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11.1: Introduction to the Chapter

  • Page ID
    44041
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    Curriculum is one of the central features of a high-quality early childhood program. It shapes what children experience each day, how teachers plan and interact, how the environment is arranged, and how children’s growth is supported over time. In early childhood education, curriculum is much broader than a list of activities or weekly themes. It includes planned experiences, routines, relationships, play, materials, assessment, family connections, and opportunities for children to explore and make meaning.

    This chapter examines how administrators establish and support high-quality curriculum in early childhood programs. It addresses how curriculum is defined, aligned with program philosophy and standards, selected or designed, implemented through developmentally appropriate and play-based practice, informed by observation and assessment, and adapted for diverse children and families. The chapter also considers how administrators evaluate curriculum quality and support continuous improvement so that the curriculum children experience each day reflects the program’s goals and values.

    Learning Objectives

    By the end of this chapter, students will be able to:

    • Describe how curriculum should align with program philosophy, developmental standards, learning goals, and children’s needs.
    • Compare different curriculum approaches and evaluate whether they are developmentally appropriate, feasible, inclusive, and responsive.
    • Analyze the role of play, intentional teaching, observation, assessment, and individualization in high-quality curriculum.
    • Identify ways administrators can evaluate curriculum implementation and support continuous improvement across classrooms.

    Brainstorming Questions

    1. When you hear the word curriculum, what kinds of experiences or materials come to mind?
    2. How is curriculum for young children different from curriculum for older students?
    3. What might children learn through play, routines, outdoor exploration, or conversations with adults?
    4. How can teachers balance planned learning goals with children’s interests and unexpected questions?

    This page titled 11.1: Introduction to the Chapter is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jennifer Marta and Hannah Knott.