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About Me

• Florida licensed and Nationally Certified Massage Therapist with over 17 years experience in the profession.

• Experience in various arenas of clinical and hands on practice as well as in areas of training and education of massage therapists and massage therapy students.

• Currently the National Director of Massage Therapy for Anthem Education Group which has numerous campuses across the country with Massage Therapy Certificate and diploma programs.

• Work in the areas of curriculum and course design, operations, faculty training and education management.

• MTBOK Task Force Member

Curriculum & Education Theory

Education is the process by which individuals gain knowledge, skills, values, habits, and attitudes. Societal mores, cultural norms,

and practical needs compel the incorporation of various components of learning and information. Hence, the educational

curriculum is vitally important to a society’s success.” Borrowman (l989)

Need for Curriculum Revision

Today’s Questions:

• What is this “Curriculum” you speak of?• Why Revise?• What is curriculum revision?• Who is involved?• How often should I revise?• Is there a methodology?• Where do I start? • What resources are there?

Contemplate on this a bit….don’t answer yet!

What determined the “success” of curriculum revision processes?

 

Were there specific factors that had a significant impact on whether or not the revision project was successful?

 

Do teachers have strong views on the process of curriculum revision processes?

 

Do teacher attitudes and/or backgrounds have an impact on the success or failure of curriculum revision procedures?

 

Does the revision procedure have an influence?

What’s with the “Check”?

= Class discussion = Your thoughts &

feedback = Open forum = Contribution

Determine a foundation

What is This Curriculum Thing?

A curriculum is an educational plan that spells out which goals and objectives should be achieved,

which topics should be covered, and which methods are to be used for learning, teaching,

and evaluation. It defines and describes program of learning and includes philosophy,

content, approach, and assessment.

What is your definition?

What is written is not always learned…

The reality of curriculum:

o Recommended curriculum.o Written curriculum.o Taught curriculum. o Supported curriculum.o Tested / Assessed curriculum.o Learned curriculum.

An effective curriculum plan must reflect the career outcomes, be relevant, teach to the

future as well as the present, and be presented in an integrated format by which

all staff and instructors understand and support all components. (Mosby 2010)

Curriculum & Education Theory

Syllabi - (Think about yours)– A description of how each course is organized.

– A description of content in each course.

– General goals (outcomes) in each course.

– Specific, measurable objectives for each course.

– A description of how instruction and student learning is to be evaluated.

– Exit and enabling competencies

Lesson Plan - (Who does these at your campus)– Weekly & Daily plan for lecture, assessments, activities, and

practicum.

– Time management guide.

– Due dates and reminders.

What Should Curriculum Include?

Graded assessments. (Most often revised)– Exams, projects and practicum that contribute to course

point values & grade determination.– Measurements of understanding and performance.– Designed to reach desired outcomes. (Learning Objectives)

Feedback loop.

(Not always considered in the process)– Progress reports.– Student surveys.– Instructor Evaluations.

What Should Curriculum Include?

Refocus & Notes Check

Up to this point… What is curriculum? The reality of curriculum. Thinking about what’s included - basic format. Started to see what may be missing, improved on,

or changed.

Are you starting to think about your curriculum

Why Revise?

Reasons for Revision:

• Update statistical data.• Introduce new modalities.• Add new classroom tools (new texts,

multimedia, etc.)• Upgrade the current instructional program.• Comply with accreditation standards.

What needs do you see?

Why do you think you should revise?

The Process:

Approaches to Revision:

• Editing• Revision that is based on structure, accuracy and grammar / spelling.

• Non-Substantive changes• Changes to internal format, delivery, text editions, rewriting

assessments and refining current content that does not change the overall course description.

• Substantive changes• Changes to large scale format, content, and structure of course and /

or program that significantly changes the course and requires a change in the course description. Change in course syllabi.

Change is not always easy but it is necessary.

In curriculum development and revision, change often means that what has been done for a

long time / entrenched methods and theories may be challenged and/or changed.

Buy-in for the revision(s) is necessary by all parties involved.

Change, Growth, & Buy-in

Who is involved?

• Program Managers / Chairs• Instructors• Advisory boards• Subject Matter Experts• Students

Who is involved with you ??

Where to start?

Big Picture

Self Evaluation / Needs Assessment

to determine structural design, content, assessments, instructional methods,

learning styles, materials & resources at the disposal of the instructors and the students.

What’s the plan Stan??

Set out a plan. – Determine the goals of the revision.

• New courses, new assessments (exams), new format, new activities.

• What do you want to see as the result of the revision?

– Employ a focus team for the revision.• Recommended that you have a central writer / editor

and contributors.

Where do I start… close up.

Evaluate current curriculum– No need to reinvent the wheel. Use a “Program, Course, Unit” approach.– Find what works and what doesn’t.

 

Use development tools to evaluate needs– Instructional Design– DACUM Process

Establish a time line

Instructional Design

Instructional Design (ID): is a process using a systematic approach to plan a course of instruction.

