Should Curriculum Be Standardized for All?

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Students are expected to become well educated, self-thinking, and creative citizens. When teachers are expected to teach to a state guided curriculum students are limited to the standards and content of knowledge. Students are all given the same multiple choice test, on the same day, at the same time. Students are not given a chance to show their depth of knowledge.

Schools must decide how to teach the standardized curriculum. Schools must figure out how to mesh a standardized and non-standardized curriculum. Can students guide their own curriculum and perform well on tests?

Standardized Curriculum and Testing

With a standardized curriculum comes standardized testing. A standardized curriculum limits what students learn. Students master content areas (Cole, Hulley, & Quarles, 2013). Students are not encouraged to go in depth of content knowledge. According to Adler (2013), objectives of the school should be the same for the whole school. To obtain these objectives teachers use lecturing, textbooks, coaching, and supervised practices. Students are not exploring the content beyond what is expected. Teachers are teaching to the test because that is what is expected of them. Students are not growing and exploring with knowledge. Content is watered down and vague for students (Noddings, 2013).

By having a standardized curriculum schools are not challenging students. They are creating students that do not challenge what they are learning. Holt (2013) thought that standardized curriculum destroyed student’s freedom of thought, right to question, and the freedom to spread ideas. Every student is the same in a way. Every student is tested the same. The problem is that every student is not the same and every studen...

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...earners.

Resources

Adler, M. (2013). The paideia proposal: Rediscovering the essence of education. In J. Noll (Ed.), Taking Sides: clashing views on educational issues, seventeenth edition (pp.17-23). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.

Cole, H., Hulley, K., & Quarles, P. (2009). Does assessment have to drive the curriculum? In Forum on Public Policy: A Journal of the Oxford Round Table. Retrieved from http://go.galegroup.com.proxy1.ncu.edu/ps/i.do?action=interpret&id=GALE%7CA21668 2645&v=2.1&u=pres1571&it=r&p=AONE&sw=w&authCount=1

Holt, J. (2013). Escape from childhood. In J. Noll (Ed.), Taking Sides: clashing views on educational issues, seventeenth edition (pp.24-28). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.

Noddings, N. (2013). Standardized curriculum and loss of creativity. In Theory into Practice, 52(3), p. 210-215. doi: 10.1080/00405841.2013.804315

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