AU REQUIREMENT TABLE COURSE TYPE AU REQUIRED CORE COURSES 69 MAJOR PRESCRIBED ELECTIVES 19 GER CORE 10 GER-PE - AHSS 3 GER-PE - STS 0 GER-PE - LS 0 Any Category (AHSS‚ BM‚ STS or LS) GER-PE REQUIREMENT 0 GER-PE - BM 0 GER-UNRESTRICTED ELECTIVES 6* TOTAL 107 * EE3179 is taken in Semester 2. Those taking EE3179 (instead of EE3076) will have the additional 4 AUs counted in the GER-UE category. CURRICULUM STRUCTURE NO. OF HOURS PER
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THE REVISED BASIC EDUCATION CURRICULUM The Revised Basic Education Curriculum (RBEC) is on its 7th year of implementation this school year 2005-2006 with slight modifications‚ with emphasis to rubrics/student performance as basis of grading system. Teachers are required to prepare their syllabus based on the objectives of the revised Basic Education Curriculum. Lesson plans were also patterned and organized to meet the objectives of the implemented curriculum. All test items; tables of specifications
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TOOLS TO ASSESS CURRICULUM ASSESSMENT STRATEGIES - Assessment strategies are the structures through which students’ knowledge and skills are assessed. A. PAPER-AND-PENCIL STRATEGY Essay - is a pencil-and-paper assessment where a student constructs response to a question‚ or brief statement. Select response - is pencil-and-paper assessment in which the student is to identify the correct answer. B. PERFORMANCE-BASED STRATEGY - is an assessment which requires students to demonstrate a skill
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ROLE OF STAKE HOLDERS IN CURRICULUM IMPLEMENTATION Girlie P. Esguerra Glecel. C. Magallanes Discussant Stakeholders • Are individuals or institutions that are interrelated in the school curriculum. • They are the one who put into action and give life to the curriculum. • They shape the curriculum implementation. Role of a Stakeholders 1. Learners at the Center of Curriculum • They are the very reason a curriculum is developed. • They make and unmake the curriculum by their active and direct
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Language and Literacy Curriculum in the Caribbean. Subject: Curriculum Issues in Language Arts Education Curriculum issues in Language Arts Education suggest many things‚ in order to understand the problems we must first grasp the theory of what is language Arts Education. English Language Arts Education incorporates the teaching and learning of reading‚ writing‚ speaking‚ listening‚ and viewing. Integration of language arts occurs in multiple ways. First‚ curriculum‚ instruction‚ and assessment
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On 15th April‚ the National Curriculum Board was formed with a mandated to oversee the development of a rigorous‚ world-class national curriculum for all the Australian Students from kindergarten to 712‚ starting with the key learning areas of English‚ Mathematics‚ the Sciences and History. Pragmatism‚ the board was to draw the best performance from each State and territory into a single curriculum to ensure every child has access to the highest quality learning programmes to lift achievement and
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Programme Design Overview of curriculum models Author: Geraldine O’Neill Email: Geraldine.m.oneill@ucd.ie Date: 13th January 2010 Overview of curriculum models Ornstein and Hunkins (2009‚ p15) contend that curriculum development encompasses how a ‘curriculum is planned‚ implemented and evaluated‚ as well as what people‚ processes and procedures are involved..’. Curriculum models help designers to systematically and transparently map out the rationale for the use of particular teaching‚ learning
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a hidden curriculum in the classroom”. This idea resides in the fact that while schools are advancing there is an issue‚ a hidden curriculum‚ in which students are taught according to their social class. This idea reinforces the class struggle that Karl Marx had become an advocate for. The idea that capitalism only contributes to classism and that the societal ramifications of this class divide will influence other factors‚ such as education. Jean Anyon’s researched four different types of schools:
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The Creative Curriculum‚ objectives of learning and development are broken down into nine different objectives.These nine objectives are broken down into two different groups‚ which the first group covers the areas of “children’s growth and development (Heroman‚ Burts‚ Berke‚ Bickart‚ 2010).” Those four areas that make this group up are; social- emotional‚ physical‚ language and cognitive. The second group is focused “upon content learning which is viewed as outcome in early learning standards (Heroman
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an even smaller percentage of white students. We currently have a large SPED and LEP population‚ and most of the families at our school are low-income families. More than half the students at our school are labeled “At Risk” in this location. My curriculum philosophy is that all children (students) can learn
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