Nature of Curriculum PDF
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This document provides an overview of the curriculum field, including definitions, types, components, and hidden curriculum. It discusses various perspectives on curriculum, including prescriptive and descriptive definitions.
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CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum The intent of this introductory chapter is to provide curriculum leaders with a general overview of the curriculum field and a set of concepts for analyzing the field. To accom- plish these related goals,...
CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum The intent of this introductory chapter is to provide curriculum leaders with a general overview of the curriculum field and a set of concepts for analyzing the field. To accom- plish these related goals, the discussion that follows focuses on these outcomes: defining the concept of curriculum, examining the several types of curricula, describing the con- trasting nature of curriculum components, and analyzing the hidden curriculum. Some fundamental concepts essential for understanding the comprehensive field of curriculum can be established at the outset. Questions addressed in this chapter include the following: What is curriculum, and why is it important? What are the types and components of curricula, and how have they changed over the years? What are the three “Ds” of curriculum standards? What are mastery, organic, and enrichment curricula, and what roles do they play in the development of curriculum? Why is knowledge of the “hidden curriculum” important to curriculum leaders? Key to Leadership Curriculum leaders should review and monitor curriculum policies to make sure the policies align with curricular goals and support student learning. 2 CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 3 THE CONCEPT OF CURRICULUM In a sense, the task of defining the concept of curriculum is perhaps the most difficult of all, for the term curriculum has been used with quite different meanings ever since the field took form. Curriculum, however, can be defined as prescriptive, descriptive, or both. Prescriptive [curriculum] definitions provide us with what “ought” to happen, and they more often than not take the form of a plan, an intended program, or some kind of expert opinion about what needs to take place in the course of study. (Ellis, 2004, p. 4) Analogous to prescriptive curricula are medical prescriptions that patients have filled by pharmacists; we do not know how many are actually followed. “The best guess is that most are not” (p. 4). This is parallel to the prescribed curriculum for schools where the teacher, like the patient, ultimately decides whether the prescription will be followed. In essence, “the developer proposes, but the teacher disposes” (p. 4). To understand the nature and extent of curriculum diversity, it is important at this junc- ture to examine the prescriptive and descriptive definitions offered by some of the past and present leaders in the field. The prescriptive definitions in Exhibit 1.1, arranged chrono- logically, have been chosen for their representativeness. EXHI BI T 1. 1 Prescriptive Definitions of Curriculum Date Author Definition 1902 John Dewey Curriculum is a continuous reconstruction, moving from the child’s present experience out into that represented by the organized bodies of truth that we call studies... the various studies... are themselves experience— they are that of the race. (pp. 11–12) 1918 Franklin Bobbitt Curriculum is the entire range of experiences, both directed and undirected, concerned in unfolding the abilities of the individual. (p. 43) 1927 Harold O. Rugg [The curriculum is] a succession of experiences and enterprises having a maximum lifelikeness for the learner... giving the learner that development most helpful in meeting and controlling life situations. (p. 8) 1935 Hollis Caswell in The curriculum is composed of all the experiences children have under the Caswell & Campbell guidance of teachers.... Thus, curriculum considered as a field of study represents no strictly limited body of content, but rather a process or procedure. (pp. 66, 70) 1957 Ralph Tyler [The curriculum is] all the learning experiences planned and directed by the school to attain its educational goals. (p. 79) (Continued) 4 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM EXHI BI T 1. 1 ( C o n t i n u e d ) Date Author Definition 1967 Robert Gagne Curriculum is a sequence of content units arranged in such a way that the learning of each unit may be accomplished as a single act, provided the capabilities described by specified prior units (in the sequence) have already been mastered by the learner. (p. 23) 1970 James Popham & [Curriculum is] all planned learning outcomes for which the school is Eva Baker responsible.... Curriculum refers to the desired consequences of instruction. (p. 48) 1997 J. L. McBrien & [Curriculum] refers to a written plan outlining what students will be R. Brandt taught (a course of study). Curriculum may refer to all the courses offered at a given school, or all the courses offered at a school in a particular area of study. 2010 Indiana Department Curriculum means the planned interaction of pupils with instructional of Education content, materials, resources, and processes for evaluating the attainment of educational objectives. (n.p.) In your opinion, which definition is appropriate today? Why? The descriptive definitions of curriculum displayed in Exhibit 1.2 go beyond the pre- scriptive terms as they force thought about the curriculum “not merely in terms of how things ought to be... but how things are in real classrooms” (Ellis, 2004, p. 5). Another term that could be used to define the descriptive curriculum is experience. The experienced curriculum provides “glimpses” of the curriculum in action. Several examples, in chrono- logical order, of descriptive definitions of curriculum are listed in Exhibit 1.2. The definitions provided for prescriptive and descriptive curricula vary primarily in their breadth and emphasis. It would seem that a useful definition of curriculum should meet two criteria: It should reflect the general understanding of the term as used by educa- tors, and it should be useful to educators in making operational distinctions. The following definition of curriculum is offered and will be used in this work: The curriculum is the plans made for guiding learning in the schools, usually Curriculum represented in retrievable documents of several levels of generality, and the Tip 1.1 actualization of those plans in the classroom, as experienced by the learners and as recorded by an observer; those experiences take place in a learning environment that also influences what is learned. Several points in this definition need to be emphasized. First, it suggests that the term curriculum includes both the plans made for learning and the actual learning experiences provided. Limiting the term to the plans made for learning is not enough, because, as will CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 5 EXHI BI T 1. 2 Descriptive Definitions of Curriculum Date Author Definition 1935 Hollis Caswell & All the experiences children have under the guidance of teachers. Doak Campbell 1941 Thomas Hopkins Those learnings each child selects, accepts, and incorporates into himself to act with, on, and upon, in subsequent experiences. 1960 W. B. Ragan All experiences of the child for which the school accepts responsibility. 1987 Glen Hass The set of actual experiences and perceptions of the experiences that each individual learner has of his or her program of education. 1995 Daniel Tanner & The reconstruction of knowledge and experience that enables the learner Laurel Tanner to grow in exercising intelligent control of subsequent knowledge and experience. 2006 D. F. Brown All student school experiences relating to the improvement of skills and strategies in thinking critically and creatively, solving problems, working collaboratively with others, communicating well, writing more effectively, reading more analytically, and conducting research to solve problems. 2009 E. Silva An emphasis on what students can do with knowledge, rather than what units of knowledge they have, is the essence of 21st-century skills. In your opinion, which definition is appropriate today? Why? be discussed below, those plans are often ignored or modified. Second, the phrase “retriev- able documents” is sufficiently broad in its denotation to include curricula stored in a digital form—i.e., software and/or shared on the Internet. Also, those documents, as will be more fully explained below, are of several levels of specificity: Some, such as curricular policy statements, are very general in their formulation; others, such as daily lesson plans, are quite specific. Third, the definition notes two key dimensions of actualized curricu- lum: the curriculum as experienced by the learner and that which might be observed by a disinterested observer. Finally, the experienced curriculum takes place in an environ- ment that influences and impinges on learning, constituting what is usually termed the hidden curriculum. Although the definition, for the sake of brevity, does not deal explicitly with the relation- *Instruction is viewed as an aspect of curriculum. ship between curriculum and instruction, an implicit relationship does exist. Instruction is Its function and importance vary across viewed here as an aspect of curriculum, and its function and importance change through- types of curricula. out the several types of curricula. First, in the written curriculum, when the curriculum is a set of documents that guide planning, instruction is only one relatively minor aspect of the curriculum. Those retrievable documents used in planning for learning typically specify five components: a rationale for the curriculum; the aims, objectives, and content for achieving those objectives; instructional methods; learning materials and resources; and tests or assessment methods. 