Dictionary Definition
curriculum n : an integrated course of academic
studies; "he was admitted to a new program at the university" [syn:
course of
study, program,
programme, syllabus] [also: curricula (pl)]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
- the courses offered by a school
Translations
- Arabic: [منهج، نظام]
- Chinese: 學校的全部課程
- Dutch: curriculum , levensloop
- Finnish: opintosuunnitelma
- Polish: program nauczania
Derived terms
Synonyms
Latin
Etymology
Somehow from currere "to run, race".Extensive Definition
In formal education, a curriculum (plural
curricula) is the set of courses, and their content, offered at a
school or university. As an idea,
curriculum stems from the Latin word for race course,
referring to the course of deeds and
experiences through which children grow and mature in
becoming adults.
Historical conception
In The Curriculum, the first textbook published
on the subject, in 1918, John
Franklin Bobbitt said that curriculim, as an idea, has its roots
in the Latin
word for race-course, explaining the curriculum as the course of
deeds and experiences
through which children
become the adults they
should be, for success in adult society. Furthermore, the
curriculum encompasses the entire scope of formative deed and
experience occurring in and out of school, and not experiences
occurring in school;
experiences that are unplanned and undirected, and experiences
intentionally directed for the purposeful formation of adult
members of society. (cf. image at right.)
To Bobbitt, the curriculum is a social
engineering arena. Per his cultural presumptions and social
definitions, his curricular formulation has two notable features:
(i) that scientific
experts would best be qualified to and justified in designing
curricula based upon their expert knowledge of what qualities
are desirable in adult members of society, and which experiences
would generate said qualities; and (ii) curriculum defined as the
deeds-experiences the student ought to have to become the adult he
or she ought become.
Hence, he defined the curriculum as an ideal,
rather than as the concrete reality of the deeds and
experiences that form people to who and what they are.
Contemporary views of curriculum reject these
features of Bobbitt's postulates, but retain the basis of
curriculum as the course of experience(s) that forms human beings
in to persons. Personal formation via curricula is studied at the
personal level and at the group level, i.e. cultures and societies (e.g.
professional formation, academic
discipline via historical experience). The formation of a group
is reciprocal, with the formation of its individual
participants.
Although it formally appeared in Bobbitt's
definition,
curriculum as a course of formative experience also pervades
John
Dewey's work (who disagreed with Bobbitt on important matters).
Although Bobbitt's and Dewey's idealistic understanding of
"curriculum" is different from current, restricted uses of the
word, curriculum writers and researchers generally share it as
common, substantive understanding of curriculum.
Curriculum in formal schooling
In formal education or schooling (cf. education), a curriculum is the set of courses, course work, and content offered at a school or university. A curriculum may be partly or entirely determined by an external, authoritative body (i.e. the National Curriculum for England in English schools). In the U.S., each state, with the individual school districts, establishes the curricula taught. Each state, however, builds its curriculum with great participation of national academic subject groups selected by the United States Department of Education, e.g. National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) for mathematical instruction. In Australia each state's Education Department establishes curricula. UNESCO's International Bureau of Education has the primary mission of studying curricula and their implementation worldwide.Curriculum means two things: (i) the range of
courses from which students choose what subject matters to study,
and (ii) a specific learning program. In the latter case, the
curriculum collectively describes the teaching, learning, and
assessment materials available for a given course of study.
Currently, a spiral curriculum (or tycoil
curriculum) is promoted as allowing students to revisit a subject
matter's content at the different levels of development of the
subject matter being studied. The constructivist approach, of the
tycoil curriculum, proposes that children learn best via active
engagement with the educational environment, i.e. discovery
learning.
A crucial aspect for learning, understanding by
stimulating the imagination, is absent in
the so-called "neo-conservative
curriculum" that stresses the ineffective aspects of knowledge
amounts and of logico-mathematical thinking, i.e. rote
learning.
Crucial to the curriculum is the definition of
the course objectives that usually are expressed as learning
outcomes and normally include the program's assessment strategy.
These outcomes and assessments are grouped as units (or modules),
and, therefore, the curriculum comprises a collection of such
units, each, in turn, comprising a specialised, specific part of
the curriculum. So, a typical curriculum includes communications,
numeracy, information technology, and social skills units, with
specific, specialized teaching of each.
