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Curriculum for the 21 st Century Teaching and Learning
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Curriculum for the 21st Century Teaching and Learning

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Some of the emerging factors or conditions frequently mentioned in various formal discussion, dialogues

that will shape the curriculum of the century include the following:

• 1. Globalization of economies where power is centered in Asia with China leading.

• 2. Dependence on international markets that need global perspectives from entrepreneurs and workers

• 3. Increased concern and positive actions about environment degradation, water and energy shortage.

• 4. Nations competing for power blocks – this would require understanding for the need to build alliances.

• 5. Internationalization of employment due to increased global migration

• 6 . Science and Technology edge as drivers of gaining economic edge.

• 7. The knowledge economy as the generator of most wealth and jobs.

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Emerging Curricula for the 21st Century Learner

• What curricula should schools have for the 21st century?

• Curricularists say that the 21st Century curricula should be inspiring and challenging for both the teachers and learners. ACARA in 2012 mentions the following characteristics of a curriculum.

• 1. It should provide appropriate knowledge, skills, understanding and capabilities to face the future with confidence. ( interdisciplinary, connected to the community local, national global.

• 2. It should be based on strong evidence drawn from reaserch. (research driven)

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• 3. It should be a product of highly consultative, collaborative development process. (co-development).

• 4 It is a curriculum that supports excellence and equity for all learners. (multicultural)

• 5. It is accessible and ready for schools, teachers, parents, and the broader community ( sustainable)

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The Global Classroom20

thCentury

Classrooms

21st

Century

Classrooms

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• 20th Century Classrooms

• Time-based

• Focus: memorization of discrete facts

• Lessons focus on the lower level of Bloom’s Taxonomy –knowledge, comprehension and application.

• Textbook-driven

• Passive learning

• Learners work in isolation –classroom within 4 walls

• Teacher-centered: teacher is center of attention and provider of information

• Little to no student freedom

• “Discipline problems – educators do not trust students and vice versa. No student motivation.

• Fragmented curriculum

• Grades averaged

• Low expectations

• Teacher is judge. No one else sees student work.

• Curriculum/School is irrelevant and meaningless to the students.

• Print is the primary vehicle of learning and assessment.

• Diversity in students is ignored.

• Literacy is the 3 R’s – reading, writing and math.

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21st Century Classrooms• Outcome-based• Focus: what students Know, Can

Do and Are Like after all the details are forgotten.

• Learning is designed on upper levels of Blooms’ – synthesis, analysis and evaluation (and include lower levels as curriculum is designed down from the top.)

• Research-driven• Active Learning• Learners work collaboratively

with classmates and others around the world – the Global Classroom

• Student-centered: teacher is facilitator/coach

• Great deal of student freedom

• No “discipline problems” –students and teaches have mutually respectful relationship as co-learners; students are highly motivated.

• Integrated and Interdisciplinary curriculum

• Grades based on what was learned

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• High expectations – “If it isn’t good it isn’t done.” We expect, and ensure, that all students succeed in learning at high levels. Some may go higher – we get out of their way to let them do that.

• Self, Peer and Other assessments. Public audience, authentic assessments.

• Curriculum is connected to students’ interests, experiences, talents and the real world.

• Performances, projects and multiple forms of media are used for learning and assessment

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• Curriculum and instruction address student diversity

• Multiple literacies of the 21st century – aligned to living and working in a globalized new millennium - aural & visual literacy, financial literacy, ecoliteracy, media literacy, information literacy, cyberliteracy, emotional literacy, physical fitness/health, and global competencies.

• 21st century model.

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Thus from the descriptions of two contrasting classroom, the critical attributes of the 21st century

curriculum and education are:

• Integrated and interdisciplinary

• Global Classroom/ Globalization

• Student centered

• Research-driven

• Technologies and media

• 21st Century Skills

• Relevant, rigorous and real world

• Adapting to and creating constant personal and social change and lifelong learning.

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