6 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM Consequently, instruction is a component of the planned curriculum and is usually seen as less important than the aims, objectives, and content at the actualized level; when the planned or written curriculum is actually delivered, instruction takes on a new importance. For that reason, administrators and supervisors should view the curriculum as the total learning experience for students and focus on instruction—how teachers are teaching. THE TYPES OF CURRICULA The definition stipulated above suggests that there is a major difference between the planned curriculum and actualized curriculum. Yet even these distinctions are not suffi- ciently precise to encompass the several different types of curricula. It is important to note that the word curriculum (as defined from its early Latin origins) means literally “to run a course.” If students think of a marathon with mile and direction markers, signposts, water stations, and officials and coaches along the route, they can better understand the concept of types of curriculum (Wilson, 2005). As early as the late 1970s, Goodlad and associates (1979) were perhaps the first to sug- gest several key distinctions. As Goodlad analyzed curricula, he determined that there were five different forms of curriculum planning. The ideological curriculum is the ideal curricu- lum as construed by scholars and teachers—a curriculum of ideas intended to reflect funded knowledge. The formal curriculum is that officially approved by state and local school boards—the sanctioned curriculum that represents society’s interests. The perceived curriculum is the curriculum of the mind—what teachers, parents, and others think the curriculum to be. The operational curriculum is the observed curriculum of what actually goes on hour after hour in the classroom. Finally, the experiential curriculum is what the learners actually experience. While those distinctions in general seem important, the terms are perhaps a bit cumber- some and the classifications are not entirely useful to curriculum workers. It seems to be more useful in the present context to use the following concepts with some slightly differ- ent denotations: the recommended curriculum, the written curriculum, the supported curriculum, the taught curriculum, the tested curriculum, and the learned curriculum. Four of these curricula—the written, the supported, the taught, and the tested—are consid- ered components of the intentional curriculum. The intentional curriculum is the set of learnings that the school system consciously intends, in contradistinction to the hidden curriculum, which by and large is not a product of conscious intention. The Recommended Curriculum The recommended curriculum is the one recommended by the individual scholars, profes- sional associations, and reform commissions; it also encompasses the curriculum require- ments of policymaking groups, such as federal and state governments. Similar to Goodlad’s “ideological curriculum,” it is a curriculum that stresses “oughtness,” identifying the skills and concepts that ought to be emphasized, according to the perceptions and value systems of the sources. CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 7 Recommended curricula are typically formulated at a rather high level of Curriculum generality; they are most often presented as policy recommendations, lists of Tip 1.2 goals, suggested graduation requirements, and general recommendations about the content and sequence of a field of study, such as mathematics. The prevailing decline of American education at the elementary, middle, and high school levels, its low international educational ranking, and the achievement gap between students of different races are undoubtedly factors that influenced several of today’s reform reports. Many perceive the state of American education as a national embarrass- ment as well as a threat to the nation’s future. Second, advancements in technology also play a role. The widespread use of technology in the nation’s schools has influenced sev- eral of the professional associations to include in their recommendations aspects of tech- nology across the curriculum. Advancing excellence in technological literacy in our schools is vital because citizens of today must have a basic understanding of how technology affects their world and how they coexist with technology. Attaining technological literacy is as fundamentally important to students as developing knowledge and abilities in the traditional core subject areas. Students need and deserve the opportunity to attain technological literacy through the educational process. (Dugger, Meade, Delany, & Nichols, 2003, pp. 316–317) The impact of technology is best evidenced by Monica Martinez (2010), president of New Tech Network, who notes that with the advent of digital media, network teaching, and learning platforms, we now have an unprecedented opportunity to reimagine teaching and learning. Professional associations and individuals also seem to have an impact. First, the profes- sional associations representing the several disciplines, such as the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, and those that represent school administrators, such as the National Association for Secondary School Principals, have been active in producing rec- ommended curricula. Also, there seems to be a network of opinion shapers in the profes- sion, who through their writing and consulting have a strong impact on recommended curricula as they attempt to translate the latest research into recommendations for content and methodology. Also, as will be discussed in Chapter 4, federal and state legislation and court decrees play a significant role. Public Law 94-142, requiring the “least restrictive environment” for handicapped pupils, and Public Law 107-110, the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), as well as charter schools, homeschooling, school choice, and vouchers, have had a profound influence on all those developing recommended curricula for these groups of learners. All this legislation is being judiciously reviewed. And, to be sure, many strongly believe that NCLB has had the most devastating effect on schools as well as a general debilitating effect on teaching (Starnes, 2010). Along with the adoption of Common Core State Standards for English language arts and mathematics by a majority of the states, national 8 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM educational organizations have launched a series of ambitious projects to define voluntary standards for science, mathematics, art, music, foreign languages, social studies, English language arts, and other subjects. These efforts have served as catalysts in a wide-ranging national conversation about the needs of students and the instructional approaches of their teachers. This also adds to the national dialogue by presenting the consensus that exists among thousands of educators about what all students in K–12 schools should know and be able to do in the various subject fields. The authors endorse the act of defin- ing standards released by the National Governors Association Center for Best Practices (NGA Center) and the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) and learned societies because it invites further reflection and conversation about the goals of public and private schooling. As we reviewed the standards set forth by the NGA Center and CCSSO and various learned societies, we concluded that administrators, curriculum specialists, and teachers should know that clear goals for learning are required to ensure quality education for all students. And there is a difference between content standards—what students should know and be able to do—and performance standards identifying the acceptable level of performance (Cox, 2000). First, we must define what we mean by standards. Second, we must create a set of standards that are “doable” in the classroom. Finally, teachers must view standards Curriculum as an important part of their work. I call these the three Ds—definition, doability, Tip 1.3 and desirability. —Jim Cox, president of JK Educational Associates, Inc. in Anaheim, California It is interesting to note that the recommended curriculum, as posited by the NGA Center and CCSSO and learned societies, remains remarkably accurate today. As Mike Rose (2010), professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, states: “When standards are employed fairly, they can facilitate learning and show students that their teachers believe they can meet academic expectations” (p. 26). Raising standards in the core curriculum subjects continues to gain momentum in states and school districts across the country. In essence, “the process of setting standards for state assessments should follow the suggestions of many experts—good judgment and pragmatism must guide the final standard setting” (Pellegrino, 2007, p. 541). In this regard, states have begun to use academic standards to make clear what students should learn and what teachers should teach. The curricula recommended by state governments, as well as learned societies, will help curriculum coordinators and teachers make decisions about developing their instructional programs. In addition to recommendations for the core curriculum by the NGA Center and CCSSO and learned societies, there must be a focus on curriculum diversity in our schools. The authors perceive diversity education as a response to the changing demographics of the United States. This perception was supported early by Hanley (1999), who cites J. A. Banks and C. A. M. Banks (1996), who predicted that “by the year 2020, 46% of the students in CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 9 public schools will be children of color and 20.1% of all children will live in poverty” (n.p.). Subsequently, “the need to address the various learning needs of such a diverse student population and the subsequent pluralistic society for which those children will be respon- sible is an urgent task faced by American public [and private] schools” (n.p.). The Written Curriculum The written curriculum is intended primarily to ensure that the educational goals of the system are being accomplished; it is a curriculum of control. Typically, the written curricu- lum is much more specific and comprehensive than the recommended curriculum, indicat- ing a rationale that supports the curriculum, the general goals to be accomplished, the specific objectives to be mastered, the sequence in which those objectives should be studied, and the kinds of learning activities that should be used. Note, however, that Glatthorn (1980) questioned such comprehensiveness and recommended that the written curriculum be delivered to teachers as a loose-leaf notebook, containing only a scope-and-sequence chart, a review of the research, a list of course objectives, and a brief list of materials to be used. This simpler format, he believed, would make the written curriculum more likely to be used. Curriculum The written curriculum is an important component of authentic literacy—the ability Tip 1.4 to read, write, and think effectively. As school administrators and curriculum leaders, the authors believe that the written curriculum must be authentic. Schmoker (2007) supports this belief, saying, “There is every reason to believe that these capacities [the ability to read, write, and think effectively], if acquired across the disciplines, will change lives by the millions and will redefine the pos- sibilities of public education” (p. 488). Similarly, Steven Wolk (2010), associate professor at Northeastern Illinois University, believes that we need visionary educators who see bold purposes for school and who understand that what students read in school has profound, lifelong effects. As an aspect of early authentic literacy discussions, Walker (1979) was one of the first to note that written curricula can be both generic and site specific. Let’s review the concepts of generic and site-specific curricula. Generic curricula are those written for use in various educational settings. Initially, dur- ing the 1960s, numerous generic curricula were produced by federally funded research and development laboratories; now, more typically, they are produced by state and federal education departments and intended