Learner Centered Curriculum Design
Learner Centered Curriculum Design
Learner Centered Curriculum Design
Topic:
Learner-Centered Designs
1. Child-Centered Design
2. Experience-Centered Design
3. Romantic (Radical) Design
RATIONALE
Learner-Centered Designs
1. Child-Centered Design
The proponent of this design believe that students must be
enthusiastic in their learning environments and that learning
should not be detached from students lives which is mostly on
the paradigm of the subject-centered designs.
As an alternative, the design should be centered on students
lives, needs and interests.
Every child is a unique and special individual. Consequently, we
have to teach individual children and be respectful of and
account for their individual uniqueness of age, gender, culture,
temperament, and learning style.
Children are active participants in their own education and
development. This means that they should be mentally involved
and physically active in learning what they need to know and do.
Childrens ideas, preferences, learning styles, and interests are
considered in the planning for and implementation of
instructional practices.
Arthur Ellis
-said that attending to students needs and interests requires careful
observation of students and faith that they can articulate to those
needs and interests. Also, young students interests must have
educational value.
John Locke
-noted that individuals construct bodies of knowledge from a foundation
of simple ideas derived from their experiences.
Immanuel Khant
-was a German philosopher during the Enlightenment era of the late
18th century. His best known work is the Critique of Pure Reason.
-postulated that aspects of our knowledge result from our cognitive
actions; we construct our universe to have certain properties.
Francis Parker
-he disputed that effective education did not call for strict discipline.
Instead, attaining the childs innate tendency to become involved in
exciting things is in the institutional approach that is somewhat free.
2. Experience-Centered Designs
John Dewey
-childrens impulsive power, their demand for self expression, cannot
be suppressed.
-interest was purposeful
-In Experience and Education, education should commence with the
experience learners already possessed when they entered school.
-Experience was essentially the starting point for all learning.
-Children exist in a personal world of experiences and their interests
are personal concerns, rather than bodies of knowledge and their
attendant facts concepts, generalization, and theories.
Thomas Armstrong
-creating a friendly classroom environment, one that radiates a joyful
atmosphere and capitalizes on students natural character to learn.
3. Romantic (Radical) Design
Students must learn ways of engaging in a critique of knowledge
Learning is reflective, it is not externally imposed by someone in
power
Radicals view society as deeply flawed & believe that schools
used curriculum to control & indoctrinate, not to educate &
emancipate
Students must accept responsibility for educating themselves &
demand freedom
Paolo Freire
-is the most inuential thinker of education in the late twentieth century,
particularly with informal educators with his emphasis on dialogue, his
concern for the oppressed and educational pro-grams for adult
education and literacy
-believes that education should inform the masses about their
oppression, provoke them to feel dissatisfied with their condition, and
give them skills necessary for correcting identified injustices.
References
Excerpt from Early Childhood Education Today, by G.S. Morrison,
2009 edition, p. 109. 2009
Ornstein and Hunkins (Curriculum, Foundations, Principles and
Issues), 2009
Emerita Reyes, Ed.D., Curriculum Develop p. 99-102
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