What educational purposes should the school seek to attain, and what educational experiences can be provided that are likely to achieve these purposes? Rather than literally answering these questions of curriculum and i...

Buy Now From Amazon

What educational purposes should the school seek to attain, and what educational experiences can be provided that are likely to achieve these purposes? Rather than literally answering these questions of curriculum and instruction, Tyler develops a rationale for studying them, and suggests procedures for formulating answers and evaluating programs of study. Quite simply, his book outlines one way of viewing an instructional program as a functioning instrument of education.

The four sections of the book deal with ways of formulating, organizing, and evaluating the educational objectives that have been chosen for the curriculum. Tyler emphasizes the fact that curriculum planning is a continuous cyclical process, involving constand replanning, redevelopment, and reappraisal. Substitution of such an integrated view of an instructional program for hit-or-miss judgment as the basis for curriculum development cannot but result in an increasingly effective curriculum.


Similar Products

Experience And EducationThe Paideia Proposal: An Educational ManifestoPedagogy of the Oppressed, 30th Anniversary EditionThe Human Side of School Change: Reform, Resistance, and the Real-Life Problems of InnovationThe School and Society and The Child and the Curriculum (Centennial Publications of The University of Chicago Press)The Struggle for the American Curriculum, 1893-1958The Curriculum Studies ReaderBasic Principles of Curriculum and Instruction