for use throughout the individual states and/or coun- try, with some local leeway provided. Site-specific written curricula are those developed for a specific site, usually for a local school district or even for a particular school. Site-specific written curricula are influenced by several different sources. First, as will be explained more fully in Chapter 4, federal and state legislation and court directives play a role. The passage of Public Law 94-142, prescribing that schools provide the “least restric- tive environment” for handicapped learners, undoubtedly precipitated much local curricu- lum work to help teachers work toward “inclusion.” The textbooks and standardized tests 10 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM in use in the district seem to influence decisions about the inclusion and placement of content. The expectations of vocal parent and community groups seem to have at least a constraining influence on what can be done. In general, however, the guides seem to reflect the preferences and practices of a local group of elites: a director of curriculum, a supervisor of that subject area, a principal with a strong interest in curriculum, and experienced teachers. They, in turn, seem most influ- enced by the practice of “lighthouse” districts. It is important to note that we are entering a new kind of shared leadership in the 21st century. Teacher leadership continues to evolve as teachers gain a “global” view of what affects their vision of good schools and good teach- ing (Hanson, 2010). The authors know that people will support what they help create; so all stakeholders, especially teachers, share the commitment of curriculum leadership. The chief functions of written curricula seem to be three: mediating, standardizing, and controlling. They first mediate between the ideals of the recommended curriculum and the realities of the classroom; in this sense, they often represent a useful compromise between what the experts think should be taught and what teachers believe can be taught. They also mediate between the expectations of administrators and the preferences of teachers. The best of them represent a negotiated consensus of administrative and class- room leaders. An example of the “how to” in developing and implementing curriculum is illustrated in Chapter 10. Written curricula also play an important role in standardizing the curriculum, especially in larger districts. Often they are produced as a result of directives from a superintendent who is concerned that students in School A are studying a social studies curriculum or using a reading series quite different from those in Schools B and C. Standardizing and centralizing curricula are often used by district and school adminis- trators as management tools to control what is taught. This control function seems to be perceived differently by administrators and teachers. Administrators believe that control- ling the curriculum is an important management responsibility; they point to the research on school effectiveness that seems to indicate that in schools with higher pupil achieve- ment there is a principal actively monitoring the curriculum to ensure that the written curriculum is being delivered. Waters, Marzano, and McNulty (2003) compiled more than three decades of research on the effects of instruction and schooling on student achieve- ment and found a substantial relationship between leadership and student achievement (see Exhibit 1.3). The results of this study continue to provide practitioners with specific guidance on the curricular, instructional, and school practices that, when applied appro- priately, can result in increased achievement. Walcott (1977), however, discovered in his ethnographic study of a district monitoring plan that most teachers have historically viewed such attempts to control the curriculum as intrusive and counterproductive and will work hard to subvert such plans. Popham (2009) echoes Walcott’s predictions, stating that “teachers must understand that we’re talk- ing about a test-supported process instead of a test” (p. 86). Moreover, these concerns about testing seem to resonate with educators across the country. Predictably, written curricula, especially site-specific ones, are of uneven quality. The best of them seem to represent a useful synthesis of recommended curricula and local practice; they seem well conceptual- ized, carefully developed, and easy to use. Too many, however, lack those qualities. Careful CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 11 EXHI BI T 1. 3 Principal Leadership Responsibilities Responsibilities The extent to which the principal... Culture establishes a set of standard operating procedures and routines Discipline protects teachers from issues and influences that would detract from their focus on teaching time Resources provides teachers with material and professional development necessary for the successful execution of their roles Curriculum, instruction, is directly involved in the design and implementation of curriculum, assessment instruction, and assessment practices Focus establishes clear goals and keeps those goals at the forefront of the school’s attention Knowledge of curriculum, is knowledgeable about current curriculum, instruction, and assessment instruction, assessment practices Contingent rewards recognizes and rewards individual accomplishments Communication establishes strong lines of communication with teachers and among students Outreach is an advocate and spokesperson for the school to all stakeholders Input demonstrates an awareness of the personal aspects of teachers and staff Affirmation recognizes and celebrates school accomplishments and acknowledges failure Relationship demonstrates an awareness of the personal aspects of teachers and staff Change agent is willing to and actively challenges the status quo Optimizer inspires and leads new and challenging innovations Ideals/beliefs communicates and operates from strong ideals and beliefs about schooling Monitors/evaluates monitors the effectiveness of school practices and their impact on student learning Flexibility adapts leadership behavior to the needs of the current situation and is comfortable with dissent Situational awareness is aware of the details and undercurrents in the running of the school and uses this information to address current and potential problems Intellectual stimulation ensures that faculty and staff are aware of the most current theories and practices and makes the discussion of these a regular aspect of the school’s culture 12 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM reviews of a large number of such curriculum guides reveal that they suffer from some common faults: The objectives are often not related to the stated goals, instructional activities are not directly related to the objectives, the activities do not reflect the best cur- rent knowledge about teaching and learning, and the guides are generally cumbersome and difficult to use. The Supported Curriculum The supported curriculum is the curriculum as reflected in and shaped by the resources allocated to support and deliver it. Four kinds of resources seem to be most critical here: the time allocated to a given subject at a particular level of schooling (How much time should we allocate to social studies in Grade 5?); the time allocated by the classroom teacher within that overall subject allocation to particular aspects of the curriculum (How much time shall I allocate to the first unit on the explorers?); personnel allocations as reflected in and resulting from class-size decisions (How many physical education teachers do we need in the middle school if we let PE classes increase to an average of 35?); and the textbooks and other learning materials provided for use in the classroom (Can we get by with those old basals for one more year?). The patterns of influence bearing on the supported curriculum seem rather complex. First, both federal and state governments exercise a strong influence on the supported cur- riculum: State curriculum guidelines go even further by specifying minimum time alloca- tion, as well as state-approved lists of basic texts that restrict the choice of textbooks to a relatively small number. In addition, the local school board, under the leadership of its superintendent, seems to be playing an ever-increasing role in supporting curriculum. In many districts, boards will adopt curriculum policies specifying minimum time allocations to the several subjects, will approve district-purchased texts, and will make major budget decisions that strongly affect the personnel and material support provided. At the school level, principals also seem to have a major influence. They usually have some discretion in the allocation of funds for textbooks and other learning materials. They often are given some latitude in their requests for additional staff. The school master schedule is the major means for translating school priorities into decisions about curricular support. Of course, the classroom teacher plays a crucial role as well. All teachers exercise a great deal of influence in determining how much time is allocated to particular subjects, despite the attempts of principals to limit such autonomy. Obviously, the supported curriculum needs to be examined. The data are clear that several aspects of the supported curriculum have a major bearing on what and how much is learned. First, early studies indicate that time is an important factor. In her review of the research, Stallings (1980) concluded that “the body of knowledge emanating from the research on teaching in the 1970s suggests that teachers should allocate more time to aca- demic subjects, keeping in mind ability levels, and students should be kept engaged in the tasks” (p. 12), which is relevant today as well. During the 1980s, Berliner (1984) also cited examples of the dramatic differences in the way time is allocated in elementary school classrooms. One fifth-grade teacher devoted CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 13 only 68 minutes a day to reading and language arts; another teacher, 137 minutes. Karweit (1983), however, questioned one aspect of this concern for time. In a review of the research on time-on-task, Karweit noted that, “by a variety of criteria for the importance of an effect, the most outstanding finding relating the effects of time-on-task to learning is that the effects are as small as they are” (p. 46). Second, does class size make a difference? A study of 4,948 participants in Tennessee’s class-size experiment, PROJECT STAR, addressed three questions about the long-term effects of early school experiences: (a) Is participation in small classes in the early grades (K–3) related to high school graduation? (b) Is academic achievement in K–3 related to high school graduation? (c) If class size is related to graduation, is the relationship explained by the effect of participation in small classes on students’ academic achievement?... Analyses showed that graduating was related to K–3 achievement and that attending small classes for 3 or more years increased the likelihood of graduating from high school, especially among students eligible for free