Philosophy of Curriculum Development
Though each individual classroom and instructor operates on a largely independent basis, the philosophy and practicalities of Ms. Pohlman's approach to instructional leadership and the functioning of Rush Strong Elementary according to her description exemplifies an instance of coupling that is more tight than loose (Glickman et al. 2007). There is a great deal of integration and guidance of the individual and independent instructors and instructional methods; this guidance is the result of independent input, but provides a clear overarching structure to the institution and the instructional methods and goals (Pohlman 2010). This is the reason that Ms. Pohlman's philosophy is best classified as leaning towards tight rather than loose coupling (Glickman et al. 2007).
Despite the fact that Ms. Pohlman's instructional leadership philosophy favors tight rather than loose coupling, she does not attempt to exert total control over her instructors, their instructional methods, or the curricula taught in the school. Ms. Pohlman is explicitly and decidedly against the concept of "teacher-proof" curricula as described in Glickman et al. (2007). The teachers are expected and encouraged to be actively involved in the development and implementation not only of their own curricula, but also for the integration of school-wide curricula in order to ensure a lack of redundancies, a comprehensiveness, and the proper progression of education and knowledge requirement for the students (Pohlman 2010). This approach to curriculum development and design is completely antithetical to the concept of "teacher-proof" curricula.
Student achievement outcomes at the school have not changed dramatically since Ms. Pohlman's installation as the principal...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now