Tuesday, December 24, 2013

CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT IN LANGUAGE TEACHING: AN OVERVIEW

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INTRODUCTION
Language curriculum development is an aspect of a broader field of education activity known as curriculum development or curriculum studies. Curriculum development focuses on determining what knowledge, skills, and values students learn in schools, what experiences should be provided to bring about intended learning outcomes, and how teaching and learning in schools or educational system can be planned, measured, and evaluated. Language curriculum development refers to the field of applied linguistics that addresses these issues. It describes an interrelated set of processes that focuses on designing, revising, implementing, and evaluating language program.
There are three aims/purposes of writing the paper:
1.      To provide a framework discussing of  curriculum and syllabus (concept and definition).
2.       To provide the origin of language curriculum development.
3.       To provide the overview of language curriculum components.








CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT IN LANGUAGE TEACHING: AN OVERVIEW
A.    Curriculum and syllabus: concept and definition
1.      Curriculum
a.      Definition
According to Beauchamp (1968:6), in the broadest sense the term “curriculum” ordinarily is used by a specialists in the field in two ways: (1). To indicate, roughly,  a plan for the education, of learners, and (2) to identify a field of study.
Curriculum is a plan for the education of learners usually is referred to as a curriculum or the curriculum. What is required when referring to the term is “the grasp of the basic notions education involves as well as the structural organization every author states within this definition for the term curriculum” (Moreno, 2000:11). Evidence of what mentioned before is the following listing of the same concept defined by different authors :
1)      Curriculum can be defined, as an educational program which states :
·         The educational purpose of the program (the ends)
·         The content teaching procedures and learning experience which will be necessary to achieve this purpose (the means)
·         Some means for assessing whether or not the educational ends has been achieved”
(Richard, Platt and Platt 1933: 94)
2)      “Curriculum is a very general concept which involves consideration of the whole complex of philosophical, social, and administrative factors which contribute to the planning of an educational program.” (Allen quoted in Nunan, 2006 : 6)
3)      “Curriculum theory encompasses philosophy and value systems; the main components of the curriculum; purposes, content, methodology, and evaluation; and the process whereby curricula are developed, implemented and evaluated”. (White, 1993: 19).
From the definition of curiculum, can summarize is the curriculum is A plan for the education of learners in general concept.

