ENGLISH CURRICULUM RENEWAL IN SCHOOLS
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2024/k7f1ye43Keywords:
curricula development, computerized and verbiage features, up-to-now curriculum, philosophical resources, consequent vision, educational breakthrough, underpinning resourcesAbstract
Curriculum is to have been formulated by the history, psychological and philosophical minds, educational theorists and scholars of the society. Curriculum is viewed the planned chain of the content sequence of a grade-cohort subject. Curriculum is the sequel of one`s life experience and should also be the others`. “Social and political developments are the factors for the curriculum implementation or vice versa” (Bobbit, 1918). As long as the huge percentage of the world population are the client of education curriculum and its inclusions necessarily shape the mindsets of them with sticking to curricular products. Technological changes remind individuals what have been transformed and what should consecutively be, also, how we need to educate. Information technology and communication have been the answer how recent curricula of advanced educational systems possess all needed multi-dimensional inclusions of educational requirements. “The present-day technology advances in curricula development are becoming more and more varied with the reforms of government authorities, school analytic experts, scholars of educational managements, all of which are essential assets of curriculum recourse” (Korn., 2004). As technological breakthroughs roar, “massive updates began filling the gaps of should-be definitions of curriculum” (Bronkhorst., 2000). New technological instructions regulate the challenges of school learners and these are by far the fastest mobilizing and changing aspects of the world. Technology-blended curriculum matches the uncertain world of the future with its electronic, computerized and verbiage features. Up-to-now curriculum is structured concerning the age-cohort because of which is significantly suggested that knowledge acquisition varies among ages. However, there still remain gaps in comprehending stratification, likely regarding the gender.
References
Anderson, J. R., Corbett, A. T., Koedinger, K. R., & Pelletier, R. (1995). Cognitive tutors: Lessons learned. Journal of the Learning Sciences, 4, 167–207.
Anderson, J. R., & Reiser, B. (1985). The LISP tutor. Byte, 10, 159–175.
Barr, A., Beard, M., & Atkinson, R. C. (1976). The computer as tutorial laboratory: The Stanord BIP project. International Journal on Man–Machine Studies, 8, 567–596.
Bloom, B. S. (1984). The 2 Sigma problem: The search for methods of group instruction as effective as one-to-one tutoring. Educational Researcher, 13, 3–15.
Brusilovsky, P., Schwarz, E., & Weber, G. (1996). ELM-ART: An intelligent tutoring system on World Wide Web. In C. Frasson, G. Gauthier, & A. Lesgold (Eds.), Third International Conference on Intelligent Tutoring Systems, ITS-96 (Vol. 1086, pp. 261–269). Berlin: Springer Verlag.
Calvi, L., & De Bra, P. (1998). A flexible hypertext courseware on the Web based on a dynamic link structure, interacting with computers. Interdisciplinary Journal of Human–Computer Interaction, 10, 143–154.
Downloads
Published
Conference Proceedings Volume
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Fotima Nuriddinova, Zukhra Nuriddinova, Gulsara Yuldasheva (Author)

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
