criticisms.
Tessa Aquino Oreta, the main author of Republic Act No. 9115 or the
Governance of Basic Education Act, said the “outcome of learning” among
students in public schools nationwide will be sacrificed and eventually suffer
because a number of teachers in the country are not prepared to teach the new
curriculum.
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83.
The research agency, IBON Foundation, also criticized the design of the BEC,
claiming it caters to the needs of multinational corporations for highly skilled and
technically proficient workers at the expense of nationalism.
Antonio Tinio, national coordinator of the Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT), said
the new curriculum will have a strategically adverse impact on the promotion of a
scientific and nationalist education program which are critical components in the
holistic development and progress of a nation. He said the BEC is a scheme crafted
to produce lowly paid labor force that will support the niche marketing schemes of
the government and corporations in the era of globalization. He added that the
DepEd rushed the implementation of the program to catch up with the full
implementation of World Trade Organization agreements in 2004. According to ACT,
BEC will be producing cheap skilled laborers for the world market instead of Filipinos
with a strong sense of history, culture, arts and life skills.
-
84.
The research agency, IBON Foundation, also criticized the design of the BEC,
claiming it caters to the needs of multinational corporations for highly skilled and
technically proficient workers at the expense of nationalism.
Antonio Tinio, national coordinator of the Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT), said
the new curriculum will have a strategically adverse impact on the promotion of a
scientific and nationalist education program which are critical components in the
holistic development and progress of a nation. He said the BEC is a scheme crafted
to produce lowly paid labor force that will support the niche marketing schemes of
the government and corporations in the era of globalization. He added that the
DepEd rushed the implementation of the program to catch up with the full
implementation of World Trade Organization agreements in 2004. According to ACT,
BEC will be producing cheap skilled laborers for the world market instead of Filipinos
with a strong sense of history, culture, arts and life skills.
-
85.
In spite of the negative impressions, the restructured curriculum allows teachers
to address important issues promoting social awareness to the students. It
develops wider views of each subject matter while reducing redundancy of
content. It also helps to keep pace with the changes in the global context of our
educational system and to attain functional literacy. It aims to provide more
attention to the means of learning and at the same time promote values
development to all students. It features greater importance on helping every
learner particularly in Grades 1-3 to become successful reader. Mathematics on
the other hand is the focus in the secondary level. It emphasizes interactive
teaching approaches and values formation in all subject areas.
(Guzman and Sevilleno 2003)
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