Curriculum development requires educators ask the following questions: 1. What content is worth knowing? 2. What concepts are worth understanding? (Erickson, 2002) 3. What skills are worth knowing? 4. What should be left out of the curriculum or moved to a different part of the curriculum? 5. Should the curriculum teach for Introduction, Review, Mastery or Deep Understanding at this grade level? Where does the curriculum address this content, skill, or concept before or after this grade level or course? 6. Will this standard or the curriculum provide students with knowledge and skills that will be of value beyond a single test date (Reeves*)? 7. Will this standard or curriculum provide students with essential knowledge and skills that are necessary for success in the next grade or the next level of instruction (Reeves*)? 8. What educational purposes should this course/the school seek to attain? (Tyler, 1949) 9. What do we want students to uncover (Coverage vs. Uncoverage)? (Wiggins & McTighe, 2005) 10. Is the curriculum aligned with the criteria for 21st Century standards? See 21st Century Standards What criteria do educators in your school district or state use when developing K-12 curriculum? Do you agree or disagree with the criteria listed above? A great article for K-12 Curriculum Developers was written by George Nelson (2001). Nelson's article titled Choosing Content That's Worth Knowing provides educators and other stakeholders with essential questions for curriculum development. To view the article online, visit http://tiny.cc/VlwsR K-12 Curriculum Development was developed as a site for educators to share ideas, discuss recent books about curriculum, share tools for supporting the work of teachers and administrators, and foster an online professional learning community. References: * Excerpted from Ainsworth, L. (2003). Power Standards, pp. 10-14, Englewood, CO: Advanced Learning Press. Erickson, H. L. (2002). Concept-based curriculum and instruction: Teaching beyond the facts (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press. Nelson, G. (2001). Choosing content that's worth knowing. Educational Leadership, 59, 12-16. Tyler, R.W. (1949). Basic principles of curriculum and instruction . Chicago: University of Chicago. Wiggins, G., & McTighe, J. (2005). Understanding by design (2nd ed.). Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. CommentsLeave a Reply |

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