A one-of-a-kind resource written for educational leaders-teachers and administrators-who want to successfully restructure and enhance school curriculum
Praise for the First Edition
" Curriculum Leadership presents the fundamentals of the curriculum development process and provides educators with the foundation to be curriculum specialists."- Amany Saleh, Arkansas State University " Curriculum Leadership provides tried and true techniques that teachers can use right away, right now, to make writing curriculum a rewarding experience that benefits the curriculum writer and the teachers who will be asked to implement the curriculum."- Clyde Winters, Governors State University Curriculum Leadership: Strategies for Development and Implementation, Second Edition is a much-needed, highly informative, and easy-to-read account of curriculum development and implementation for those aspiring to become curriculum decision makers. This important book-which helps bridge curriculum’s rich historical past to today’s global education world-is essential for educational leaders in the planning, alignment, and development of curriculum to meet state, national, and international standards.
Authors Allan A. Glatthorn, Floyd Boschee, and Bruce M. Whitehead provide innovative and successful curriculum ideas that include reflective case studies with challenges and key issues/questions, Key to Leadership sections, curriculum tips, an Applications section, and a Webliography in every chapter. Also interspersed throughout the book are tried-and-true strategies that provide administrators with innovative ideas on meeting state and national standards.
New to this edition High-quality ancillaries Available to qualified instructors upon request, Instructors’ Resources on CD-ROM include PowerPoint lecture slides, a comprehensive test bank, sample syllabi, and more.
Intended Audience This is a much needed, highly informative, and easy-to-read account of curriculum development and change for curriculum leaders, those teaching curriculum courses, and those aspiring to become curriculum decision makers. It provides the knowledge and skills needed to develop and implement a K–12 school curriculum.
Very helpful content is shared and great insight on leadership in the curriculum.
This is the definition of curriculum the author used: "The curriculum is a set of plans made for guiding learning in the schools, usually represented in retrievable documents of several levels of generality, and the actualization of those plans in the classroom, as experienced by the learners and environment that also influences what is learned."
Here is a powerful quote about leadership and character from this book also: “The question is not whether an individual can lead but more appropriately can they lead with integrity, compassion, and good judgment?"
I had to read this for my grad class - all about the prices of changing a school district’s curriculum. And I hated it. The book is geared toward those who want to be administrators or principals and I only want to a simple teacher who makes good quality lesson plans and unit plans. This book referred to a LOT with little depth. It was a lot more breadth. And it kind of talked in circles. It didn’t help that our professor had us read chapters out to order…honestly, it may have been the way the course was taught more than my distaste for the actual textbook.
Unlike the other book for this class, this book pushed, challenged, and stretched my knowledge of curriculum. I had rented the text but plan on buying it because there are things I want to refer to.
Okay, let me first qualify this. This is an important book for anyone in instructional leadership.
I only gave it three stars because I had such a hard time reading it. It's loaded with great information, and specific strategies for developing curriculum in academic settings, and for making changes to existing curriculum and its implementation. But it's hard to read, especially for someone without any hook to hang it on. The chapters are long, which means that when I was trying to read it chapter by chapter, there was really too much to digest in one setting. I resorted to recreating the book's outline as I read, and when I did that, that was when I was really able to mine all the valuable helps and experience the book contains.
Textbook in a textbook style, but with great information for a niche reader. Which is what it's intended to do.
This book is a great reference for students of advanced Instructional Design and Technology. Assessments styles and strategies for evaluation are in plain terms be used to incorporate into a paper or research article. The in-depth explanation of curriculum evaluation and the process are easy to follow as well. Great text