lunch. (Finn, Gerber, & Boyd- Zaharias, 2005, p. 214) Achilles, Finn, Prout, and Bobbett (2001) found different behavior patterns between teachers who had small classes (15–17) and regular classes (20–28). Their findings revealed that as the day wore on, teachers in regular classes became irritable, edgy, and tired. “They wiped their eyes, sat down, and slowed or regimented instruction, often neglecting stu- dents’ indiscipline, lassitude, and off-task misbehavior. All [teachers] seemed hassled” (p. 2). In contrast, teachers with small classes “remained full of energy all day. Time-on-task stayed high and constant with students remaining well behaved, engaged, and energetic. Student and teacher behavior were reciprocal, but positive” (p. 2). Another factor that the study revealed was carbon dioxide (CO2) levels. “CO2 is related to the number of persons in a space, is cumulative, and causes drowsiness and lethargy that may influence teaching and learning. Class size and time of day seemed to be key variables” (p. 2). The National Education Association (NEA, 2011) also indicated that a class size of 15 students in regular programs and even smaller in programs for students with exceptional needs is the key. NEA officials noted that while many education reform proposals remain controversial, reducing class size to allow for more individualized attention for students is strongly supported by parents, teachers, and education researchers. It is believed that teachers with small classes can spend time and energy helping each child succeed. Smaller classes also enhance safety, discipline, and order in the classroom. When qualified teachers teach smaller classes in modern schools, kids learn more. Finally, the quality of the textbook and other learning resources as an aspect of the sup- ported curriculum seems to play a central role. Allington (2002) noted that “many students in Grades 5–12 struggle to learn from content-area textbooks that don’t match their reading levels” (p. 16). As Chall (as cited in Allington, 2002) declared, the demands of reading increase dramatically for students in fourth grade as their learning begins to rely more on textbooks. For example, “the vocabulary they encounter is less conversational and less familiar, with more specialized, technical terms (delta, plateau, and basin) and abstract ideas 14 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM (democracy, freedom, civilization)” (pp. 16–17). In essence, “the syntax of texts becomes more complex and demanding” (p. 17). Also, “the reasoning about information in textbooks shifts, with a greater emphasis on inferential thinking and prior knowledge. (For example, what stance is the author taking on industrial polluters? Is there another stance that others might take?)” (p. 17). As Baumann and Duffy (as cited in Allington, 2002) indicated, Schools have typically exacerbated the problem by relying on a single-source curriculum design—purchasing multiple copies of the same science and social studies textbooks for every student. This “one-size-fits-all” approach works well if we want to sort students into academic tracks. It fails miserably if our goal is high academic achievement for all students. (p. 17) Undeniably, problems with textbooks are a recurring issue. It should be noted that cur- rent elementary school reading series appear to contain several flaws: Stories written for use in the primary grades do not give enough insight into characters’ goals, motives, and feelings; many of the so-called stories do not actually tell a story; textbooks lack a logical structure, often emphasizing a trivial detail rather than a fundamental principle. Harder textbooks, as well as media-related texts, unfortunately, have captured the attention of educators and policymakers who want to raise academic achievement. Yet today, the concern over quality textbooks continues to grow. Dr. Gay Ivey (2010), professor of Early, Elementary, and Reading Education at James Madison University, notes, “When it comes to subject-area reading materials, we are stuck in a rut” (p. 22). Further, “to create lifelong readers, we need to give them reading materials that leave them wanting to know more.... Instead of focusing on how to get students to remember what they read, our best bet is simply to provide texts that are more memorable” (p. 19). It should be noted that supportive curriculum involves aspects other than textbooks. For example, curriculum author Carol Ann Tomlinson and her colleagues (2002) indicated that the supported curriculum can also involve the use of flexible options and the formation of a parallel curriculum model. They noted in The Parallel Curriculum that parallels can be used to develop or support curriculum for individuals, small groups, and entire classes. The term parallel indicates several formats through which educators can approach curriculum design in the same subject or discipline. Tomlinson and her colleagues refer to the four parallels as Core Curriculum, Curriculum and Connections, Curriculum of Practice, and Curriculum of Identity. These parallel processes can be deductive or inductive and can be used as catalysts to discover student abilities and interests or in response to student abilities and interests. They believe that these parallels act as support for thematic study and help connect content that might otherwise seem disjointed to learners. Using this model, a teacher might establish a definition of change, identify key principles related to change, and introduce students to key skills as well as specify standards that need to be covered. Tomlinson and colleagues' parallel model for curriculum development is only one of the many approaches that can be used to help support curriculum. The supported curriculum plays a central role at several stages of the curriculum cycle. First, in developing curricula, educators should focus specifically on the supported cur- riculum, paying special attention to time allocations and the materials of instruction. Second, in implementing the curriculum, administrators should be sure that adequate CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 15 support is provided. Next, as Chapter 11 indicates, those involved in aligning the curricu- lum should assess to what extent a good fit exists between the written, the supported, and the taught curricula. Finally, any comprehensive evaluation of the curriculum should assess the supported curriculum because deficiencies in support will probably be a major factor in student achievement. The Taught Curriculum The extent to which consonance exists between the written curriculum and the taught curriculum seems to vary considerably. At one extreme are those school systems that claim to have achieved a high degree of consonance between the two by implementing curriculum-alignment projects. At the other extreme are schools where a state of curricular anarchy exists: Each teacher develops his or her own curriculum, with all sorts of disparate activities going on across the school. Curriculum The taught curriculum is the delivered curriculum, a curriculum that an observer Tip 1.5 sees in action as the teacher teaches. How does the taught curriculum, regardless of its fit with the written curriculum, become established? The question is a complex and an important one that can best be answered by synthesizing several studies of teachers’ thinking, planning, and decision making. Thus, teachers’ decisions about the curriculum are products of many interacting vari- ables. Rather than being mindless choices or acts of willful rebellion, those decisions instead seem to represent the teacher’s considered judgment about what compromises will be best for that teacher and a particular class. Statistical evidence provides a strong warrant that how we organize and operate a school has a major effect on the instructional exchanges in the classroom (Bryk, 2010). Bergman and Bergman (2010) agree, noting that good teaching is like good writing—the principles of good writing can help teachers improve their style. The Tested Curriculum The tested curriculum is that set of learnings that is assessed in teacher-made classroom tests; in district-developed, curriculum-referenced tests; and in standardized tests. To what extent are these several types of tests related to the taught curriculum? The answers seem to vary. First, there were early problems in test preparation. Tests previously concentrated on assessing students’ comprehension and memory of objective information, and their attempts to measure understanding of concepts resulted in multiple-choice items that really assessed students’ guessing ability. The evidence on the congruence between curriculum-referenced tests and instruction suggests a somewhat different picture. In districts using curriculum-referenced tests as a means of monitoring teacher compliance, the test seems to drive instruction. The result is a closer fit. Yet, here, the congruence is not reassuring to those who value higher-order 16 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM learning. An examination of a curriculum-referenced test used in a large district’s align- ment project indicated that the test items were concerned almost exclusively with such low-level objectives as punctuating sentences correctly, spelling words correctly, and iden- tifying the parts of speech. Finally, the research suggests that a gap is widening between standardized tests and what some instructors are teaching. The consequences of inade- quate alignment and poor testing are serious. From a historical perspective, Berliner took the lead in 1984 to point out that achieve- ment was lower in schools where there was not a close fit between what was taught and what was tested. Students were put at a disadvantage when the teaching and testing did not match, and their grades and scores were probably not a valid measure of what they had learned. Finally, there were serious legal consequences when poorly fitting tests were used to make decisions about promotion and graduation. The courts ruled that when tests were used for purposes that denied constitutional guarantees of equal protection or due process (as in retention or denial of graduation), schools needed to provide evidence that those tests assessed skills and concepts actually taught in the classroom. As noted author James Popham (2007) states, If we plan to use tests for purposes of accountability, we need to know that they measure traits that can be influenced by instruction.... Instructionally insensitive tests render untenable the assumptions underlying a test-based strategy for educational accountability. (p. 147) Within this milieu of court orders, educators soon began facing greater problems with local testing. Schools, under pressure, then began to rely on strategies to get immediate but lackluster results. This move often creates a dilemma of selecting an assessment method that is incapable of reflecting intended learning, which then compromises the accuracy of results (Chappuis, Chappuis, & Stiggins, 2009). The good news is that many more teachers are using state-approved, online-based pro- grams to ease the alignment of local testing to state and national standards. Teachers are