Curriculum Decision Making


 


Executive Summary


The Intellectual Property refers to the legal rights that correspond to intellectual activity in the industrial, scientific and artistic fields. These legal rights, most commonly in the form of patents, trademarks, and copyright, protect the moral and economic rights of the creators, in addition to the creativity and dissemination of their work. Industrial property, which is part of intellectual property, extends protection to inventions and industrial designs. Therefore, rask and procurement management are present in the development and implementation of intellectual property and it is anticipated that most individuals offering such rights are likely to be acting from non-commercial motives and will encourage highly functional, value-added, access and the Individual IP owners will appreciate the benefits of making a gift of rights to an organization that ensures their work a sort of immortality. It is critical that the donation of different levels of functionality, and the progressive release of further permissions over time, not result in additional operational costs for an IPO. This means that the metadata captured up front must interact with the format captured up front, to dictate levels of display functionality.


 


 


 


In addition, an entity offering free sound at this time seems likely to increase the public confusion. The information contained in a patent is not in itself of great value until much further development makes it so, and the filing of a patent makes that information publicly available even in the existing system. If patent rights were given to a public trust, necessary further development could be undertaken by that trust or could be limited by the trust, for example by auctioning the rights, by others. If the others built a product on the free patent right, they would surround it by many other proprietary patents to protect the value of their investment.


Discussion and  part of instruction


PURPOSE


To provide a process to manage the curriculum by establishing the structure for curriculum design


and delivery and a systematic basis for decision-making and standardized practice


B. ISSUE


Curriculum contains the Board of Education’s prescribed elements of programs and courses, which


shall state clearly and specifically what students are expected to know and be able to do, how well


they will be able to do it, how they will meet their learning objectives, and by what means they will


be assessed. Curriculum documents typically include rationale and purpose, scope and sequence


of learning outcomes, instructional strategies, adaptations for special populations, and assessment


procedures.


Curriculum is fundamental to what Montgomery County Public Schools is trying to accomplish.


Consequently, it shall be regularly evaluated and revised to the level of the best models we can find,


and curriculum development shall be a partnership endeavor among all stakeholders: school board


members, central office administrators, curriculum coordinators, teachers and instructional staff,


principals, parents, students, and community and business people.


C. POSITION


The Board of Education recognizes the need and value of a systematic ongoing program of


curriculum review and development. The board will encourage and support the professional staff


in its efforts to investigate curriculum ideas, develop and improve programs, evaluate results, and


participate in staff development activities.


IF


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1. This policy encompasses the following:


a) The written curriculum as presented in the curriculum framework and in the


curriculum guides


b) The taught curriculum as implemented by teachers with students


c) The learned curriculum as demonstrated by assessments of student performance


d) The ongoing staff development needed to ensure consistent implementation,


monitoring, and supervision


e) The monitoring of curriculum implementation by teachers, principals, and central


services staff


2. Written Curriculum


a) The Board of Education expects that learning will be enhanced by adherence to a


curriculum that promotes continuity and cumulative acquisition and application of


skills and knowledge from grade to grade and from school to school. The


curriculum should reflect the best knowledge of the growth and development of


learners, the needs of learners, and the desires of the community, state law, and


state board of education rules.


b) The focus of the curriculum shall promote:


(1) An opportunity for every student to participate


(2) Achievement at the highest level in every curricular area for every student


(3) Objectives derived from local, state, national, and international standards


as appropriate in all subject areas


c) The curriculum shall provide teachers, students, and parents with the Board of


Education’s expectations of what students should know and be able to do at the


end of each grade level and course.


IF


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d) Subject area written curriculum frameworks, scopes and sequences, expectations,


curriculum guides, and material for parents shall be developed for every grade level


and course.


(1) Initial information regarding proposed curriculum development or revisions


shall be presented to the Board of Education for approval to proceed with


a formal request for curriculum development or revision to the Council on


Instruction.


(2) All curriculum shall be documented in writing in a standardized format


providing the following:


(a) The context for learning


(b) Content and performance standards stated clearly for teachers to


understand what is expected and required of them and all


students; for parents to understand what is expected of their


children; and for students to understand what is expected and


required of them


(c) A model for instruction to meet those standards for all students


(d) A model for assessment to monitor student progress toward those


goals


(e) Use of approved instructional resources


(3) Each subject area curriculum will be reviewed on a cycle every 5 years,


with at least one area reported to the Board of Education every year. The


review process should include, but not be limited to, use of data,


benchmarking, and communication.


(4) Teachers shall have copies of guides and use the standards in the guides


to develop daily lesson plans.


(5) Principals and central services staff shall work with teachers to maintain


consistency among the written curriculum, the taught curriculum, and what


students have learned as measured by assessments.


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e) Instructional resources such as textbooks, software, electronic resources, and other


materials shall be selected based upon their alignment with the curriculum standards


and priorities of the system using a uniform process.


3. Taught Curriculum


a) The taught curriculum shall be aligned with the written curriculum and the assessed


curriculum to bring about a high degree of consistency.


b) All programs for all students shall be aligned to the system wide curriculum and shall


be integrated in their delivery.


c) All curriculum decisions, including but not limited to, elimination or addition of


programs and courses and extensive content alteration, shall be subject to Board


of Education approval.


d) Curriculum guides shall be used to map a logical sequence of instruction. All guides


will ensure that all courses contain the appropriate content required to prepare


students for assessment activities.


e) Staff development shall be designed and implemented to prepare staff members to


teach the written curriculum and shall use methodologies to ensure that staff


members have appropriate knowledge, skills, and practices to teach effectively.


4. Learned Curriculum


a) The superintendent shall recommend to the Board of Education assessment


approaches for determining the effectiveness of instruction at system, school, and


classroom levels. Assessments shall evaluate the extent to which students master


international, national, state, and local standards and the extent to which teachers


enable students to meet those standards.


b) A variety of assessment approaches will be used to determine the effectiveness of


the written curriculum, the taught curriculum, and instructional programs and


courses, including pre-assessment, formative assessment, and summative


assessment.


IF


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c) The assessed curriculum shall include the following components:


(1) National and international assessments as appropriate


(2) State-level assessments as required


(3) Local assessments


(4) An electronic information management system at the classroom, school,


and central office levels that will provide teachers, principals, central office,


other instructional staff, and parents with regularly reported individual


student data to support coordination of instructional planning, student


assessment and placement, instructional delivery, and program evaluation


(5) A program evaluation component


d) Teacher assessment of students on the curriculum standards shall be ongoing.


Teacher-made tests, as well as local assessments, shall be used to determine


patterns of student achievement. Teachers and supervisors shall use test results to


assess the status of individual student achievement, to continuously regroup


students for instruction, to identify general achievement trends of various groups of


students, and to modify curriculum and/or instruction as warranted by assessment


results.


e) Principals shall review assessments with teachers to ensure the assessments are


congruent with the written curriculum.


f) A systematic process shall be in place for assessing/testing student performance.


This process shall provide for the acquisition, analysis, and communication of


student performance data to:


(1) Measure student progress and diagnose student needs


(2) Guide teachers’ instruction at appropriate levels


(3) Guide students’ learning


(4) Guide system wide improvement of curriculum alignment and programmatic


decisions


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(5) Communicate progress to parents to support learning


D. DESIRED OUTCOMES


A focused curriculum that:


1. Is well-balanced and appropriate for all students to meet needs of diverse learners


2. Conforms to state mandates regarding course offerings and essential knowledge and skills


3. Reflects current research, best practices, data, and technological advancements within the


disciplines and promotes congruence among written, taught, and assessed content


4. Provides strategies for differentiation in instructional methodologies, pacing, and resources


for special populations and diverse learners


E. IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGIES


1. The Board shall:


a) Approve the curriculum frameworks and scopes and sequences


b) Provide for staff development that focuses on the necessary methodologies to


increase staff proficiency in content knowledge, skills, and practices


c) Communicate to its constituents the Board of Education’s curricular expectations


d) Recommend funding, through the budget process, for adequate resources needed


to implement the curriculum based on data


e) Establish the breadth and depth of the local testing program, including what grades


are tested, in which subjects, and for what purposes


f) Establish a process for evaluation and selection of instructional texts and materials


g) Establish standards for acceptable performance on assessments


h) Establish goals that are congruent with student performance expectations


IF


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2. The superintendent shall:


a) Ensure that a functional decision-making structure is in place to implement this


policy


b) Prepare a long-range master plan for curriculum development, curriculum revisions,


student assessment, and program evaluation


c) Prepare a long-range master plan for the electronic collection and storage of data


that supports the analysis and reporting of program evaluation and student


assessment data and facilitates data-based decision making at all levels


d) Prepare a long-range master plan for comprehensive training and staff development


e) Ensure that implementation of the curriculum is monitored


3. Regulations will be developed/revised as needed to implement this policy.


F. REVIEW AND REPORTING


1. The superintendent shall annually report to the Board of Education concerning


implementation of this policy.


2. Each subject area curriculum will be reviewed on a cycle every 5 years, with at least one


area reported to the Board of Education every year.


3. Periodic reports shall be made to the Board of Education concerning assessments.


4. This policy will be reviewed on an ongoing basis in accordance with the Board of


Education’s policy on policy setting.



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