Instructional design lays the groundwork before training occurs. This helps the instructor or trainer to use a preplanned course or material as a basis for training. The instructor is then free to facilitate the learning process. An additional advantage to the ID process is that a course can be reproduced to be taught by multiple, qualified instructors.• Analyze instructional needs• Design plan • Develop material or service• Implement material or service • Evaluate project

Advanced Technology Environmental and Energy Center (ATEEC)

DACUM

DACUM

A DACUM is a method of occupational (or task) analysis. Led by a trained facilitator, expert practitioners in an occupation come together to provide input on the specific knowledge, skills and abilities required to perform their job. Curriculum and revisions are developed.

• Identify instructional needs.• Plan an instructional program.• Design and develop curriculum.• Design and develop instructional materials.• Create and revise job descriptions and performance standards.

Plan for Improvement not just replacement.

Areas of potential improvement

– Instructor training– Critical Thinking – Substantive Learning– Blooms Taxonomy (Higher Level Competencies)– Outcomes Assessments– New resources

Instructor Training - The issues

• The leadership roles of teachers are becoming more prevalent, more dominant, and more demanding.

• The ability of an instructor to lead, inspire, control, and guide require many skills that are not taught in the MT Field as well as manage the large amount of information.

• MT Education must come from a mature approach to learning and focus on the needs of the adult learner in the context of the classroom.

• Instructors need to use a broad spectrum of techniques and be able to employ not just on the “in-session” skills.

Notes on Instructor Training Needs

To what extent does the instructor teach so that you must THINK to understand the content, or are you able to get a good grade by simply memorizing without really understanding the content?

To what extent does your instructor teach so as to make clear the precise question, problem, or issue on the floor at any given time in instruction?

To what extent does your instructor teach so as to help you learn how to find information relevant to answering questions in the subject?

To what extent does your instructor teach so as to enable you to think more clearly? More Accurately? More Logically?

Instructor Training / Evaluation

Critical Thinking

Studies demonstrate that most college faculty lack a substantive concept of critical thinking. Consequently they do not (and cannot) use it as a central organizer in the design of instruction.

They do not link it to the essential thinking that defines the content they teach. They, therefore, usually teach content separate from the thinking students need to engage in if they are to take ownership of that content.

Critical Thinking

Knowledge exists, properly speaking, only in minds that have comprehended it and constructed it through thought. And when we say thought we mean critical thought.

All too often we focus on a narrow collection of well-defined tasks and train students to execute those tasks in a routine fashion. Then we test the students on tasks that are very close to the ones they have been taught. If they succeed on those problems, we and they congratulate each other on the fact that they have learned some powerful techniques…

Critical Thinking

A critical thinker does not say: “My thinking is just fine. If everyone thought like me, this would be a pretty good world.”

A critical thinker says: “My thinking, as that of everyone else, can always be improved. Self-deception and folly exist at every level of human life. It is foolish ever to take thinking for granted. To think well, we must regularly analyze, assess, and reconstruct thinking — ever mindful as to how we can improve it.”Source: Foundation for Critical Thinking (2010)

Substantive Learning

If we understand critical thinking substantively, we not only explain the idea explicitly to our students, but we

use it to give order and meaning to virtually everything we do as teachers

and learners.

Determines how we conceptualize our role as instructors. It enables us to understand and explain the thinking that defines the content we teach.

We need to model the thinking that students need to formulate if they are to take ownership of the content.

Substantive Learning

Refocus & Notes Check

Up to this point… Curriculum Evaluation. Why Revise? Where to start? Who is involved? The Plan. Areas of Improvement.

Instructor Training Critical Thinking Substantive Learning

What notes have you taken?

Guiding Principles

State guidelines – Minimum contact / clock hours – transcripts.– State and or national exam / licensure.

Accreditation guidelines– Minimum contact / clock hours.– Syllabi and competencies.

Professional standards– Relevant theory & applications– Standardized education practices (assessments, etc.)

Available Resources

• States Criteria for License / Certification / Registration. The Law!

• Accreditation Standards• NCBTMB – Exam Content• MBLEx – Exam Content• MTBOK – Schools Checklist• Bloom’s Taxonomy • MT School Program Guide

States with Regulation

Hourly Breakout – State Regs.

Swedish Massage

Anatomy & Physiology

Health & Human Hygiene Pathology Hydrotherapy

Massage Techniques Kinesiology

Business, Laws and

Rules

SupervisedClinic / Extern

Total CourseHours

Completed

                   

30 15   10   15 10     80

30 15   10   15 10     80

30 15   10   15 10     80

30 15   10   15 10     80

30 15   10   15 10     80

    25   25 15 15     80

              60   60

                90 90

150 75 25 50 25 90 65 60 90 630

125 75 20 40 20 75 50 45 50 500

NCBTMB Exam Content

General Knowledge of Body Systems (16%)

Knowledge of Anatomy, Physiology and Kinesiology (19%)

Pathology (13%)

Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork Assessment (18%)

Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork Application (22%)

Professional Standards, Ethics, Business and LegalPractices (12%)

NCBTMB Exam Content

© 2007 National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage & Bodywork All rights reserved.