also using data analysis of student strengths and weaknesses. Web programs such as ExamView and Classroom Performance System now allow classroom teachers to create pre- and posttests online easily and quickly. Valid and reliable test questions aligned with state and national standards are selected from large banks of test items. Online testing programs also provide possible teaching strategies to address specific areas of need. Curriculum Components of the curriculum determine the fit between what is taught and what Tip 1.6 is learned. It might be useful at this juncture to note again that the four curricula discussed above— written, supported, taught, and tested—might be seen as constituting the intentional cur- riculum, which comprises that set of learning experiences the school system consciously intends for its students. CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 17 The Learned Curriculum The term learned curriculum is used here to denote all the changes in values, percep- tions, and behavior that occur as a result of school experiences. As such, it includes what the student understands, learns, and retains from both the intentional curriculum and the hidden curriculum. The discussion here focuses on what is learned from the intentional curriculum; the last part of the chapter analyzes what is learned from the hidden curriculum. What, then, do students learn and retain from the intentional curriculum? Obviously, the answer varies with the student, the teacher, and the curriculum. Thus, for many educa- tors, it’s hard to know what works and what doesn’t when it comes to school turnaround (Salmonowicz, 2009). There are, however, some subtle transformations, especially between the taught curriculum and the learned curriculum, that occur in most classrooms, regard- less of the specific conditions. (The discussion that follows draws primarily from the review of the research on academic work.) To begin with, students seem especially sensitive to the accountability system at work in the classroom and take seriously only that for which they are held accountable. Regardless of what objectives the teacher announces or what the teacher emphasizes, students seem to assess the importance of classroom transactions in relation to their value in that accountability system: “Will this be on the test?” To achieve success in an accountability-oriented classroom, students invent strategies for managing ambiguity and reducing risk. They will restrict the output they provide teachers, giving vague and limited answers to minimize the risk of making public mis- takes. They also attempt to increase the explicitness of a teacher’s instructions, asking the teacher for more examples, hints, or rephrasing of the question. Furthermore, they pres- sure teachers to simplify curriculum complexity, strongly resisting any curriculum that forces them to think, inquire, and discover. Undoubtedly, NCLB tried to address many of these student/classroom issues through accountability and testing. In this regard, NCLB brought about an accountability culture in numerous districts that creates greater coher- ence through centralized control. However, according to Rutgers Professor William A. Firestone (2009), “The accountability culture is often not as effective as the student learn- ing culture for promoting achievement.” Firestone adds, “What takes a district from accountability to the student learning culture is a mix of board and community support and leadership from the top” (671). COMPONENTS OF THE CURRICULUM Although several texts in the field seem to treat curriculum development as if it were one undifferentiated process, the realities are quite different. The concept subsumes several distinct entities that might best be described as components of the curriculum. They are as follows. Each of these will be analyzed briefly below and then discussed more fully in the chapters that follow. 18 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM Curricular Policies David Jacobson (2010), senior specialist at Cambridge Education in Westwood, Massachusetts, believes results-oriented approaches explicitly direct administrators to set a specific agenda for school-based teaching teams that have a tighter, more structured, and somewhat more top-down feel. If Jacobson is correct, it appears that few education reforms will be long lasting unless they become institutionalized. And the best way to institutional- ize curriculum is to formulate sound curricular policies. The term curricular policies, as used here, designates the set of rules, criteria, and guide- lines intended to control curriculum development and implementation. In reviewing the literature, Kirst (as cited in Glatthorn, 1987) led the way by noting that there are macropoli- cies, such as a board policy on courses required in high school, and micropolicies, such as a set of recommendations for a curriculum unit in mathematics. Policymaking, as he noted, is essentially the “authoritative allocation of competing values” (p. 15). Thus, as a board makes a policy requiring 3 years of science in the high school curriculum but does not require any study of art, it is perhaps unwittingly according a higher value to science as a way of knowing than it does to aesthetics. Saylor, Alexander, and Lewis (1981) made a useful distinction between de jure policymaking (as implemented in court decisions, national and state legislative acts, and local agency regulations) and de facto policymaking (as carried out by community networks, testing bureaus, accrediting associations, and advisory boards). Curriculum Educators, administrators, and teachers are well advised to reexamine policies Tip 1.7 affecting curriculum and the accepted practices at their schools. The decisions that a school makes regarding established policies and practices can affect students enormously. For example, school boards that prioritize learning for all students help telegraph positive messages to administrators and thus try to invest deeply in human resources, especially professional development (Mizell, 2010). In this regard, school boards and administrators have multiple policies and practices that can and do affect curriculum development. Some policies are deliberately set in place, while others evolve with time. Curricular Goals Curricular goals are the general, long-term educational outcomes that the school system expects to achieve through its curriculum. Three critical elements are included in this definition. First, goals are stated much more generally than objectives. Thus, one goal for English language arts might be “Learn to communicate ideas through writing and speak- ing.” One objective for fifth-grade language arts would be much more specific: “Write a letter, with appropriate business-letter form, suggesting a community improvement.” Second, goals are long-term, not short-term, outcomes. The school system hopes that after 12 years of formal schooling, its students will have achieved the goals the system has set. Finally, curricular goals are those outcomes the school system hopes to achieve through its curriculum. Here, it is important to make a distinction between educational goals and CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 19 curricular goals. Educational goals are the long-term outcomes that the school system expects to accomplish through the entire educational process over which it has control, as Brown (2006) found from a survey conducted with educators, parents, and employers as to what type of skills they believed students should be developing. The following is a priori- tized list of survey responses: 1. Critical-thinking skills 2. Problem-solving strategies and effective decision-making skills 3. Creative-thinking processes 4. Effective oral and written communication skills 5. Basic reading, mathematics, and writing abilities 6. Knowledge of when and how to use research to solve problems 7. Effective interpersonal skills 8. Technology skills 9. Knowledge of good health and hygiene habits 10. Acceptance and understanding of diverse cultures and ethnicities 11. Knowledge of how to effectively manage money 12. Willingness, strategies, and ability to continue learning How do curricular policies and curricular goals interrelate? In a sense, the policies estab- lish the rules of the game (“Take 3 years of health education”) and the goals set the targets (“At the end of those 3 years, you will have adopted constructive health habits”). In this sense, they should determine in a rational system the form and content of all the other components that follow. As will be evident throughout this work, however, educational organizations are usually not very rational. Typically, policies are not related to goals, and goals are not related to fields and programs of study. Fields of Study A field of study is an organized and clearly demarcated set of learning experiences typi- cally offered over a multiyear period. In most school curricula, such fields of study are equivalent to the standard school subjects: English language arts, mathematics, social stud- ies, science, and so on. At the college level, fields are more narrowly defined; thus, students pursue majors in history or anthropology or sociology—not “social studies.” Programs of Study A program of study is the total set of learning experiences offered by a school for a par- ticular group of learners, usually over a multiyear period and typically encompassing 20 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM several fields of study. The program of study is often described in a policy statement that delineates which subjects are required and which are electives, with corresponding time allocations and credits. Here, for example, is a typical program of studies for an elemen- tary school: Reading and language arts: 8 hours a week Social studies: 3 hours Mathematics: 4 hours Art: 1 hour Music: 1 hour Health and physical education: 1 hour At the college level, a student’s program of studies includes all the courses he or she will take or has taken. Courses of Study A course of study is a subset of both a program of study and a field of study. It is a set of organized learning experiences, within a field of study, offered over a specified period of time (such as a year, a semester, or a quarter) for which the student ordinarily receives academic credit. The course of study is usually given a title and a grade level or numerical designation. Thus, “third-grade science” and “English II” are courses of study. At the college level, courses of study seem to be the most salient component for both students and faculty: “I’m taking Economics I this term”; “I’m offering Elizabethan Literature this quarter.” Units of Study A unit of study is a subset of a course of study. It is an organized set of related learning experiences offered as part of a course of study, usually lasting from 1 to 3 weeks. Many units are organized around a single overarching concept, such as “Mythical Creatures” or “The Nature of Conflict.” Units of study generally follow established standards. Unfortunately, these same standards often evolve through consensus that can be unfa- miliar to teachers (Rose, 2010). Thus, not all teachers think about standards