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By: Roxanne Putro, Jessica Huff, and Kaylyn White National Curriculum

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National Curriculum. By: Roxanne Putro, Jessica Huff, and Kaylyn White. What are “National Standards”?. Different view of what they want to create – or protest: Some say it is setting standards for the content of what is taught Others say it is increasing the rigor of instruction - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: National Curriculum

By: Roxanne Putro, Jessica Huff, and Kaylyn White

National Curriculum

Page 2: National Curriculum

What are “National Standards”?

• Different view of what they want to create – or protest:

• Some say it is setting standards for the content of what is taught

• Others say it is increasing the rigor of instruction

• Others say it means “standardizing” what knowledge is taught

Page 3: National Curriculum

What is National Curriculum?

• A framework used by all maintained schools to ensure that teaching and learning is balanced and consistent.

• A set of educational standards devised by a central government to be implemented in government-funded schools.

Page 4: National Curriculum

What is National Curriculum?

• Schools are free to plan and organize teaching and learning in the way that best meets the needs of their pupils (in the UK)

• Many schools use the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) Schemes of Work to plan their curriculum. These help to translate the National Curriculum’s objectives into teaching and learning activities.

Page 5: National Curriculum

What is National Curriculum?

• As we speak, there is a coalition drafting standards in math and reading and putting those drafts trhough a process of “validation” by a committee.

• Next step - Write standards for each grade level.

• Decide whether the coalition moves on to create a common test for each grade in math and reading and advances to other subject areas.

Page 6: National Curriculum

National Curriculum Essential Questions • Culturally would a national curriculum work for

the United States?

• Is the United States too diverse to have a national curriculum?

• How is the size of the US a factor in relationship to the control that local authorities feel they need in setting up a national curriculum?

• How can schools serve the highest and lowest achievers?

• How can we develop high-quality content standards and tests?

Page 8: National Curriculum

Whose responsibility is it?

• Curriculum within public elementary education is determined by individual school districts.

•School district selects curriculum guides and textbooks that are reflective of a state's learning standards and benchmarks for a given grade level.

•Learning Standards are the goals by which states and school districts must meet adequate yearly progress (AYP) as mandated by No Child Left Behind.

Page 10: National Curriculum

National curriculum systems generally require some type of assessment or standardized testing every few years.

Rather than assessing a student's intelligence, the primary goal of the assessment tests are to measure how well the teacher or school is meeting the aims set out by the curriculum.

Page 11: National Curriculum

Teach to the Test

Page 12: National Curriculum

Teach to the Test

Page 13: National Curriculum

Thinking Outside the Box

Page 14: National Curriculum

Pros of a National Curriculum

Allow state by state comparison.

•Certification for teaching standards and state qualifications will be the same across the board.

Could see where strengths/weakness areas are in certain areas of the country.

•One version of a curriculum is easier to deal with on a national level than 50 state versions.

• Create an environment where students learn together about a shared concern.

• Enable students to mix self-interest and apply knowledge to solve problems.

• Make learning relevant to real issues. provide a well-assessed general base of knowledge for all students

Page 15: National Curriculum

Cons of a National Curriculum• Disagreement between lawmakers

Who decides what is important/ what is not important

• Hidden Curriculums differ State by state curriculum lines differ

• Federal Government power Where their funding should go Too much power to people that are not involved with

teaching

• Different Cultures make up United States Different cultures value different aspects of education

- May not be tailored to the needs and heritage of specific students.

• Other aspects of education need to become uniform

- Starting date, days of school, salaries

• Educators need more training.

Page 16: National Curriculum

National Curriculum and Individualism & Equality

• Article: “liberationists: “liberate students from oppressive forces in schools and society.”

- “reconstructionists: use schools to criticize and remake society.”

Page 17: National Curriculum

National Curriculum

• “The statutory curriculum should establish an entitlement for all children and promote high standards.”

http://curriculum.qcda.gov.uk/new-primary-curriculum/aims-values-and-purposes/index.aspx

Page 18: National Curriculum

Equality, Individualism, and Individuality

• A common curriculum is not a necessary implication of “cultural literacy,” but it comes into the picture if an entire populace is to be raised to a minimum level of literacy. It is also the best way to avoid one of the most damaging divisions in a society, that between the prosperous and the poor.

Hirsch Jr, E.D. The Making of Americans: Democracy and Our Schools, Yale University Press, 2009.

Page 19: National Curriculum

Extensions of National Curriculum

• Will the national curriculum maintain its motives?

• Will it be criticized and even visciously attacked?

• Will it provide opportunities for out-of-school education?

• Will it accommodate ALL students after schooling as far as work?

Page 20: National Curriculum

Further Questions…

• Can administrators cope with the shift of power to teachers and students?

• How do you address concerns about not following a sequential curriculum?

• How do you make people understand that separate subjects are tools that are use to build knowledge, not ends unto themselves?

• How do we test this curriculum?

• Using this approach forces us to question our central American values of competition and individualism.

Page 21: National Curriculum

Other Sources

Barton, Paul E. “National Education Standards: To Be or Not to Be?”, Educational Leadership, 67, April 2010.

Hirsch Jr, E.D. The Making of Americans: Democracy and Our Schools, Yale University Press, 2009.

http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/Bridging-Differences/2009/03/march_12_2009_dear_diane.html

http://curriculum.qcda.gov.uk/new-primary-curriculum/aims-values-and-purposes/index.aspx

McClusky, Neal. “Behind the Curtain: Assessing the Case for National Curriculum Standards”, Policy Analysis, 17, Feb 17, 2010

Smith, Marshall S. “A National Curriculum in the United States?” EJ432699, Educational Leadership 49, 1, 74-81, September, 1991.