EDLC 571 Curriculum Fundamentals

An introduction to basic concepts and issues related to curriculum design, development, change and evaluation.

For information regarding prerequisites for this course, please refer to the Academic Course Catalog.

Course Guide

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*The information contained in our Course Guides is provided as a sample. Specific course curriculum and requirements for each course are provided by individual instructors each semester. Students should not use Course Guides to find and complete assignments, class prerequisites, or order books.


It is important for the teacher candidate to be aware of the wide range of subject matter, teaching methods, and potential resources that may be included in the classroom. To make educationally sound decisions and to implement decisions in a manner that is productive for students, the educator must know the parameters, advantages, and disadvantages of curriculum design and must analyze the research which supports or discredits those conclusions. Special emphasis should be given to meeting the physical, mental, social, emotional, cultural, and spiritual needs of each student. Additional attention will be given to the needs of the urban, the rural, the minority, the gifted, the average, the learning disabled, and the exceptional child. All of these aspects of the curriculum should be related to both public education and Christian school education. 


Readings and presentations

No details available.

Course Requirements Checklist

After reading the Course Syllabus and Student Expectations, the candidate will complete the related checklist found in the Course Overview. 

Discussions (3)

Discussions are collaborative learning experiences. Therefore, the candidate will participate in three discussions. Each discussion will be completed in two parts: At least 300 words addressing the provided prompt and 2 replies of at least 100 words each to other classmates’ threads. For each thread, the candidate must support his or her assertions with at least one research-based, scholarly journal citation and one scriptural reference in APA format. The research-based, scholarly journal resource cited must have been published within the last five years. Replies are not required to incorporate scholarly citations or scripture integration. Avoid the use of websites. All writing must follow current APA format, including in-text citations and references. (CLO: A, B, C, D, E, F) 

Culturally Responsive Teaching Article Review Assignment

The candidate will use the Jerry Falwell Library Databases to find two professional journal articles on culturally responsive teaching. He or she will write a compare and contrast essay that is 500 words, not including the title and reference pages. The candidate must use current APA format throughout. (CLO: C, E, F)

Interdisciplinary Instructional Planning Project Assignments (5)

For this project, the candidate will plan a research-based curriculum with instruction and assessments that are engaging, culturally responsive, aligned to interdisciplinary standards, infused with technology, and designed to meet the needs of all learners. The project will be a 20-day interdisciplinary instructional unit plan that is content focused with connections to reading and writing across the curriculum. The first 10 days will include full lesson plans using the student teaching lesson plan template provided. Then, the candidate will map out the following 10 days providing a horizontal planning outline (block plans) with standards and instructional topics only. This assignment will be broken up into smaller pieces and submitted across the term. This is a key assessment that will be submitted to CORE upon conclusion. (CLO: A, B, C, D, E, F, G)

Interdisciplinary Instructional Planning Project: Mission Statement, Character Principles, and Biblical Worldview Assignment

For this assignment, the candidate will create a school and write a mission statement to guide the focus of the school. In addition to the mission statement, the candidate will identify eight character principles that represent the values of the school and state how he or she would integrate a biblical worldview. 

Interdisciplinary Instructional Planning Project: Proposal Assignment

For this assignment, the candidate will provide an overview of his or her ideas for meeting the requirements of the 20-day interdisciplinary instructional unit plan. The candidate will include 3 strategies for technology integration and summarize 5-6 professional journal articles.

Interdisciplinary Instructional Planning Project: Lesson Plans 1 — 4 Assignment

For this assignment, the candidate will complete and submit his or her first four days of detailed lesson plans using the lesson plan template provided. These lessons should include 5-6 professional references cited in APA format.

Interdisciplinary Instructional Planning Project: Lesson Plans 5 — 8 Assignment

For this assignment, the candidate will complete and submit his or her next four days of detailed lesson plans using the lesson plan template provided. These lessons should include 5-6 professional references cited in APA format.

Interdisciplinary Instructional Planning Project: Final Assignment

For this assignment, the candidate will complete and submit two more detailed lesson plans and 10 days of block plans. The candidate will also create a flyer that could be sent home to parents and/or families inviting them to attend a culminating activity/student presentation event.


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