and units as they plan. Many high school teachers simply aggregate lessons: “I’ll have a spelling les- son tomorrow and a grammar lesson on the next day.” As college instructors conceptual- ize their courses, they often seem to think about a sequence of lectures rather than a unit of study. At the turn of this century, Robert Marzano (as cited in Marzano, Pickering, & Pollock, 2001), noted that when developing units of study at any level, it is best to view the process as a series of phases. The planning phases of unit development include the following: CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 21 At the beginning of a unit, include strategies for setting learning goals. During a unit, include strategies for monitoring progress toward learning goals, for introducing new knowledge, and for practicing, reviewing, and applying knowledge. At the end of a unit, include strategies for helping students determine how well they have achieved their goals. Marzano’s intent is for teachers to systematically utilize strategies that work. These are best-practice approaches. Basically, teachers should present students with the components and subcomponents of the unit process and then structure tasks to emphasize a specific component or subcomponent. Lessons A lesson is a set of related learning experiences typically lasting 20 to 90 minutes, focusing on a relatively small number of objectives. Ordinarily, a lesson is a subset of a unit, although, as noted above, the unit level is sometimes omitted by teachers while planning for instruction. These distinctions among the several components of curriculum have an importance that transcends the need for conceptual clarity. Each seems to involve some rather different planning processes. Thus, to speak generally about “curriculum planning,” without differ- entiating between planning a program of studies and planning a course of studies, is to make a rather serious mistake. Improving and enhancing lessons based on current brain research and curriculum design is becoming a critical component in the search for best practices. Marzano and his colleagues (2001) identified nine categories of strategies that have a strong effect on student achievement. They are as follows: 1. Identifying similarities and differences 2. Summarizing and note taking 3. Reinforcing effort and providing recognition 4. Homework and practice 5. Nonlinguistic representations 6. Cooperative learning 7. Setting objectives and providing feedback 8. Generating and testing hypotheses 9. Questions, cues, and advance organizers As can be seen from analyzing these nine strategies, students need a fair amount of guidance when learning complex processes. 22 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM Classroom teachers, therefore, need to realize that curriculum planning should empha- size metacognitive control of all processes. These processes are similar to skills in that they often produce some form of product or new understanding. Teachers intuitively recognize the importance of metacognition but may not be aware of its many dimensions. Metacognitive ability is central to conceptions of what it means to be educated. The world is becoming more complex, more information rich, more full of options, and more demanding of fresh thinking. With these changes, the importance of metacognitive ability as an educational outcome can only grow (Martinez, 2006). THE MASTERY, THE ORGANIC, AND THE ENRICHMENT CURRICULA One additional classification system first proposed by Glatthorn during the 1980s has proven useful, especially in developing and improving fields of study. Curriculum Curriculum leaders should distinguish between the three types of learning in each Tip 1.8 field of study. The three types of learning are mastery, organic, and enrichment. The three types of learning result from the following analytical steps. First, divide the learnings in that field between those that are basic and those that are enrichment. Basic learnings are those that, in the views of knowledgeable educators, are essential for all stu- dents (all, in this use, refers to the top 90% of learners, excluding the least able and those with serious learning disabilities). Enrichment learnings are the knowledge and skills that are interesting and enriching but are not considered essential; they are simply “nice to know.” Thus, in fifth-grade social studies, curriculum workers might decide that the early settling of the Vikings in Iceland would be interesting enrichment content. Once the first division between basic and enrichment is made, then further divide the basic learnings into those that require structure and those that do not require structure. Structured learning, as the term is used here, has four characteristics: 1. Sequencing 2. Planning 3. Measurable outcomes 4. Clearly delineated content Nonstructured learning, on the other hand, includes all those skills, knowledge, and attitudes that can be mastered without such careful sequencing, planning, testing, and delineation. Structured and nonstructured learning yield the three types of curricula depicted in Exhibit 1.4: mastery, organic, and enrichment. CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 23 Mastery learnings are those that are both E X HI B I T 1. 4 The Three Types of Curricula basic and structured. An example of a mas- tery objective for language arts, Grade 2, is Basic Enrichment the following: Structured Mastery Enrichment Use a capital letter for the first word Nonstructured Organic in a sentence. Organic learnings, however, are those that are basic but do not require structuring. They are the learnings that develop day by day, rather naturally, as the result of numerous interactions and exchanges. They tend not to be the focus of specific learnings. They are just as important as the mastery outcomes (if not more so), but they do not require sequencing, pacing, and articulation. Here is an example of organic learning for language arts, Grade 2: Listen courteously while others speak. The teacher might emphasize that learning on every occasion, not devote a specific les- son to it. And enrichment learnings, as noted above, are those learnings that simply extend the curriculum; they are not considered basic. This tripartite division is more than an interesting intellectual exercise. It has signifi- cant implications for curriculum development. In general, district curriculum guides and scope-and-sequence charts should focus solely on the mastery elements. The nurturing of organic components can be enhanced through effective staff development; such out- comes do not need to be explicated fully and carefully in guides. The enrichment com- ponents can be included in a supplement for those teachers who want to share enrichment activities. Curriculum-referenced tests should focus only on mastery elements; organic elements should not be tested. One district that ignored this important distinction wasted a great deal of time trying to develop a test for courteous listening before it was forced to give up in frustration. The distinction also has implications for the purchase of texts: Textbooks should focus on the mastery objectives; the teacher can nurture the organic without the aid of textbooks. Finally, the distinction helps resolve the issue of district versus teacher control. In gen- eral, the district should determine the mastery curriculum, to the extent of specifying objectives. The district emphasizes the important outcomes but gives the teacher great latitude of choice in nurturing them. In addition, the enrichment curriculum is the teacher’s own: Here the teacher can add whatever content he or she feels might be of interest to the students. In addition to the discussion of basic versus organic structure of curriculum, it is also important that teachers be aware of brain research and how students learn. A look into brain research may provide some insight and offer ways to help reduce distractions and increase student attention in the classroom (McDonald, 2010). This sentiment was echoed a number of years ago by Patricia Wolfe (2001), an educational author and consultant, who shared that 24 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM learning is a process of building neural networks. She indicated that children construct networks in the cortex of the brain that contain information about an unbelievable variety of concepts. She lists three levels of learning: Concrete Experience, Representational or Symbolic Learning, and Abstract Learning. Concrete Learning, according to Wolfe, is pretty much what the term implies. It is a combination of repeated experiences and visualizations that allow the brain to store, net- work, and recall when necessary. The second level, Representational or Symbolic Learning, is based on the brain linking and cross-referencing information. All sensory data are linked through association and become part of memory. With concrete experiences available, sensory data can be “acti- vated” when remembered. Without the concrete experience, the representation or symbol may have little meaning, no matter how much someone explains it to the student. The third level, Abstract Learning, involves the brain using only abstract information, primarily words and numbers. With a strong neural network formed both by concrete experience and representations, it is possible for children to visualize in their “mind’s eye.” An understanding of terms, sets, and similarities depends on a child’s developmental age and on a teacher’s ability to give sufficient examples that relate to the student’s experi- ences. It is also important for the teacher to involve students in experiences that make the abstract concepts understandable. More research is helping educators grasp how students learn. For example, neuroimag- ing studies are revealing an underactivation in the brain region influencing fluency in struggling readers. According to Shaywitz and Shaywitz (2007), understanding neural systems that influence reading and reading disability is critical. Basically, this progress reflects the development of functional neuroimaging–functional magnetic resonance imaging, a technology that assesses increases in blood flow in brain regions while subjects carry out specific cognitive tasks. With this in mind, current research on brain develop- ment, especially during this digital age, is continuing to change and evolve. Such findings help educators select the most successful and evidence-based approaches to reading instruction. It is hoped that instruction using phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension strategies will be enhanced with the feedback from neu- roimaging research. Curriculum The key to enriching curriculum is to involve students in real-life problem-solving Tip 1.9 scenarios. Using real-life problem-solving scenarios via technology applications can assist in the process of developing the strongest brain networks that will be formed by actual experi- ence. Furthermore, students’ digitally conditioned brains are 21st-century brains, and teachers must, therefore, encourage these brains to operate fully in the classroom (Sprenger, 2009). As a result, most schools are now using critical-thinking and