b.      Concept
In the broadest sense the term “curriculum” ordinarily is used by specialists in the field in two ways: (1) to indicate, roughly, a plan for the education of learners, and (2) to identify a field of study. Curriculum as a plan for the education of learners usually is referred to as curriculum or the curriculum.
Curriculum as a field of study, like most specialized fields, is defined by (1) the range of subject matters with which it is concerned (the substantives, structure), and (2) the procedures of inquiry and practice that it follows (the syntactical structure). Thus, the curriculum field, for our purpose, may be describes in term of (1) the subject matters and (2) the many processes with which specialists are characteristically concerned.
Concepts of the curriculum.
The word “curriculum” comes from a Latin root meaning “racecourse”, and traditionally the schools’ curriculum has represented something like that figuratively speaking.
Curriculum as the Program of Studies.
 A listing of the titles of program of studies offered (or required) by the school. Furthermore, reflection on our own experience will serve to remind us that course titles ordinarily reveal very little with regard to learning out comes and the experiences that students can expect to have while taking the course. For these reason, therefore specialists in the field prefer to use the term “program of studies” rather than curriculum to refer to school’s subjects and/or course offerings.
Curriculum as Course Content.
The content of particular courses in the program often is regarded as the curriculum. This concept of curriculum, like the one described above, was prevalent among most professional educators before the advent of the curriculum movement.  It conceives of curriculum solely as the data or information recorded in guided or textbooks and overlooks many  additional elements that need to be provided for in learning plan. Such a conception of curriculum limits planning to the selection and organization of information that learners are acquire.
Curriculum as Planned Learning Experiences.
A curriculum conceived of as planned learning experiences is one of the most prevalent concepts among the specialists in the field today. For example, Krug (1956:4) refers to curriculum as “All the means employed by the school to provide students with opportunities for desirable learning experiences,” and Doll (1964:15) writes: “The commonly accepted definition of the curriculum has changed from content of courses of study and lists of subject and courses to all the experiences which are offered to learners under the auspices or direction of the school.
Curriculum as Experiences “Had” under the Auspices of the School.
Writers who favor the broader definition of the curriculum sometimes refers to the “invisible curriculum” or the “hidden curriculum”. For example to teach students to read, but as a result of certain other experiences “had” by students, they may also learn to dislike reading.
Curriculum as a Structured Series of Intended Learning Outcomes.
Among the writers who view “planned learning experiences” as too broad a definition of the curriculum is MauritzJhonson. In a widely debated essay, this curriculum theories point out that “there is. . .no experience until an interaction between the individual and his environment actually occurs. Clearly, such interaction characterized instruction, not curriculum. Thus, he maintains, the curriculum can consist only of “a structured series of intended learning outcomes” [Jhonson, (1967:130)].
Curriculum as a (Written) Plan for Action.
Macdonald (1965:3) proposes that schooling be conceptualized as the interaction of four systems. The first of these, teaching, is defined as the “professionally oriented behavior of individual personality systems, called teachers...”. The second system, learning consist of the “actions that students perform which teachers perceive to be task related...”. Combining these two systems, Macdonald defines the third instruction, as “the action context within which formal teaching and learning behaviors take place”. In other words, the teaching learning system. The fourth system of schooling is the curriculum system, which like instruction, is a social system. The curriculum system consist of those individuals whose behaviors eventuate in a curriculum. Macdonald then defines a curriculumas a plan for action. A plan which guides instruction.
A Compromise Concept of the Curriculum.
Taba (1962:9) finds the extreme breadth of the “experience” definition of the curriculum non functional. On the other hand, she feels that “excluding from the definition of curriculum everything except the statement of objectives and content outlines and relegating anything that has to do with. . . learning experiences to method” might be too confining to be adequate for a moderncurriculum”.
Clearly, Taba has succeeded in drawing only a very hazy distinction between the aspects of learning processes and activities that are concern in curriculum and those that are distinctively within the realm of teaching and instruction. Taba’s conception of curriculum, unlike Johnson’s and Macdonald’s, does not employ an “implementation” criterion, rather it depends on a relatively flexible and subjective judgment as to where a dividing line is to be drawn on a continuum which is clearly ultimate-general at the “curriculum” pole and immediate-specific at the “instruction” end.
2.      Syllabus
a.      Definition
Syllabus is a more detailed and operational statement of teaching and learning elements which translates the philosophy of the curriculum into a series of planed steps leading towards more narrowly define objectives at each level. Dubin&Olshtain, (1997: 28).
b.      Concept
A syllabus is a specification of the content of a course of instruction and lists what will be taught and tested. Thus the syllabus for a speaking course might specify the kinds of oral skills that will be taught and practiced during the course, the functions, topics, or other aspects of conversation that will be taught and the order in which they will appear in course.“Syllabus is essentially a statement of what should be taught, year by year –through language– syllabuses also contain points about the method of teaching and the time to be taken” (Lee 1980:108). Another opinion is that that a syllabusare more localized and are based on accounts and records of what actually happens at the classroom level. Given these definitions it is suggested that it seems helpful to define a curriculum and syllabuses as separate entities.
B.     Origins of  Language Curriculum Development
Curriculum development focuses on determining what knowledge, skills, and values students learn in schools, what experiences should be provided to bring about intended learning outcomes, and how teaching and learning in schools or educational system can be planned, measured, and evaluated. Language curriculum development refers to the field of applied linguistics that addresses these issues. It describes an interrelated set of processes that focuses on designing, revising, implementing, and evaluating language program.
Historical Background.
The history of curriculum development in language teaching starts with the nation of syllabus design. Syllabus design is one aspect of curriculum development but it is not identical with it. A syllabus is a specification of the content of course of instruction and list what will be taught an tested. It includes the processes that are used to determine the needs of a group of learners, to develop aims or objectives for a program to address those needs, to determine an appropriate syllabus, course structure, teaching method, and materials, and to carry out an evaluation of the language program that result from these process. Curriculum development in language teaching as we know it today really began in the 1960s, though issues of syllabus design emerged as a major factor in language teaching much earlier.
The methods concept in teaching-the nation of systematic set of teaching practices based on a particular theory of language and language learning-is a powerful one and the quest for better methods has been a preoccupation of many teachers and applied linguistic since the beginning of the twentieth century. Many methods have come and gone in the last 100 years in pursuit of the “best method,” as the following chronology illustrates, with dates suggesting periods of greatest dominance :
1.      Grammar Translation Method (1800-1900)
2.      Direct method (1890-1930)
3.      Structural Method (1930-1960)
4.      Reading Method (1920-1950)
5.      Audio-lingual Method (1950-1970)
6.      Situational Method (1950-1970)
7.      Communicative Approach (1970-present)
The oral-based method known as the Direct Method, which developed in opposition to the Grammar Translation Method in the late of the nineteenth century, prescribes not only the way a language should be taught, with an emphasis on the exclusive use of the target language, intensive question-and-answer teaching techniques, and demonstration and dramatization to communicate meanings of words; it also prescribes the vocabulary and grammar to be taught and the order in which it should be presented.
Harrold Palmer summarized the principles of language teaching methodology at that time as follows:
1. Initial preparation- orienting the students toward language learning.
2. Habit-forming- establishing correct habits.
3. Accuracy- avoiding inaccurate language.
4. Gradation- each stage prepares the students for the text.
5. Proportion- each aspect of language given emphasis
6. Concreteness- movement from concrete to the abstract.
7. Interest- arousing the students’ interest at all times.
8. Order of Progression- hearing before speaking, and both before writing.
9. Multiple line of approach- many different ways used to teach the language.
(Palmer {1922} 1968, 38-39).

