Posts tagged plan

Curriculum Theory

I have been working on writing a curriculum for the sand box and teaching programs I plan on running. As I have never written a curriculum before I have been on a steep learning curve! I have been reading ‘Curriculum theory and practice’, and have found it really useful. The author presents four options as to what it a curriculum could be and leaves it somewhat up to the reader to decide the most appropriate meaning.

From reading this I find that I most identify with the ideas of curriculum put forward by Lawrence Stenhouse:

‘A curriculum is an attempt to communicate the essential principles and features of an educational proposal in such a form that it is open to critical scrutiny and capable of effective translation into practice’ – Lawrence Stenhouse (1975)

One of the key ideas that Stenhouse puts forth is that individuals are not merely present in the process but that they should have a voice in the way that the process is implemented. This is important because the process is only a guide that is being worked out. It will not necessarily be perfect or the right thing for all the participants, therefore they must be able to provide feedback on how things are run so as to provide them with the most value – after all they are the reason for even having the curriculum in the first place!

Classic methods of teaching often fail people because they do not work well with the way that they learn. I know this because the way I was taught had little alignment with the way that I learn, I therefore had little desire to apply myself and subsequently dropped out. I was lucky that my desire to succeed and accomplish things drove me to learn skills on my own time and in my own way. I am hoping that my experience with this, and the understanding of how I learn, will enable me to effectively pass that knowledge onto others. My goal is that they will catch a passion for learning that inspires them to pursue knowledge their own way, on their own terms.

Which brings me back to the last part of the quote from Stenhouse:

... and capable of effective translation into practice’.

This is the key – translating the theory into practice. I have a lot of work to do to figure out how to do this and it is what I will be working through over the next few years.

Part of the plan

I have spent some time making up plans for this business I want to start. Here is the run down.
Get a bunch of kids who have no bearing in life and have had trouble with school. Spend a couple of hrs a day with them, teaching them the basics of software development. I am preparing some short modules that I hope will be fun and they can take and use to get started with the learning process. I call this ‘the sandbox’. It is a time to play around, dabble with some technology and with a bit of luck, and encouragement, catch a bit of the passion that comes with it.

I think the sandbox time will last a few weeks. The people who have got some motivation and are interested will be welcomed back to continue learning with a more in-depth teaching class, but again just a couple of hrs a day. This will consist of more advanced concepts along with exercises to complete and material that encourages them to look for their own answers and develop their own solutions to problems

At the moment I am working on a curriculium for how this will work. The more advanced part of it I think I know what I am doing – that sounds wrong I know. But getting people interested,  passionate and wanting to learn? I am not sure how exactly to go about that! But it should be fun to give it a go :)