Knowledge and Curriculum PDF
Knowledge and Curriculum PDF
• Meaning of knowledge:
Characteristics of Knowledge
• Non-depleting: unlike other resources that are managed because of their scarcity
value, the more knowledge is used, the more is generated; we all know about
'information overload'!
• Win-win sharing: if you share your knowledge with another person, the first person
does not lose it
• Transferable: it can move from place to place; explicit knowledge, in particular, can
easily be distributed via networks to many people
• Mobile: it tends tends to leak and diffuse, either as people move jobs, talk or through
technical reproduction and transmission
• Substitutable: in many situations it can replace physical and other forms of resource;
thus telecommunications reduces the need for travel or physical transport (of
documents).
• Propositional : The third kind of knowledge, the kind that philosophers care about
most, is propositional knowledge, or knowledge of facts. This is knowledge of facts,
knowledge that such and such is the case.
Empiricism
¾ Empiricists hold that all of our knowledge is ultimately derived from our senses or our
experiences. They therefore deny the existence of innate knowledge, i.e. knowledge
that we possess from birth.
¾ Empiricism fits well with the scientific world-view that places an emphasis on
experimentation and observation.
Rationalism
¾ Rationalists hold that at least some of our knowledge is derived from reason alone,
and that reason plays an important role in the acquisition of all of our knowledge
¾ There is clearly a limit to what we can learn through abstract thought, but the
rationalist’s claim is that reason play a role in observation, and so that the mind is
more fundamental than the senses in the process of knowledge-acquisition
Unit 1 C. EDUCATION
Characteristics of Education
• Bipolar process
• Tripolar process
• Deliberate process
• Education is progressive
UNIT 2
BASES OF MODERN CHILD CENTRED EDUCATION
• Useful manual labour, intelligently performed is the means par excellence for
developing the intellect....A balanced intellect presupposes a harmonious growth of
body, mind and soul....An intellect that is developed through the medium of socially
useful labour will be an instrument for service and will not easily be led astray or fall
into devious paths.
• Craft, Art, Health and education should all be integrated into one scheme. NaiTalim is
a beautiful blend of all the four and covers the whole education of the individual from
the time of conception to the moment of death....Instead of regarding craft & industry
as different from education, I will regard the former as the medium for the latter.
Discovery:
• and to search for new information and relationships based on their interests.
• A dialogue approach to education views learners as subjects in their own learning and
honours central principles such as mutual respect and open communication (Vella,
2002).
Need
• Student centered
• Encourage engagement
• Significance
• shifts the focus of education from what the teacher says to what the learner does
• Use of dialogues
• Dialogue based educational approach, which was put forward by Paulo Freire (1921 –
1997),
• culture circle‟, where learners used their own ways of speaking to articulate their
shared understanding of how their world came to be like it was and how to act to
change their future
• constant communication unlocks doors for prosperity and victory in any situation
• It is an interpersonal activity in which the leader and participants enter a higher state
of consciousness, allowing psychic material to flow through them.
Five aspects of Paulo Freire’s work have a particular significance for our purposes here.
• emphasis on dialogue
• use of metaphors
Concept of society
Concept of culture
• Culture is, in the words of E.B. Tylor, "that complex whole which includes
knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom and any other capabilities and habits
acquired by man as a member of society.”
• Some aspects of human behavior, such as language, social practices such as kinship,
gender and marriage, expressive forms such as music, dance, ritual, religion, and
technologies such as cooking, shelter, clothing are said to be cultural universals,
found in all human societies. The concept material culture covers the physical
expressions of culture, such as technology, architecture and art, whereas the
immaterial aspects of culture such as principles of social organization (including,
practices of political organization and social institutions), mythology, philosophy,
literature (both written and oral), and science make up the intangible cultural heritage
of a society.
Modernity as a concept
• Modernity is a term of art used in the humanities and social sciences to designate both
a historical period (the modern era), as well as the ensemble of particular socio-
cultural norms, attitudes and practices that arose in post-medieval Europe and have
developed since, in various ways and at various times, around the world. While it
includes a wide range of interrelated historical processes and cultural phenomena
(from fashion to modern warfare), it can also refer to the subjective or existential
experience of the conditions they produce, and their ongoing impact on human
culture, institutions, and politics (Berman 2010, 15–36).