Hourly Breakout - NCBTMB

Anatomy, Physiology & Kinesiology

MT Theory, Assessment &

Applications Pathology

Business Practices &

Ethics

Additional Supervised Instruction

Supervised Clinic

Total CourseHours

             

20 25 5 2 18   70

30 15 5 5 15   70

30 25 10 5 0   70

30 25 5 2 8   70

30 35 5   0   70

20 30 5   15   70

8 25     37   70

30 35 5   0   70

15 10   35 10   70

20 20   5 25   70

          120 120

233 245 40 54 128 120 820

125 200 40 10 125   500

MBLEx Exam Content

Anatomy & Physiology (14%)

Kinesiology (11%)

Pathology, Contraindications, Areas of Caution, Special Populations (13%)

Benefits and Physiological Effects of Techniques That Manipulate Soft Tissue (17%)

Client Assessment Reassessment and Treatment Planning (17%)

Overview of Massage & Bodywork History, Culture, Modalities (5%)

Ethics, Boundaries, Laws and Regulations (13%)

MBLEX Exam Content

MBLExPathology, Contraindications,Areas of Caution, SpecialPopulations

Ethics, Boundaries, Laws &Regulations

Client Assessment,Reassessment and TreatmentPlanning

Overview of Massage &Bodywork History, Culture,Modalities

Benefits and PhysiologicalEffects of Techniques thatManipulate Soft Tissue

Kinesiology

Anatomy & Physiology

Massage Therapy Body of Knowledge – MTBOK

A living compendium of what a professional massage therapist should know and be able to do, and descriptions of the massage therapy field and

scope of practice.

Comprehensive Body of Knowledge developed for the specific purpose of guiding the Massage

Therapy profession through establishing agreed upon knowledge, skills and abilities.

• Overview of Massage Therapy and Bodywork History / Culture• Anatomy and Physiology• Kinesiology• Pathology• Assessment, Treatment Planning and Documentation• Research and Information Literacy• Business Practices, Laws and Regulations • Boundaries, Ethics and the Therapeutic Relationship• Body Mechanics and Self Care• Massage Techniques and Physiological and Psychological

Effects• Therapeutic Modalities

*MTBOK Content Checklist available at www.mtbok.org.

MTBOK & School Checklist:

To the Checklist!!!

Curriculum Development

Lesson Plan Design

Revision Evaluation

What is the most effective way for YOU to use MTBOK?

MTBOK-based Program Content

MTBOK

OverviewA&PKinesiologyPathologyAssessmentResearch Business & LawBoundaries, Ethics & TRBody Mech. & Self CareTechniques & EffecsTherapeutic Modalities

Quality Assurance

Course Level• Is there a complete lesson plan for new material?

• Are the course objectives covered?

• Are the competencies achievable?

• Does it flow well?

• Are the competencies and lecture materials proportional?

• Is there room for creativity from instructors?

• Are there support materials (Power Points, multimedia, hand-outs, etc.)

• Does the revision address different levels of cognitive skill?

• Are the grade points reasonable?

Time Line

Writing and Implementing the Revision

Collect the data: • Determined need(s)/ Needs assessment

Comply with the guidelines / standards.

Follow your plan.

Draft the revision.

Evaluate the revision. (Quality Assurance)

Determine the best way to implement:• How do you roll out new without interrupting the

old?

Communicate clearly to all stakeholders

Roll it out.

When? How Often?

Follow Up

Discussion on what we “Learned” today.

Reference

Reference:

Bent, Rudyard K.; Unruh, Adolph. (1969) The Evolving Curriculum: Theories and Approaches. Ch.1 Secondary School Curriculum. D.C. Heath and Company Boston, Mass.

Borrowman, M.L.(l989). Curriculum. The world book encyclopedia, 6, 85-l06. Chicago, IL: World Book, Inc.

Glatthorn, Allan A. 1987. Curriculum Renewal. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

Judy A. Johnson, Ed.D. Assistant Professor/ Educational Leadership and Counseling/Sam Houston State University. PRINCIPLES OF EFFECTIVE CHANGE: Curriculum Revision That Works. Journal of Research for Educational Leaders. Vol. 1 Fall 2001

Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (October 12, 2001) DEVELOPING CURRICULUM GUIDES. Missouri.

Mosby (2010) TEACH Evolve Program Guide for Massage Therapy. Mosby / Elsevier

MTBOK (2010) Massage Therapy Body of Knowledge. www.mtbok.org

Purpel, D. (l972). Curriculum and the cultural revolution: A book of essays and readings. Berkley, CA: McCutcheon Publishing Corporation.

Thank you for attending!