ITE Module 2 TC Standard 3 8 Core Topics

🗺️ Curriculum Design & Planning

From backwards design to the New Zealand Curriculum — learning to plan learning sequences that build deep, transferable understanding over surface coverage.

📋 Module Overview

Curriculum planning is where most beginning teachers feel most overwhelmed. The instinct is to fill time: find a topic, gather activities, organise into a sequence. This produces busy but shallow learning. Effective curriculum design starts from a fundamentally different place: What do I want students to understand, be able to do, and think about when this unit is over? Everything else — the activities, the readings, the assessments — serves that answer.

Teaching Council Standard 3: "Teachers design for learning." This means understanding the curriculum as more than content delivery — it encompasses values, key competencies, culturally responsive pedagogy, and the learning progressions that students need to travel through.

🔄 Backwards Design (Understanding by Design)

Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe's Understanding by Design (1998) articulates the most influential curriculum planning framework. The central insight: most planning fails because teachers start with resources and activities rather than desired student understanding.

"Too much content is taught and promptly forgotten because students were never clear on what they were supposed to take away and why that mattered." — Wiggins & McTighe, Understanding by Design (2005)
  1. Stage 1 — Identify Desired Results

    What are the big ideas? What enduring understandings should students carry five years from now? What essential questions drive genuine inquiry? Map these to NZC achievement objectives and Tātaiako cultural competencies.

  2. Stage 2 — Determine Acceptable Evidence

    How will you know students have understood? Design assessments before designing lessons. This prevents the common trap of assessing what's easy to measure rather than what matters. Consider authentic tasks, performances, portfolios.

  3. Stage 3 — Plan Learning Experiences

    Now plan the lessons, activities, and resources — all in service of Stage 1 goals and Stage 2 evidence. Ask: does this activity directly build toward the desired understanding? If not, cut it.

🌿 Backwards Design and Cultural Responsiveness

Stage 1 is where cultural responsiveness must be built in, not added on. Ask: whose knowledge counts as curriculum content? Whose ways of knowing are embedded in how I'm framing these big ideas? Can I design essential questions that invite Māori and Pasifika perspectives as central, not supplementary?

🇳🇿 The New Zealand Curriculum — A Principles-Based Framework

The NZC (2007, revised) is deliberately not a content prescription — it sets a framework of values, key competencies, and learning areas, giving teachers significant professional autonomy and responsibility. Understanding the NZC deeply is a professional obligation, not a bureaucratic requirement.

The Five Key Competencies

💭

Thinking

Creative and critical thinking. Making meaning, solving problems, reflecting on knowledge.

🗣️

Using Language, Symbols & Texts

Literacy and numeracy across all modes — interpreting and communicating.

🧘

Managing Self

Self-motivation, goal-setting, resilience and personal identity as a learner.

🤝

Relating to Others

Empathy, communication, working with diverse people.

🌍

Participating & Contributing

Active engagement in local, national, and global communities.

🌿 Te Marautanga o Aotearoa

The Māori-medium curriculum runs parallel to the NZC and is grounded in Māori concepts of knowledge, identity, and learning. All mainstream teachers should understand its existence and philosophy — teachers in bilingual contexts must know it intimately.

🧠 Bloom's Taxonomy — Designing for Cognitive Depth

Bloom's revised taxonomy (Anderson & Krathwohl, 2001) provides a framework for designing tasks with progressively deeper understanding. The research problem in NZ schools: most lesson tasks cluster at the bottom two levels while the NZC's key competencies require the top levels.

💾
Remember
Recall, define, list
📖
Understand
Explain, summarise
🔧
Apply
Use in new context
🔬
Analyse
Compare, examine
⚖️
Evaluate
Judge, critique
Create
Design, produce

📈 Learning Progressions

Learning progressions describe the typical pathway students travel in developing understanding of a concept or skill. They help teachers understand where students are now and what they need to experience next. Begin with NZC achievement objectives, then use ERO's Learning Progression Frameworks for reading, writing, and maths to plan responsive instruction.

🏫 Unit Planning: Core Disciplines

🔗 Connected Resources

Other Modules:

← All ITE Modules Next: Professional Practice & Ethics →

Mātauranga Māori Lens

Curriculum design through a mātauranga Māori lens means asking what knowledge is included, whose knowledge it is, and how it is held. Tikanga shapes not just content choices but the relational processes of planning — whanaungatanga with students, whānau, and community should inform what we plan to teach and why. Kaitiakitanga reminds us that we are guardians of young people's learning, not just deliverers of content.

Classroom Application

Use this module to review a unit plan you've written or will write soon. Check: is there a te ao Māori lens? Is the context genuinely local and relevant to your students? Next step: identify one place in the plan where you can bring in a whanaungatanga-based structure (e.g., collaborative inquiry, peer teaching, whānau voice).

Puna Kōrero — Sources

Wiggins, G., & McTighe, J. (2005). Understanding by Design (2nd ed.). Alexandria, VA: ASCD.

Ministry of Education Aotearoa New Zealand. (2023). Te Mātaiaho: The New Zealand Curriculum Refresh. Wellington: Ministry of Education.

Beane, J. A. (1997). Curriculum Integration: Designing the Core of Democratic Education. New York: Teachers College Press.