Vocabulary Selection
Vocabulary is one of the most obvious components of language and one of the first things applied linguists turned their attention to. Some of the earliest approaches to vocabulary selection involved counting large collections of texts to determine the frequency with which words occurred, since it would be seem obvious that words of highest frequency should be taught first.
Other criteria were therefore also used in determining word lists. These included:
Teachability: in course taught following the Direct Method or a method such as Total Physical Responses, concrete vocabulary is taught earlyon because it can easily be illustrated through pictures or by demonstration.
Similarity: Some item may be selected because they are similar to words in native language. For example, English and  French have many cognate such as table, page, and nation and this may justify their inclusion in a word list for French-speaking learners.
Availability: Some words may not be frequent but are readily “available” in the sense that they come quickly to mind when certain topics are taught of. For example, classroom calls to mind desk, chair, teacher, and pupil, and these words might therefore be worth teaching early in a course.
Coverage: words that cover or include the meaning of other words may also be useful. For example, seat might be taught because it includes the meaning of stool, bench, and chair.
Defining power: Some words could be selected because they are useful in defining other words, even though they are not among the most frequent words in the language. For example, container might be useful because it can help define bucket, jar, and carton.
The procedures of vocabulary selection lead to the compilation of a basic vocabulary, that is a target vocabulary for a language course usually grouped or graded into levels, such as the first 500 words, the second 500 words, and so on.
Grammar Selection and Gradation
The need for a systematic approach selecting grammar for teaching purposes was also a priority for applied linguists from the 1920s. The number of any syntactic structures in a language is a large, as is seen from the contents any grammar books.
The following principles have been used or suggested as a basis for developing grammatical syllabuses.
Simplicity and centrality: This recommends choosing structures that are simple and more central to the basic structure of the language than those that are complex and peripheral.
Frequency: Frequency of occurrence has also been proposed in developing grammatical syllabus, but relatively little progress was made in this area for sometimes because of the difficulty of deciding on appropriate grammatical units to count and the difficulty of coding grammatical structures for analysis.
Subject and verb ellipsis: such as “Don’t know” instead or “I don’t know”
Learnability: it has sometimes been argued that grammatical syllabuses should take into account the order in which grammatical items are acquired in second language learning.
In addition to decisions about which grammatical items to include in any syllabus, the sequencing or gradation of grammatical items has to be determined. The need to sequence course content in a systematic way is by no means a recent concern.
The following approaches to gradation are possible:
Linguistic distance:Lado (1957) proposed that structures that are similar to those in the native language should be taught first.
Intrinsic difficulty:this principles argues that simple structures should be taught before complex one and the commonest criterion used to justify the sequence of grammatical items in a syllabus.
Communicative need: Some structure will be needed early on and can not be postponed, despite their difficulty, such as the simple past in English, since it is difficult to avoid making reference to past events for very long in a courses.
Frequency: The frequency of occurrence of structures and grammatical items in the target language may also effect the order in which they appear in a syllabus, although as we noted, little information of this sort is available to syllabus planners.