problem-solving skills and strategies as a major part of the curriculum-development process. CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 25 THE HIDDEN CURRICULUM The concept of hidden curriculum expresses the idea that schools do more than simply transmit knowledge. In fact, the challenges one faces inside the school can easily be con- nected to and compounded by things that are happening outside school (Hatch, 2009). Thus, there are differences between written and hidden curricula in that teachers teach and students learn implicit concepts and patterns (Deutsch, 2004). Hidden curriculum, which is sometimes called the “unstudied curriculum” or the “implicit curriculum,” might best be defined in the following manner: Those aspects of schooling, other than the intentional curriculum, that seem to produce changes in student values, perceptions, and behaviors. As the definition suggests, students learn a great deal in school from sources other than the intentional curriculum. Although the term hidden curriculum is often used with nega- tive connotations, those learnings can be both desirable and undesirable from the view- point of one aspiring to optimal human development. In examining the specific nature of the hidden curriculum, it seems useful at this point to distinguish between what might be termed the constants (those aspects of schooling that seem more or less impervious to change) and the variables (those aspects that seem susceptible to reform). Curriculum The hidden curriculum might be seen as those aspects of the learned curriculum Tip 1.10 that lie outside the boundaries of the school’s intentional efforts. The Constants of the Hidden Curriculum Certain important aspects of the hidden curriculum are so intrinsic to the nature of schools as a cultural institution that they might be seen as constants. Historically, the depiction of those constants presented below has been influenced by a close reading of several early curricular reconceptualists such as Apple (1979), Pinar (1978), and Giroux (1979); sociolo- gists such as Dreeben (1968); and educational researchers such as Jackson (1968) and Goodlad (1984). One of the constants of the hidden curriculum is the ideology of the larger society, which permeates every aspect of schooling. Thus, schools in the United States inevitably reflect the ideology of democratic capitalism. A key component of the school as an organization is the classroom, where the most salient aspects of the hidden curriculum come into play. The classroom is a crowded place, where issues of control often become dominant. Control is achieved through the differential use of power; the teacher uses several kinds of power to control the selection of content, the methods of learning, movement in the classroom, and the flow of class- room discourse. Control also is achieved by the skillful use of accountability measures; teachers spend much time evaluating and giving evaluative feedback. In such a classroom, 26 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM students unconsciously learn the skills and traits required by the larger society; they learn how to be punctual, clean, docile, and conforming. They learn how to stand in line, take their turn, and wait. Another example of the hidden curriculum, according to Butzin, Carroll, and Lutz (2006), is when a teacher works solo within a “grade,” students lose instructional time at the beginning of each year while the teacher gets to know them. Students also lose quality instructional time at the end of each school year after “The Test” because teachers back off from rigorous topics. Even though the above features of the hidden curriculum are presented here as con- stants relatively impervious to change, it is important for curriculum leaders to be aware of their subtle and pervasive influence. Being aware of aspects and variables of the hidden curriculum is crucial for the success of our future administrators and teacher–leaders. The Variables of the Hidden Curriculum Several other important aspects of the hidden curriculum can be more readily changed by educators. The most significant of these can be classified into three categories: organiza- tional variables, social-system variables, and culture variables. Organizational Variables The term organizational variables is used here to designate all those decisions about how teachers will be assigned and students grouped for instruction. Here, four issues seem worthy of attention: team teaching, promotion and retention policies, ability grouping, and curriculum tracking. The evidence on the effects of team teaching on student achievement is somewhat inconclusive. Even though many school systems have implemented “promo- tional gates” policies that promoted students solely on the basis of achievement, several syntheses of the research indicate that social promotion results in better attitudes toward school, better self-image, and improved achievement. Grouping practices in the schools often have been attacked by critics as one of the most baleful aspects of the hidden curriculum. Here, the denunciation of Giroux and Penna (1979) is perhaps typical of the era then and now: The pedagogical foundation for democratic processes in the classroom can be established by eliminating the pernicious practice of “tracking” students. This tradition in schools of grouping students according to “abilities” and perceived performance is of dubious instructional value. (p. 223) However, Cris Tovani (2010), a high school reading specialist in Colorado, shares, “when strugglers are grouped together, all the experts except the teacher are taken from the mix.” She further adds, “groups are fine—as long as the teacher frequently changes the configuration” (p. 28). The chief problem with curriculum tracking, according to researchers, is the lack of challenge in the general curriculum. Many approaches to tracking have been developed CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 27 to prevent an exodus of public school students to private schools as per NCLB and other government regulations. While tracking may have an uncertain effectiveness in achieving that goal, it creates considerable concerns about the potential for relegating the children “left behind” to mediocre schools and tracks and for increasing social stratification (Rotberg, 2007). A better alternative to tracking would be the regular use of cooperative learning groups. According to Slavin, Chamberlain, and Daniels (2007), cooperative learning is effective at all grade levels, but it is particularly appropriate for the developmental needs of middle school students. Cooperative learning allows students to be noisy, active, and social in the pursuit of academic excellence. Learning groups within a heterogeneous classroom have been shown to result in higher achievement, little or no psychological harm to the students, and reduced segregation. Students also gain experience in individual accountability and responsibility, as well as acquiring skills in working with others. The weight of the research evidence suggests educational leaders interested in improv- ing the organizational variables of the hidden curriculum might focus their attention on promotion policies and curriculum tracking as the key variables. They should ensure that the general curriculum is neither dull nor trivial. Other organizational variables might include connections such as class size, better libraries, breakfast and lunch, noncategorical special help, and better assessment, as well as outside connections such as community activities. Each of these hidden curriculum variables can, and do, affect school change in various ways. The key is whether possible changes in these organizational variables are needed reforms or frivolous fads. To this degree, ASCD Editor in Chief Marge Scherer (2009) asks the following questions, “Will the new practices take into account what we know about how students learn? Will they lead to higher achievement for more students, or will they leave more students—and educators— behind?” (p. 7). Much discussion has taken place regarding the impact of class size on curriculum plan- ning and implementation. Many authors and researchers believe that smaller class sizes facilitate better teaching and more personalized instruction. Some authors and researchers do not. The key is that smaller class size may facilitate, but does not necessarily ensure, better teaching and learning. Most individuals do agree, however, that class size does affect how the curriculum is delivered, and thus, the curriculum’s nature can be implicit. Breakfast and lunch may lie outside the boundary of curriculum, but they still may have an important impact on planning. For example, classes have to be scheduled around these activities, especially if the cafeteria is located in the gymnasium. Children having to eat late or not having proper nutrition may also influence when and how the curriculum is delivered. Noncategorical special help has a substantial and yet hidden impact on a school’s sched- ule in that staff may have to adjust classes to compensate for students’ being out of the room. Teachers also have to adjust their classroom organization to accommodate students’ arriving back into a classroom after receiving special help in another setting. To increase the percentage of proficient readers, educators must increase the use of best reading practices (Carbo, 2007). Special programs such as Reading Recovery and Read Well are now important components of the classroom, since the passage of NCLB in 2002. The 28 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM hidden aspect of these special phonics-based programs is that primary teachers must now schedule their units and lessons around these intensive reading programs to accommodate high-risk children. There is little doubt about the impact of these special programs on how the curriculum in the classroom is being delivered. Unfortunately, however, not all schools are raising reading levels. As shared by McCombs and Marsh (2009), “Despite recent prog- ress in reading achievement among elementary school children, literacy levels among U.S. adolescents remain low” (p. 501). Schools with better libraries and/or that provide students with better access to books may have an advantage over schools that do not. Getting reading and informational materials to students in a timely manner can be a key to learning. Albeit hidden, the ability of a teacher to access books and materials will make a big difference in how that teacher will teach. Assessment and accountability are becoming bywords with the advent of NCLB and Race to the Top, and assessment and data analysis are now becoming major determiners of what is taught, when it is taught, and how it is taught. Entire curricula are being changed based on the collection of assessment data and student test scores. Although the impact of assessment is not totally understood and often goes unnoticed, extended days and after-school programs appear to be having a major impact on curricu- lum planning and implementation. Teachers are now being paid extra for extended days to complete in-service and staff development requirements. Additional staff development opportunities