Monday, August 11, 2008

Turning points in curriculum

Marshall, J. D., Sears, J. T., Allen, L. A., Roberts, P. A., & Schubert, W. H. (2007). Turning points in curriculum: A contemporary American memoir (2nd ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Merrill Prentice Hall.

Part 1 Contextual panorama for contemporary curriculum work (1897-1946)

Chapter 1. Prelude to contemporary curriculum theory and development
  • Curr. history is a continual recurrence of focus on subject matter, learners, and society throughout the 19 century
  • Two added elements
    • What is worth knowing and experiencing (and worth sharing)? - different responses shift the balance among SM, L, & S; e.g., Schubert's (1980) three schools of curri. - intellectual traditionalist, experientialist, & social behaviorist
    • Who decides (and should decide)? - null curriculum (Eisner, 1985); P. Freire
  • The birth of curr. studies
    • How to provide universal education (schooling for the elite until 1890s)
    • Horace Mann & Henry Barnard - promoting universal schooling
    • Charles Eliot led National Educational Association's (NEA) Committee of Ten - the best preparation for college was the same as the best preparation for life
    • Committee of Fifteen: developmental theories (Herbarians - e.g., Child development, recapitulation theory) v. the disciplines of knowledge (Hegelians - e.g., Harris: "five windows of the soul"). Result: a shift from subject to learner as a basis for curri. work.
    • Social behaviorist: G. Stanley Hall started America's first psychological laboratory
    • Dewey's curricular view: a balanced integration of emphasis on subject matter, society, and the child. His central curr. position: the progressive reorganization of subject matter. Arguing for the pedagogic necessity of starting with the psychological and moving to the logical
      • Psychological: the concerns and interests of the learner's life world of experience
      • Logical: both the disciplines of knowledge and knowledge accumulated by human beings through everyday experiences
      • Pedagogical process: identifying individual student interests, encouraging students to share these interests within a community of learners, excavating common human interests symbolized by the individually identified interests, tapping a broad array of experiential resources as precedent, and drawing on the fund of written knowledge in pursuit of original interests and the discovery of new interests
    • At the turn of the century, Dewey's pragmatic experimentalist educational philosophy, progressive social and educational theory, and experiential and reconstructionist curriculum thinking came to the fore
    • Joseph Mayer Rice (1913): Educational progress would only occur if teachers and their leaders were carefully guided, efficiently managed, and systematically controlled. He described the gross ineptitudes, similar to Kozol's (1991) "savage inequalities" between urban and suburban schools
  • Struggles surface
    • The overwhelming influence of Taylorism (technical efficiency); IQ=potential;
    • Edward Thorndike(1924) - founder of ed. psych., test & measurement
    • Dewey: intelligence cannot be reified as test scores
    • Frank Bobbit (social behaviorist): scientific curr. making - activity analysis
    • William Kilpatrick: The Project Method (1918) - integrate curr. around projects that grow from student interests
    • "What are the purposes of education?" (revived by the decline of faculty psychology, the move away from classic subjects, and the influx of new student populations
    • 1920s & 1930s: the heyday of progressive practices. but progressivism never dominated educational thinking or practice because the traditionalist position was kept alive (curri. makng was a top-down, expert-driven enterprise resulting in selection or creation of products to be systematically delivered to students who were assessed on their retention of knowledge and acquisition of skills
  • The progressives multiply and divide
    • The Eight Year Study (1933-1941): the performance of students from the experimental-progressive schools equaled or exceeded that of students from traditional schools
    • Reconstructionist progressives (foster critical thinking and social action around issues of ethics & justice): George Counts (Dare the school build a new social order? 1932- curricula must be designed to overcome injustice and oppression and create democratic, equitable, fulfilling way of life), Harold Rugg, Theodore Brameld
    • Child-centered ("apolitical") v. social reconstructionist. Dewey called for a deeper look into the difference and find reciprocal relationships between individual and political growth - failed and weakened the collective voice of progressives
Part 2 The rise and fall of curriculum specialists (1947-1960)

Chapter 2. Curriculum development at its zenith: curriculum people
  • Background: postwar America, an era of hope and optimism
  • 1947 Chicago Curriculum Theory Conference (Virgil Herrick & Ralph Tyler)
  • 1956 Benjamin Bloom: Taxonomy of Educational Objectives
Chapter 3. Transfer by eminent domain: National interest
  • As Cold War escalates, James B. Conant advocates national interest, rather than growth of the individual, as the primary purpose of schooling in Education in a Divided World
  • The 1950s: revolutionary upheavals in politics, business, pop culture, religion and tech (e.g., Catcher in the Rye, Salinger, 1951; I Love Lucy; My Fair Lady; Lord of the Rings; Brown v Board of Ed.; Little Rock Nine; Elvis Presley...)
  • 1957 the launching of Sputnik
  • Jerome Bruner (1960) The Process of Education - new curri Bible (ties between curr. & natl interest, the lure of science & tech., and public disappointment with school curricula) - a rekindled interest in curr. problems by ed psychologists and concern for school's ability to produce sufficient numbers of scholars, scientists, poets, & lawmakers
  • "The contribution of university scholars in the creation of the most advanced weapons systems had led the nation's political leadership to look to the university scholars for devising curricula in science and mathematics for the elementary and secondary schools" (Tanner & Tanner, 1980, p. 434)
  • Result: Teachers became either subject matter specialists or human conduits for the transmission of subject matter knowledge, students became child-scientists, and the curri. worker took a backseat to psychologists and other discipline scholars of the "first rank." Progressive ideals and the democratic aims of American ed. were disappearing
Part 3 Reestablishing agency and agendas (1961-1969)