Characteristics of Modernity
There have been numerous attempts, particularly in the field of sociology, to understand what
modernity is. A wide variety of terms are used to describe the society, social life, driving
force, symptomatic mentality, or some other defining aspects of modernity. They include:
• Industrialization is the period of social and economic change that transforms a human
group from an agrarian society into an industrial one, involving the extensive re-
organisation of an economy for the purpose of manufacturing where education may or
may not play a major role.
• As industrial workers' incomes rise, markets for consumer goods and services of all
kinds tend to expand and provide a further stimulus to industrial investment and
economic growth, but it may not lead to more education.
• “Democracy” may refer to any of these political arrangements. It may involve direct
participation of the members of a society in deciding on the laws and policies of the
society or it may involve the participation of those members in selecting
representatives to make the decisions.
• Individual autonomy is a distinctively human value that is required for human well-
being.
• Reforms of classical education: Western classical education as taught from the 18th to
the 19th century has missing features that inspired reformers. Classical education is
most concerned with answering the who, what, where, and when?questions that
concern a majority of students.
• Progressive reforms in Europe and the United States: The term progressive in
education has been used somewhat indiscriminately; there are a number of kinds of
educational progressivism, most of the historically significant kinds peaking in the
period between the late 19th and the middle of the 20th centuries.
• The free individual is an autonomous agent who is free to choose his ends. Since
individuals will choose different ends, if all individuals are to be accorded equal
respect and dignity, their ends must, in principle, be accorded equal respect.
• This was the characteristic value of modern, democratic education where individual
autonomy and reason dominated.
• The 6 “re-s”,
• reflect,
• reconsider,
• refuse,
• reconceptualize,
• rejuvenate and
• re-engage can be applied to the lessons and become practice for the possible social
justice and injustice issues faced by pre-service teachers in the field (Miller,
forthcoming).
• Critical multiculturism-
• ‘Democratic education’
• Democratic education is an educational ideal in which democracy is both a goal and a
method of instruction. It brings democratic values to education and can include self-
determination within a community of equals, as well as such values as justice, respect
and trust.
• The system of education is also founded on the idea that children should have
freedom of choice in what activities they attend. Classes are therefore optional with
children having the choice to play, hang out or attend the class of their choosing
during the school day. To a degree, classes are organised in terms of the age group
attending, however, some classes are open to anyone who is interested in attending
from any age group.
Practical strategies for implementing multicultural education into the classroom, Andrew
Miller offers several suggestions that might provide helpful:
• Get to know your students. Build relationships and learn about their backgrounds and
cultures.
• Samanvaya, harmony or concord is the heart of Indian culture. The great minds of the
Indian Renaissance were representative of this value of Samanvaya. They were
universal citizens. This tradition of Samanvaya was further carried on by
Rabindranath Tagore and Mahatma Gandhi. These minds explored and encouraged
the spirit of the Vedic period. The Indian Renaissance developed the whole science of
human possibilities.
Tagore’s Secularism
• This new science was the science of human possibilities. Tagore’s secularism or
harmony or Samanvaya is the new science. It has sprung from the roots of Indian
literature. Tagore was highly influenced by Upanishads and the Vedas. Tagore was
also inspired by the life and words of Lord Buddha. Three centuries after Lord
Buddha, the great Mauryan Emperor Asoka translated the spirit of religion into social
experience and political state policy.
Tagore’s universalism
• “The world is a human world – the scientific view of it is also that of the scientific
man. Therefore, the world apart from us does not exist; it is a relative world,
depending for its reality upon our consciousness. There is some standard of reason
and enjoyment which gives it truth, the standard of the eternal man whose experiences
are made possible through our experiences.”
J Krishnamurti on Nationalism
• The psychological necessity for identification is the outcome of inward poverty. Self-
expansion through identification breeds mischief and destruction. In understanding
this process there comes freedom and intelligence, and not substitution.
• When you substitute religion for nationalism or nationalism for religion, both become
the means for self-expansion and so lead to contention and misery. Any form of
substitution, however noble, leads to illusion. Substitution is bribery. Only in
understanding the problem at its different levels, outward as well as inward,
intelligence comes into being.
a) Concept of Curriculum and their relationship with the aims of education (Kumar, 2004),
Determinants of curriculum, and understanding of hidden and enacted Curriculum.