Core Curriculum
In education, a core curriculum is a curriculum, or course of study, which is deemed central and usually made mandatory for all students of a school or school system. Core curricula are often instituted, at the primary and secondary levels, by school boards, Departments of Education, or other administrative agencies charged with overseeing education. At the undergraduate level, individual college and university administrations and faculties sometimes mandate core curricula, especially in the liberal arts. But because of increasing specialization and depth in the student's major field of study, a typical core curriculum in higher education mandates a far smaller proportion of a student's course work than a high school or elementary school core curriculum prescribes.Examples in Higher Education
Amongst the best known and most expansive core
curricula programs at leading American colleges are
that of Columbia College at Columbia
University, as well as the University
of Chicago's. Both can take up to two years to complete without
advanced standing, and are designed to foster critical skills in a
broad range of academic disciplines, including: the social
sciences, humanities, physical and biological sciences,
mathematics, writing and foreign languages. However, other
selective institutions have largely done away with core
requirements in their entirety, the most famous being the
student-driven course selection of Brown
University, and Cornell
University. Further, as core curricula began to be diminished
over the course of the twentieth
century at many American schools, several smaller institutions
became famous for embracing a core curriculum that covers nearly
the student’s entire undergraduate education, often utilizing
classic texts of the western
canon to teach all subjects including science. St.
John’s College in the United States remains famous in this
vein.
Choice v. Curriculum
Many educational institutions are currently
trying to balance two opposing forces: On the one hand, some
believe students should have a common knowledge foundation, often
in the form of a core curriculum; on the other hand, others want
students to be able to pursue their own educational interests,
often through early specialty in a major, however, other times
through the free choice of courses. This tension has received a
large amount of coverage due to Harvard
University's reorganization of its core requirements.
For example, in 1999, the University
of Chicago announced plans to reduce and modify the content of
its core curriculum, including lowering the number of required
courses from 21 to 15 and offering a wider range of content. When
The
New York Times, The
Economist, and other major news outlets picked up this story,
the University became the focal point of a national debate on
education. The National Association of Scholars released a
statement saying, "It is truly depressing to observe a steady
abandonment of the University of Chicago's once imposing
undergraduate core curriculum, which for so long stood as the
benchmark of content and rigor among American academic
institutions."http://www.nas.org/print/pressreleases/hqnas/releas_16apr02.htmSimultaneously,
however, a set of university administrators, notably then-President
Hugo
Sonnenschein, argued that reducing the core curriculum had
become both a financial and educational imperative, as the
university was struggling to attract a commensurate volume of
applicants to its undergraduate division compared to peer schools
as a result of what was perceived by the pro-change camp as a
reaction by “the average eighteen year old” to the expanse of the
collegiate core.
Sample curricula
- Mathematics
- English
- Science
- Languages
- Modern languages (e.g. English, Spanish, German, French, Chinese, Russian)
- Classical languages (e.g. Latin, Greek)
- Art
- Physical education
- Sexual education
- Political education
- Social studies
- Design Technology
- Computing studies
- Military Education
- Religious education
- Home economics
- Vocational education
- Public speaking
- Study skills
See also
References
curriculum in German: Curriculum
curriculum in Modern Greek (1453-): Αναλυτικό
πρόγραμμα
curriculum in Spanish: Currículo
(educación)
curriculum in Esperanto: studplano
curriculum in Croatian: Kurikulum
curriculum in Italian: Curriculum
curriculum in Malay (macrolanguage):
Kurikulum
curriculum in Japanese: カリキュラム
curriculum in Albanian: Kurrikuli
curriculum in Serbian: Курикулум
curriculum in Ukrainian: Курікулум
curriculum in Chinese: 課程
curriculum in Russian: Федеральный базисный
учебный план для образовательных учреждений Российской
Федерации
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
academic specialty, area, classical education, core
curriculum, course,
course of study, discipline, elective, field, general education, general
studies, humanities,
liberal arts, major,
minor, proseminar, quadrivium, refresher course,
scientific education, seminar, specialty, study, subdiscipline, subject, technical education,
trivium