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Towards a Better Future

A Review of the Irish School System John Coolahan | Sheelagh Drudy Pádraig Hogan | Áine Hyland | Séamus McGuinness

A Review of the Irish School System
John Coolahan | Sheelagh Drudy Pádraig Hogan | Áine Hyland | Séamus McGuinness

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Chapter Three: Curriculum<br />

PART TWO: A NEW APPROACH TO CURRICULUM DESIGN<br />

Leading and Supporting Change in Schools, 2009<br />

In 2009, the NCCA published a discussion paper on Leading and Supporting Change in Schools that,<br />

inter alia, identified the key role of teachers in the implementation of change and explored how<br />

lasting change in teaching, learning, school culture and implementation could be achieved. The<br />

document emphasised that ‘realising deep educational change can only happen through teachers<br />

and school management and their interactions and relationships with the learner.’ It recognised the<br />

need to give schools greater autonomy in setting the agenda for change at the local level and the<br />

need to involve teachers and schools in both planning for change as well as involving them in the<br />

process of change (NCCA, 2009).<br />

As a result of debate and discussion, and in line with developments in curriculum planning<br />

internationally, the NCCA made significant changes in its approach to curriculum and syllabus<br />

planning and design in 2009. The NCCA’s revised approach emphasised a ‘learning outcomes’<br />

approach to curriculum design, the role of teachers as curriculum developers and the use of an<br />

online portal.<br />

Learning Outcomes Approach<br />

Under the ’learning-outcomes’ approach, new curricula and syllabi would be specified in terms of<br />

topics and learning outcomes – it would be a matter for individual teachers to interpret these topics<br />

and learning outcomes and to plan their teaching accordingly.<br />

A learning-outcomes approach to curriculum and programme planning has been widely adopted<br />

internationally in recent years. It is used by many OECD countries for designing early years, primary<br />

and second-level curricula and has been adopted in the US, Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore,<br />

as well as in the 50 countries of the European Higher Education Area (under the Bologna agreement)<br />

as a tool for designing higher education programmes (Hyland et al 2007). In the early 2000s, the<br />

Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA) produced a national<br />

curriculum framework for primary and second-level schools that has many parallels to the NCCA’s<br />

approach. In 2012/13, the council of federal, state, and territory education ministers in Australia<br />

endorsed a revised Senior Cycle curriculum ‘as the agreed and common base for the development<br />

of state and territory senior secondary courses’. A learning outcomes approach was also adopted in<br />

2010/11 in the curriculum frameworks developed by Education Scotland – Scotland’s national<br />

curriculum authority (Hyland, 2014). However, there is an important distinction between those<br />

countries and Ireland. In the case of Australia and Scotland, there is an intermediate structure<br />

between the national curriculum body and the schools, which mediates and interprets the national<br />

curriculum and provides detailed guidelines and support for individual schools. As indicated above,<br />

each Australian state and territory has its own education ministry and Scotland has 32 individual local<br />

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