Assumptions underlying early approaches to syllabus design:
1.      The basic units of language are vocabulary and grammar
2.      Learners everywhere have the same needs
3.      Learners’ needs are identified exclusively in terms of language needs
4.      The process of learning a language is largely determined by the textbook
5.      The context of teaching is English as a foreign language

C.    Overview of Language Curriculum Components
Systematic Approach to Designing and Maintaining Language Curriculum (Adapted from Brown 1989)
NEEDS ANALYSIS
OBJECTIVES
TESTING
MATERIALS
TEACHING

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1.      Need analysis
Need analysis in language programs is ofyen viewed simply as identification of the language  likely need to use in the target language when they are required to actually understand and produce the language.
Needs analysis of s analysis will be defined tentatively as the systematic collection and analysis of all relevant information necessary to statify the language learning requirements of the students within the context of the particular institutions involved in the learning situation.
2.      Goals  and objectives
Goals is general statements about what must be accomplished in order to attain and satisfy student’s needs.
Objectives are precise statements about what content or skills the students must master in order to attain a particular goal
3.      Language testing
The goals and objectives of a program may require extensive test development for widely different purpose within a program
Tests can be used to drive a program by shaping the expectation of the students and their teachers. Tests are very crucial element in the curriculum development process.
4.      Materials development
Material choices and use will be affected by what is learned from each of the other components of a program and will in turn have an effect of their own on tose other components. Materials can be handled rationally-wether adopted, developed or adopted-perhaps for the first time in same language programs.
5.      Language teaching
Teachers must be supported in their jobs to whatever degree that is possible in teaching
6.      Program evaluation
Evaluation is systematic collection and analysis of all relevant information necessary to promote the improvement of the curriculum and to asses its effectiveness within the context of the particular institutionss involved. Program evaluation might be defined as the ongoing process of information gathering, analyis, and synthesis.
REFERRENCES
Brown, James Dean.1995.The Elements of Language Curriculum: A systematic Approach to Program Development. USA: Heinle & Heinle Publishers
Dubin, F. & Olshtain, E. (1997) Course Design: Developing Programs and Materials for language Learning, Cambridge: Cambridge university Press
Núñez y Bodegas Irma Dolores.2007. From Curriculum to Syllabus Design: The Different Stages to Design a Programme. Universidad de Quintana Roo

Richard, Jack C.1990.The Language Teaching Matrix.USA: Cambridge University Press.
______________.2001.Curriculum Development in Language Teaching.USA: Cambridge University Press.
Richards, Platt and Platt (1993) Dictionary of language Teaching and Applied Linguistics. London: Longman
Zais, Robert S.1976.Curriculum: Principles and Foundation. New York: Harper & Row Publishers.


Monday, October 7, 2013

OPEN MINDED

Diposkan oleh KADRY BONJOLY di 9:38 PM 0 komentar

OPEN MINDED
BY : FEBRIAN CUBRA

Open minded is one  of the human personality. It’s can include some good and bad effect. Actually,  Openminded can help people in resolving the problem. Whith open minded we can share whith friends, so we can enjoy the problems with it. But in other side open minded also give some bad effect to each people. Such as by open minded someone talk the bad of someone to others. It’s will outcome something bad in relationship. In the al-qur’an Allah said  : 
Mock, ridicule other people, some people gossip about his brother with the mock, ridicule. The unlawful act. Allah Subhanahu wa ta'ala says: "Let not a people deride the other, maybe they (who mocked) it's better than them." (QS.Al Hujurat 49: 11)
From the ayat of al-qur’an above, we can take that don’t ever talk the bad of someone. Because someone who we talk can be more better than us. It’s fine if we be open minded, but don’t do it over !!!. as we know something that we do with word “over” will be outcomes something bad.
In this life, we need some one who open minded. Not only our self but also all of people. If someone has personality that open minded we can know, when he got some problems, when he sad and so many else, because he/she will talk it. So we can help him and make our relationship better. Especially for our self when we got some prolems, like I talk above we can sharing with our friends when we got some problems, and also we aks our firend if we need some helps. However, it’s depend on us, sometime open minded gave positive effect but sometime it gave negative effect.
So, we the explanation above we can conglude that open minded is kind of personality that can give positive effect and also negative effect.
 

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