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Chapter 9 Aims, Goals, Objectives

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Title: Chapter 9 Aims, Goals, Objectives


1
Chapter 9- Aims, Goals, Objectives
2
Aims of Education
  • General statements that provide shape and
    direction
  • Starting points that suggest an ideal or
    inspirational vision of the good
  • Guides for the educational process

3
Sources of Aims
  • Spencers Report
  • Cardinal Principles of Secondary Education
  • The Purpose of Education in American Democracy
  • Education for All American Youth
  • The Central Purpose of American Education
  • A Nation at Risk

4
Goals of Education
  • Statements of purpose with some outcome in mind
  • Address certain characteristics of the learner
    who attains the goals
  • Desired outcomes for students as a result of
    experiencing the curriculum
  • Derived from various aims

5
Levels of Goals
  • Aims become goals when they become more specific
    and refer to a particular school or school system
    and to a specific subject area of the curriculum

6
Formulating Goals
  • Timelessness
  • Address the needs of society, of students, or the
    particular community

7
Objectives
  • More specific statements of the outcomes of the
    curriculum or project being considered
  • Statements that enable curriculum decision makers
    to identify the particular intent of a particular
    action
  • Philosophy Aims Goals Objectives

8
Types of Educational Objectives
  • Program Objectives
  • Address subjects at particular grade levels
  • Course Objectives
  • Relate to particular courses within grade levels
  • Classroom Objectives
  • Divided into unit objectives and lesson plan
    objectives

9
Conceptions of Objectives
  • Taba
  • School-wide outcomes
  • Unit, course or grade level program outcomes
  • Ornstein
  • program objectives
  • course objectives
  • classroom objectives
  • Posner and Rudnitsky
  • Intended Learning Outcomes

10
Behavioral Objectives
  • precise statements of outcomes in terms of
    observable behavior expected of students after
    instruction

11
Nonbehavioral Objectives
  • Examples Appreciate, Know, Understand

12
Guidelines for Formulating Educational Objectives
  • Matching
  • Worth
  • Wording
  • Appropriateness
  • Logical Grouping
  • Periodic Revision

13
Taxonomic Levels
  • Cognitive Domain
  • Affective Domain
  • Psychomotor Domain

14
Cognitive Domain
  • Blooms Taxonomy
  • Knowledge
  • Comprehension
  • Application
  • Analysis
  • Synthesis
  • Evaluation

15
Affective Domain
  • Krathwohls Taxonomy
  • Receiving
  • Responding
  • Valuing
  • Organization
  • Characterization

16
Psychomotor Domain
  • Harrows Taxonomy
  • Reflex Movements
  • Fundamental Movements
  • Perceptual Abilities
  • Physical Abilities
  • Skilled Movements
  • Nondiscursive Communication

17
Approaches to Educational Objectives
  • Behaviorist
  • Managerial
  • Systems
  • Humanistic
  • Reconceptualist

18
Behavioral
  • technical/scientific
  • concern for specificity
  • we can identify essential learnings
  • compartmentalization of curriculum
  • defined scope and sequence
  • convergent emphasis on curricular learnings

19
Systems/Managerial
  • Systems and organizational Theories
  • Interrelatedness of the parts of the organization
  • Objectives are part of the total process of
    decision making and curriculum implementation
  • Management by objectives
  • Curriculum as a system of related components

20
Humanistic
  • Focus on the person
  • Personal growth, joy of learning, respect for
    others
  • Curriculum seen as divergent
  • Opportunities for students to explore, to become
    self-directed

21
Reconceptualists
  • Political and social posture with a theoretical
    critique
  • Empower individual to be more fully human,
    socially sensitive, and existential
  • Curriculum is emergent- concern with those
    processes that allow for control of ones
    learning
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