Chapter 4. Muted heretics endure (1961-1964): "Outsiders" (Psychology contributors)
  • B. F. Skinner (1958): "Teaching Machines" - radical behaviorist
  • Hilda Taba's (1962) Curriculum development: Theory and practice
  • Technological view of curriculum - efficiency movement (Bruner "automatizing devices")
  • In spite of the dominant technorationality, progressive ideas were kept alive (e.g., Huebner: curri. field permits the use of all major disciplinary systems, not only behaviorist psychology; John Goodlad, 1964, critiqued the national curri. reform projects)
Chapter 5. Transcending a muddled juncture (1965-1969): Publications
  • Background: Godfather, 60 Minutes, Martin Luther King, Jr, ...a decade of political turmoil and social change (transformation from an era of New Frontier innocence and idealism to the realpolitik of the Nixon-Kissinger legacy)
  • Coroner for conventional curr. making - Joseph Schwab's (1969) The practical: A language for curriculum, diagnosing the curriculum field as moribund - a wake up call for new directions. It is the most significant curriculum publication since Tyler's Basic Principles in Curriculum and Instruction (1950)
  • 1965 Chicago curriculum meeting (bases and principles) - curr. field needed to shift from "objective" and empirically based issues to socially oriented, value-based questions by radical thinkers (Michael Apple)
Part 4 (Re)shaping the contemporary curriculum field (1970-1983)

Chapter 6. The Renaissance blossoms: Professional organizations and gatherings
  • Background: 1970s - overconsumption of tech and natural resources, overindulgence with sexual freedom and freedom of expression, overreliance on federalism and individualism
  • AERA (formed in 1916, the same year J. Dewey published Democracy and Ed.), Division B (formed in 1964) - "Curriculum & Objectives"
  • James Macdonald: A transcendental development ideology of education
  • Paulo Friere (1970) Pedagogy of the Oppressed
  • The 1970s - new people and ideas emerged in opposition to traditional practices and procedures
  • Paradigm: a conceptual framework or way to look at the world composed of knowledge, values, and assumptions that govern activity or inquiry in an academic field such as curri.
Chapter 7. From chorus to cacophony: Paradigms and perspectives (Multidimentional, eclectic)
  • Background: early 1980s - Michael Jackson, Madonna, Prince, Channel One, USA Today, Star Trek...
  • Analytically distinctive curriculum paradigms (3 from Schubert, 1986, and 1 from Lather, 1992)
    • Predict (the perennial paradigm)
    • Understand (the practical paradigm)
    • Emancipate (the critical paradigm)
    • Deconstruct (the poststructual or postmodern paradigm)
  • Reconceptualization (Henry Giroux)
  • Aesthetic perspective (Elliot Eisner, The Educational Imagination)
  • John Goodlad: Curriculum Inquiry: The study of curriculum practice
  • Glatthorn (1980)
  • Cronbach statistics
  • Michael Apple - Ideology and Curriculum
  • The multiple perspectives and sophisticated nuances contained within each of them
  • "Paradigm wars" (Pinar et al., 1995) - serious rifts
Part 5 The uncertainties of contemporary curriculum work (1984-2002)

Chapter 8. Implosion and consolidation: Marginalized voices
  • By the mid-1980s, teachers were center stage in the curr. field
  • Marginalized voices - the business-as-usual mode of improving curri.
  • The fracturing of theoretical unity & disciplinary cohesion (the end of science in the postmodern era)
Chapter 9. Difference that breeds hybridity: Race, reform, and curriculum
  • 1983 A Nation at Risk
  • 1989 President Bush's education summit: took up the cause of accountability and standards,
  • Goals 2000 and the NCLB (a pedagogy of poverty): from national goals to state assessments - educators lose control
  • Conflict over national values, priorities, and directions - "cultural wars" of the 1990s (what knowledge is of most worth - regarding growing racial, ethnic, and cultural differences)
  • Hybridity: the condition of heterogeneous assembly - the making of sth. out of disparate or incongruent parts or elements (national school reform & theoretical diversity)
Chapter 10. Imagining the postmillennial curriculum field
  • future & possibilities through the intersections of democracy, globalization, and technology
  • The paradox of "consolidated diversity" - communication & community have become not only more challenging but also more crucial to the work of curri.

No comments: