Do you like wearing a one-size-fits-all
shirts? If you have a “normal” size body, then you would adore such a shirt.
But if you are relatively petite or large, you
have to pass on this adorable shirt. The reason is simple, it does not fit you.
So, is your body the problem?
In the garment business, “one-size-fits-all”
is a term used to describe a product that has been designed to fit average
people. This un-sized approach to clothing design is to make it easy for
consumers to grab something off the rack in a hurry.
However, the term can also be used to describe
a simplistic and reductive approach to a problem. This includes our recent
curriculum change in schools.
Under the previous curriculum (KTSP —
school-based curriculum), teachers had to design their own syllabus after
identifying the needs of their students. Curriculum prescribes the objectives,
whereas syllabus describes the means to achieve them.
Curriculum guides teachers about “what” to
teach, syllabus tells “how” to teach it. This process requires teachers’
creativity and commitment.
Some teachers might be burned out due to their
heavy workload. But at least this system encourages teachers to teach what is
needed for their students to work creatively. Quality work takes time.
Unlike the previous curriculum, the newly
introduced curriculum of 2013 comes in a package. In an interview, Education
and Culture Minister Mohammad Nuh stated that the government would provide the
curriculum in a package with its syllabus.
This could be good news for some teachers, but
maybe not for some others.
In explaining about the new curriculum in its
familiarization program, the minister analogized the curriculum to tailoring a
suit. He claimed that the 2013 curriculum was a nice suit, because it was
designed first prior to the tailoring. Did not the previous curricula undergo
the same procedure too?
There are at least three flawed assumptions in
the new curriculum.
First, the curriculum planners have
misidentified the problem. They assume that teachers are like “dirty water in a
reservoir”. The phrase was actually presented in a national meeting of the new
curriculum. It is not only that the words chosen are offensive, the assumption
underlying the phrase itself is also flawed.
Teachers are positioned at the center of the
educational problem, and that is why they have to be represented in an
appropriate way.
The misidentified problem is that teachers are
incapable of writing a syllabus. Therefore, the panacea is the
one-size-fits-all curriculum 2013 with its syllabus.
Second, just like the one-size-fits-all shirt
may not always be flattering, the syllabus made by the government may fit one
school, but may also be irrelevant to others. More worryingly, some schools may
get neglected when they have unique needs and issues.
The curriculum basically assumes that all
schools, facilities, teachers and students are the same, which is clearly
untrue.
Third, that teachers are not trustworthy in
terms of exploring their creativity in developing the curriculum based on
contextual needs and the unique demands in each region. By the assumption of
curriculum 2013, teachers would be steered from a distance by using a universal
remote control called syllabus.
The teaching and learning process in schools
aims to shape our students’ characters and to achieve a goal where there is no
child left behind. Yet Curriculum 2013 suddenly comes out of the blue and
purports to act as an instant solution.
If these sudden changes continue, teachers and
students, the core subjects of education, will instead fall victim to the
errors of our national education system.
I
agree that we should not oppose change. But to strive for change, we need to
make sure that the changes are for the better, not worse.
Should one size fit all? Should we employ this
one-size-fits-all approach to education? So, is your body the problem? These
questions could hardly end.
The problem is not only for curriculum
planning. Winston Churchill said that “he who fails to plan is planning to
fail”. But let’s hope it does not lead to that.
Zulfa
Sakhiyya ;
A
Researcher at the Center for Multiculturalism,
Democracy,
and Character Building, Semarang State University
JAKARTA
POST, 23 Februari 2013
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