Assignment 2 (0838)
Assignment 2 (0838)
ISLAMABAD
ASSIGNMENT NO .2
ROLL NO.BY647998
A curriculum refers to a defined and prescribed course of studies, which students must fulfill in
order to pass a certain level of education.
Some influential definitions combining various elements to describe curriculum are as follows
According to John Kerr, a curriculum is planned and guided by the school, whether it is
carried on in groups, individually inside or outside the school.
The curriculum is a total learning experience provided by the school. It includes the content
of courses (the syllabus), the method employed (strategies) and other aspects like norms
and values, which relate to the way schools are organized.
Thus a curriculum is neither development nor a sequence of experiences. It is a plan for
facilitating learning for students.
This plan starts with where the child is. It enumerates all the aspects and dimensions of
learning that are considered necessary. It gives a reason why such learning is considered
necessary and what educational aims it would serve.
In a nutshell the curriculum is a means followed by the teachers and students for achieving
the set goals and the aims or objectives of education being provided in the school.
Curriculum, in every sense, is supposed to be used for all experiences. These may be
curricular or co-curricular, imparted by the school for the realization of the stipulated aims
and objectives of the school education.
To answer these questions we should now discuss the principles of curriculum development.
What is to be given to the children in the form of learning experiences at a particular age
and grade level should suit their age and mental development
The capacity for understanding, how children grow with age. The content of the study in
any subject should be formed to suit their mental ability.
Children will be able to learn better in fields where they have special tastes and
inclination of the mind.
It is also found that at different stages of age groups, children have different interest
patterns.
Interests of children also change according to circumstances and situations.
Therefore learning experiences should be designed to suit the interests and tastes of the
age group of students.
The content of the learning experiences for children should be linked with the needs of
the environment in which they live.
For example, children from rural areas can understand and grasp easily the information
which is directly concerned with their experiences in their own rural environment.
The same thing applies to children in a various environments like urban areas, hilly
areas, etc.
The curriculum must have the necessary details. List of topics to be covered does not
solve the purpose.
Both teachers and students should know clearly what is expected of them, what is the
beginning and what is the end of the topic for the particular class.
Material, aids, activities, life situations etc. should be listed in the curriculum.
The curriculum should be such that all the subjects are correlated with each other.
While designing the curriculum, it must be kept in mind that the subject matter of
various subjects has some relation to each other so that they help the child eventually.
This principle asks for the inclusion of those topics, content and learning experiences
that may prove helpful to the students in leading their future life in a proper way.
(i) The principle of consultation with teachers
Teachers play a key role in the implementation of the school curriculum of any grade or
stage.
It is therefore quite essential to seek the proper involvement of the teachers in the
construction and development of the school curriculum.
Curriculum is the means to realize the outcomes of the educational objectives of the
school. Implementation of the curriculum is equally important as curriculum construction. While
developing curriculum experts should also keep its implementation in mind. They should be
aware of the conditions of the schools and possible availability of time and resources available.
Based on this initial examination of the topic, the research study was developed. The
purpose of the study was to determine what, if any, key elements would affect successful
curriculum revision projects. The goal of the study was to determine correlates of successful
programs that would enable teachers and principals to progress through the revision process and
to culminate the project with a strong instructional program and a useable curriculum. The
study was conducted in a two-year research project concluding in the spring of l999. The
findings offered significant opportunity for further study, information for practicing
administrators and teachers, and knowledge for teacher and principal preparation programs.
Conclusions offer methods and means of improving the effectiveness of curriculum revision
programs. Since it is obvious that education will continue to change and curriculum will
perpetually be altered, this information is of vital importance regarding principles for principals
and effective curriculum revision.
After the independence of Pakistan, the first educational conference was convened in
Karachi in 1947 to restructure and reshape the whole process of education including the
process of curriculum in order to make curriculum effective and responsive to the needs of
the country. But, the fruitful results could not be achieved. Therefore, in 1959 the national
commission on education was set up to review the whole education system of the country.
Although, it was time consuming task, it produced an explicit framework for promoting
education in Pakistan aiming at restructuring the education system. The objectives of
education were elaborated and emphasis was laid on the overall development of an
individual through education process so that he/she could become effective member of the
society. But due to several reasons, our education system was not to fully achieve the
desired objective.
In late1960s, it was realized that there was a need to formulate new education policy in
order to bring about changes in the education as a whole. This policy also focused on the
quality education and character building of the young generation that appeared to be
marvelous on paper other than putting these ideas into practice through the curriculum.