often mean that teachers will be learning new material and trying different approaches in their classrooms. The impact of this change on curriculum may be obscure to some, but it is often immeasurable in scope. Social-System Variables The concepts of school climate and culture have become part of the standard rhetoric in contemporary discussions of school effectiveness. Unfortunately, both terms are complex and neither is clearly defined. However, McREL (Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning)—known to conduct, examine, and translate rigorous quantitative research into useful information for educators—found that culture matters. In a study conducted by McREL on school-level leadership, school culture surfaced as the often overlooked factor in school improvement efforts. It was found “that when leading bold improvement efforts, one of the first things that suffers is a school’s culture—specifically, a shared vision, a sense of purpose, cohesiveness, overall well-being of staff members, predictable routines, and a sense of control” (Waters, 2009). The conclusions from the research on culture reflect four attributes of Purposeful Communities: Agreement on what people can accomplish only because they work together as part of an organization Agreement on ways in which they will work together as part of an organization Effective use of all tangible and intangible assets in the organization High levels of collective efficacy (Waters, 2009) Confirming McREL’s research findings, Linda Darling-Hammond (2010) states, “America’s commitment to equity will determine our future.” She goes on to say, “Creating schools that CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 29 enable all children to learn requires the development of systems that enable all educators and schools to learn” (p. 8). In keeping with Darling-Hammond’s viewpoint, a small but growing number of school leaders are reviewing their districts’ social systems and consid- ering the integration of students by socioeconomic status. Other research findings were related to teacher–student relationships: Teacher–student interactions in general were positive and constructive; students shared in decision making; and there were extensive opportunities for student participation in activities. Obviously, all these factors can be influenced through effective leadership by both administrators and teach- ers. They are the building blocks of a strong and healthy organizational culture (Waters, 2009). Curriculum Social and economic issues can affect aspects of the hidden curriculum. Tip 1.11 Social- and economic-related programs such as Head Start and Even Start are designed to assist economically challenged preschool children. Head Start is a federal program that has been around since the 1960s. Some school districts are designing their school opera- tion to have Head Start on campus. This allows a good transition for the Head Start children to matriculate into a kindergarten program. Having Head Start on-site in a school district also enhances opportunities for staff development and offers a way to improve staff rela- tions. Head Start teachers and administrators have an opportunity to plan their curricula so that it threads unnoticed into the district curriculum. On-site Head Start teachers are, thus, better able to understand the goals and objectives of the school district and better able to correlate their programs with district primary teachers. There were two great achievements in the design of Head Start. First, the program high- lighted social and emotional development—emphasizing health, comprehensive services, and social services to families. Second, Head Start introduced parent participation. Probably the most important single determinant of a child’s growth is the behavior of parents (Perkins-Gough, 2007). Even Start is a family literacy program that includes preschool children and their par- ents. Both children and parents go to school. Parents work to complete their high school education or receive adult literacy instruction (Michigan Department of Education, 2010). The implicit aspect of this program is that children are provided with an enriched pre- school curriculum. As advocated by Cunningham and Allington (1994), parents also learn more about parenting, including ways to involve their children in reading and writing. Another social aspect of curriculum that may be hidden is the involvement of parents and community. Although parents may not directly create a change in curriculum, their approval or disapproval can have a tremendous impact on how a school is operated, what is taught, and how it is taught. An example might be the involvement of parents at the primary level and their support of technology. When parents are in the school at the primary level and see the impact that technology is having on their children, they often become major supporters of educational technology. This support is generated in the passage of special levies and bonds that affect the use of technology at all grade levels—even high school. 30 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM The involvement of the community can have an impact on curriculum development in much the same way. If members of the community feel positive about what is happening in their schools, they are much more apt to support the schools financially. This financial support might include more staff, improved facilities, materials, and/or staff development. The connection to the curriculum may not be readily apparent to some, but it is definitely a major factor in the success of the school. Culture Variables As noted by sociologist Arlie Hochschild, “We are all connected in chains of care, not only to friends and family around us, but also to other people whom we cannot see” (as quoted in Hargreaves & Fink, 2006, p. 20). Sometimes, in school settings it is the people of other cultures who are not seen and/or not understood. Successfully teaching students from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds—especially students from historically marginalized groups—involves more than just applying specialized teaching techniques. It demands combining English Language Learning and Leadership—thus, putting it all together (Lindquist & Hill, 2009). Because the hidden curriculum impacts student learning, Glatthorn and Jailall (2009) identify the key factors that seem to constitute the hidden curriculum: Time allocation: For example, are health and physical education allocated sufficient time to change the behavior of children and youth? Space allocation: How much space is allocated for teacher conferring and planning? Use of discretionary funds: How are such funds expended, and who decides this? Student discipline: Do suspensions seem to reflect an ethnic bias? Physical appearance: Does the appearance of facilities suggest that those in the building care for the school? Are walls decorated with student artwork? Student activities program: Does this program reflect and respond to student talent diversity? Communication: Are most of the messages over the public address system of a positive nature? How often are student voices heard? Power: Do teachers have power in the decision-making process? Do students have any real power over the factors that matter? (pp. 115–116) These aspects of the hidden curriculum also can be influenced by administrators and teachers working together. To summarize, then, the hidden curriculum is seen here as both constant and vari- able aspects of schooling (other than the intentional curriculum) that produce changes in the student. The constants—the ideology of the larger society, the way in which certain knowledge is deemed important or unimportant, and the power relationships that seem necessary in large bureaucratic institutions—seem unlikely to change. However, the variables—those aspects of the organizational structure, the social sys- tems, and the culture of the school that can be influenced—require the systematic attention of curriculum leaders. CHAPTER 1 The Nature of Curriculum 31 EXH IBIT 1. 5 Relationships of Types of Curricula Written Curriculum Recommended Curriculum Supported Curriculum LEARNED CURRICULUM Taught Curriculum Hidden Curriculum Tested Curriculum INTENTIONAL CURRICULUM SOURCE: Developed by Mark A. Baron, Chairperson, Division of Educational Administration, School of Education, the University of South Dakota. In reviewing the intended and hidden curriculum, a coming together of the two can be observed. Exhibit 1.5 illustrates how the intentional curriculum and the hidden curriculum extend into the learned curriculum. SUMMARY This introductory chapter provides a general overview of the curriculum field and a set of concepts for analyzing that field. The chapter defines the concept of curriculum and stan- dards, examines the several types of curricula, describes the contrasting nature of curricu- lum components, and analyzes the hidden curriculum to provide some fundamental concepts essential for understanding the comprehensive field of curriculum. The chapter 32 PA RT I FOUNDATIONS OF CURRICULUM includes the topics of what curriculum is and why it is important; the types and compo- nents of curricula and how they have changed over the years; what mastery, organic, and enrichment curricula are and the roles they play in the development of curriculum; and why knowledge of the “hidden curriculum” is important to curriculum leaders. A P P L I C AT I O N S 1. By reviewing the definitions of curriculum provided in this chapter and reflecting on your own use of the term, write your own definition of curriculum. 2. Some educators have suggested that the profession should use simpler definitions for curriculum and instruction: Curriculum is what is taught; instruction is how it is taught. Do these definitions seem to suffice, from your perspective? If so, explain. 3. Descriptive curriculum has numerous definitions, which can be slightly confusing. Based on the general definitions provided by educators and their operational distinc- tions, rank the seven examples provided in Exhibit 1.2 and explain why your selection meets the criteria. 4. Some leaders have argued for a very close fit between the written and the taught cur- riculum, suggesting that teachers should teach only what is in the prescribed curricu- lum. Others have suggested that some slippage is desirable—that teachers should have some autonomy and latitude, as long as they cover the essentials. What is your own position on this issue? 5. Although most curriculum texts do not make the distinctions noted here between pro- grams of study, fields of study, and courses of study, those distinctions do seem to matter. To test this hypothesis, do the following: (a) List the steps you would follow in designing a program of studies for one level of schooling, such as elementary or middle school; and (b) list the steps you would follow in designing a field of study, such as social studies, K–12. 6. It has been suggested here that the “constants” of the hidden curriculum are not easily changed. Others would argue that they should be changed if we truly desire democratic and humanistic schools. As a school leader, would you attempt to change any of those