• "Curriculum theory encompasses philosophy and value systems; the main components
of the curriculum: purposes, content, methodology and evaluation; and the process
whereby curricula are developed, implemented and evaluated. (White, 1993: 19).
• HIDDEN CURRICULUM can be defined as the lessons that are taught informally,
and usually unintentionally, in a school system.
• These include behaviors, perspectives, and attitudes that students pick up while
they're at school.
• This is contrasted with the formal curriculum, such as the courses and activities
students participate in.
• Enacted curriculum
• The “Enacted Curriculum” reflects the daily curricular experience of a student within
instructional settings exemplified by assignments, instructional practices, and
managed content. ➔Textbooks & Workbooks
• ➔Computer-based training
• Curriculum: Curriculum is, perhaps, best thought of as that set of planned activities
which are designed to implement a particular educational aim- set of such aims - in
terms of the content of what is to be taught and the knowledge, skills and attitudes
which are to be deliberately fostered, together with statements of criteria for selection
of content, and choices in methods, materials and evaluation". In reference to the
framework above it would mean the 'curriculum core' and 'syllabus' put together.
• Syllabus: refers to the content of what is to be taught and the knowledge, skills and
attitudes which are to be deliberately fostered; together with stage specific objectives.
• Psychological determinants
• National curriculum
• State curriculum
• School curriculum
Conceptual linkages between curriculum and text books & learning materials
“Learning and teaching materials are critical ingredients in learning and the intended
curriculum cannot be easily implemented without them. Over the past forty years the
importance of adequate Learning and Teaching Materials provision (including textbooks,
teachers’ guides and supplementary materials) to support educational development and
quality upgrading has been recognised by governments throughout the developing world and
by most development partners. There is now substantial research evidence which shows that
textbooks are one of the most important inputs that have a demonstrable impact on student
learning”.
• a) Critically analyze existing school practices in the light of what is valued and
devalued in commonplace rituals of school, its celebrations, and its notions of rules,
discipline, or the time-table
Critically analyze existing school practices in the light of what is valued and devalued in
commonplace rituals of school, its celebrations, and its notions of rules, discipline, or the
time-table
• Although the common curriculum is prescribed by the state or national agencies its
implementation depends upon various internal factors prevailing in the schools which
intern are reflected in the school practices.
School practices are reflected in school rituals , celebrations, timetables , rules and disciplines
etc.
¾ School policy
A hidden curriculum is a side effect of an education, "[lessons] which are learned but not
openly intended" such as the transmission of norms, values, and beliefs conveyed in the
classroom and the social environment. Any learning experience may teach unintended
lessons.
• Reflects that decisions and choices made during the curriculum developmentprocess
are made in the interests of learners
• Adequate assessment- tests internal and external performance, assignments & projects
• Student behaviour
– Student attitudes
• Out of school-time spent applying the content and processes, active participation in
using knowledge to address recurring societal problems
• Tasks at work or school typically have two parts: prescribed and discretionary—
aspects in which the person has some latitude to make choices. As the discretionary
component increases, engagement seems to increase.
• Teacher training- student teachers are empowered to teach the learners than subject to
learners
• Text books & instructional materials- to make students develop critical thinking ,
discuss, dialogue , able to opine, take a stand, actions to translate ideas, show
appreciation of diversity & how to to live in a diverse world harmoniously. Content
Matter should be liberating the learners.
The National System of Education will be based on a national curricular framework, which
contains a common core along with other components that are flexible. The common core
will include the history of India’s freedom movement, the constitutional obligations and other
content essential to nurture national identity. These elements will cut across subject areas and
will be designed to promote values such as India’s common cultural heritage, egalitarianism,
democracy and secularism, equality of sexes, protection of environment, removal of social
barriers, observance of small family norm and inculcation of scientific temper. All
educational programmes will be carried on in strict conformity with secular values. India has
always worked for peace and understanding between nations, treating the whole world as one
family. True to this hoary tradition, education has to strengthen this world-view and motivate
the younger generations for international cooperation and peaceful co-existence. This aspect
cannot be neglected. To promote equality, it will be necessary to provide for equal
opportunity for all, not only in access but also in the conditions of success. Besides,
awareness of the inherent equality of all will be created through the core curriculum. The
purpose is to remove prejudices and complexes transmitted through the social environment
and the accident of birth.