After a few years a new government took over and announced another educational policy in
1972 for a period of 8 years which provided a comprehensive list of objectives of education
including the promotion of ideology of Pakistan, building national cohesion by promoting
social and cultural harmony among the people, nurturing the total personality of the
individual. Mobilizing the youth for leadership roles. It was proposed that these objectives
can be achieved through the translation of curriculum into classroom practice. For example;
the Educational Policy (1972-80) mentioned that 'relevant curricula will be prepared in line
with the nation's changing social and economic needs compatible with its basic ideology
and to provide a. massive shift from general education to more agro technical education'
(Government of Pakistan 1972). In the light of the above policy objectives, the curricula at
the primary, secondary and tertiary levels were revised and implemented in the educational
institutions but the policy could not fully achieve its targets. However, another educational
policy was introduced in 1979. This policy also retained more or less the same objectives of
the past policies. However, this policy laid an emphasis on the individual as a good Muslim
and making him/her effective member of Muslim Ummaha Education Policy emphasized
the need for creating awareness in every student that he/she as a member of Pakistani nation
was also a part of the universal Muslim Ummah and that it was expected of him/her to con-
tribute towards the welfare of fellow Muslims.
In line with the National Education Policy 1979, a gigantic task of restructuring or
renovating curriculum was done to ensure that adequate content on Islam and Islamic
ideology was included and due coverage was given to instructional materials aimed at
promotion of national.
These arguments about the social role of TVET have been overshadowed by the economic
arguments that relate TVET (and education) to the economic paradigm where the concept of
economic competitiveness became the main reference point for many educational reforms.
Economic Competitiveness
Over the last two decades, globalization has come to the fore, and the focus of countries
has shifted from social to economic issues. Nations have been transformed into competition
states, and now competitiveness is at the top of the political agenda internationally. Institutions
like the World Economic Forum (WEF) define national economic competitiveness and measure
it to provide comparative statistics for ‘evidence-based’ policy. The WEF classifies countries
according to the stage of development: factor-driven economies (stage 1), efficiency-driven
economies (stage 2) and innovation-driven economies (stage 3) with a transition phase between
each stage.
The composition of the Global Competitiveness Index produced by the WEF includes human
capital components. In the Global Competitiveness Index, 18 indicators or 15.9% of all
indicators (Sabadie and Johansen) were related to human capital which focuses on individuals’
capacities to be developed through education and training. Education related factors have
different a weighting at various stages of development. Human capital accounts for more than
24% of the national economic competitiveness score for countries in the innovation-driven stage,
and for 16.3% at the factor-driven stage in the WEF Global Competitiveness Index (Sabadie and
Johansen. This data as well as other studies (e.g. Mankiw et al; Barro; Krueger and Lindahl
shows that human capital leads to economic growth. In addition, Sabadie and Johansen’s
modelling demonstrates that ‘in all selected countries, increases in the GCI score through human
capital are much higher than what can be gained through improvements in macroeconomic
stability’. Therefore, an improvement of education and training systems is even more important
to the enhancement of economic development than is ‘macroeconomic stabilization, although the
latter is routinely considered a key factor of development’.
Internationally, the human resource development (HRD) concept has attracted more and more
attention compared to human capital, although the meaning of these two concepts is quite close.
In its broad definition, HRD includes health and standard of living, together with education and
vocational training; in its narrower definition, the focus is on upgrading skills in order to
maximize the effectiveness of economic activities. Therefore, although human capital constitutes
only the economic dimension of HRD, ‘in recent years the narrower definition of HRD has
‘tended to prevail” and both concepts have been used interchangeably.
In accord with the HRD argument, many governments establish high targets for the
proportion of secondary students they want to enroll in vocational studies. For example, targets
for secondary vocational programmer enrolments, set up by the governments of Indonesia and
the PRC, were 70 and 60%, respectively (Copenhagen Development Consult). India targeted
25% (World Bank) and Bangladesh 20% of all secondary students to be enrolled in the
vocational/technical secondary stream (World Bank). Pakistan planned to add
technical/vocational streams in secondary education and aimed for half of all secondary students
to enter those streams (World Bank). These targets could provide implementation challenges for
these governments. As a reflection on Australia’s expansion of VET system over the past
20 years revealed, an increase in funding by government’s played a key role in this process
(Snell and Hart). Currently, 61.2% of upper-secondary students pursue pre-vocational or
vocational programs in Pakistan.
A number of trends related to Vocationalisation which may be observed in the region will now
be discussed.
In 2006, the Singapore Workforce Development Agency identified ten foundational skills
that are applicable across all industries. Since then, courses are offered in these areas,
particularly for those who do not have any formal qualifications, in order to provide an
alternative entrance requirement for National Innovation and Technology Certificate (NITEC)
courses. Since 2001, qualifications in the Philippines have been based on three types of
competencies: basic (generic work skills), common (industry specific) and core (occupation
specific). Some examples of basic competencies are leading workplace communication, leading
small teams, developing and practicing negotiation skills and solving problems related to work
activities. In the Philippines, life skills were integrated into SIYB competency standards. A
recent study by Bowskill suggests that after several years following graduation, school graduates
in New Zealand valued more the development of employability skills through their TVET
courses rather than subject-specific and specialized skills.