Curriculum Implementation & Evaluation
Curriculum Implementation & Evaluation
& EVALUATION
MODULE VI
Introduction
A curriculum starts with a plan
Whenever a new
programme is being
designed, communication
channels must be kept open
so that the new programme
does not come as a surprise
Guidelines for Effective
Implementation
Implementation is a
collaborative and emotional
effort
3. The maintenance or
institutionalization phase
essentially refers to the
monitoring of the
innovation after it has been
introduced
Three Stages to Implementing
Change
Change is accomplished
by individuals first
Institutions cannot
change until the
individuals within them
change
Curriculum Implementation
Models
Change is a highly personal
experience
Change can be facilitated by
change agents providing
diagnostic, client-centred
support to individual teachers
Curriculum Implementation
Models
CBAM begins with the
assumption that there is a
specific curriculum that should
be adopted by a district or school
Question: How to assist teachers
in adopting this curriculum as
their own?
Curriculum Implementation
Models
Answer: CBAM centres on the
concerns of the teachers, not
the school or the district
It attempts to provide data that
will help teachers themselves
implement a new curriculum
Curriculum Implementation
Models
Other implementation
models include:
Organizational
Development Model
Overcoming Resistance to
Change Model
CURRICULUM EVALUATION
Curriculum evaluation is essential
to curriculum development,
implementation, and maintenance
However, there is little agreement
on deciding what evaluation is,
how to approach its use, and how
to employ the results of
evaluation activities
CURRICULUM EVALUATION
A key concept embedded in
evaluation is value
Value is defined by one’s
philosophical position
Value subsumes the
concepts of merit and worth
CURRICULUM EVALUATION
Merit relates to the degree to
which something is
accomplished or the degree
of success some person,
programme or activity has in
light of some preset standard
Definitions of Evaluation
Worthen and Sanders define
evaluation as “the formal
determination of the quality,
effectiveness, or value of a
programme, product,
project, process, objective,
or curriculum.”
Definitions of Evaluation
Evaluation includes inquiry
and judgement methods:
(1)determining standards for
judging quality and deciding
whether those standards
should be relative or absolute
Definitions of Evaluation
2.collecting relevant
information
3.applying the standards to
determine quality
Definitions of Evaluation
Bruce Tuckman has defined
evaluation as “the means of
determining whether the
programme is meeting its goals:
that is whether a given set of
instructional inputs match the
intended or prescribed
outcomes.”
Definitions of Evaluation
Daniel Stufflebeam has
defined evaluation as “the
process of delineating,
obtaining, and providing
useful information for judging
decision alternatives.”
Nature and Purpose of
Evaluation
Evaluation is a process or cluster
of processes that people perform
in order to gather and interpret
data to decide whether to
accept, change, or eliminate
something.
Important questions to consider:
Nature and Purpose of
Evaluation
1. The Question of Intrinsic
Value: This question addresses
the goodness and the
appropriateness of the curriculum
It deals with the curriculum as it is
planned and also with the finished
curriculum as it is delivered
Nature and Purpose of
Evaluation
If a school were dealing with a
new language arts curriculum, it
would ask:
(a) whether the curriculum
incorporates the best thinking to
date on what is known about the
content of the language arts
Nature and Purpose of
Evaluation
(b) the arrangement of content
and the presentation of that
content
Would specialists in linguistics,
composition, grammar, and
communication give the
curriculum planned high
marks?
Nature and Purpose of
Evaluation
2. The Question of Instrumental
Value: This question posits,
“What is the curriculum good for,
and who is its intended
audience?”
- To what extent will students
attain the planned activities in the
curriculum?
Nature and Purpose of
Evaluation
- Note that the extent of
attainment relates to standards
Context Evaluation
Context evaluation
involves studying the
environment of the
programme
Stufflebeam’s Context, Input,
Process, Product Model
(CIPP)
Process Evaluation
This stage addresses
curriculum implementation
decisions that control and
manage the programme
Stufflebeam’s Context, Input,
Process, Product Model
(CIPP)
It is used to determine the
congruency between the
planned and actual activities
It includes three strategies:
Stufflebeam’s Context, Input,
Process, Product Model
(CIPP)