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What is Hidden Curriculum

Faculty Roles and Changing Expectations in the New Age
Those learning outcomes that are not directly stated in the curriculum; not directly taught and unassessed; and refers to values such as the soft skills.
Published in Chapter:
The Inconvenient Truth About Digital Transformation in Higher Education
Roslind Xaviour Thambusamy (Future Academy, Malaysia), Parmjit Singh (Universiti Teknologi MARA, Malaysia), and Mohd Adlan Ramly (Universiti Teknologi MARA, Malaysia)
Copyright: © 2019 |Pages: 16
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-7438-5.ch014
Abstract
The proliferation of technology into the teaching and learning process has drawn ire in certain quarters of education. This chapter takes up this train of thought to elucidate on certain aspects of the digital transformation of higher education processes which threaten to suffocate the humanistic aspects of the educative process. Special focuses are placed on the pervasive and invasive encroachment of technology into all aspects of teaching, learning, and assessment in terms of its actual value to the end users—the students. The authors highlight how universities are now reflecting Giroux's neoliberalism and Ritzer's McDonaldization in their management and, consequently, depriving instructors and students of the opportunity to true quality education that should pivot on humanistic values and not the accumulation of grades. Apart from these theoretical bases, the authors present arguments drawn from empirical evidence and their own experience as long-serving academics.
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The Significance of Collective Self-Directed Learning Competencies for the Sustainability of Higher Education
What students take away from university that is not explicitly taught but profoundly impacts whom they become and how they see the world.
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Gender and Sexuality in Physical Education and Health Curricula in Japan: Feminist, Human Rights, and Anthropological Lenses
Refers to the presence of powerful, hegemonic messages that reinforce dominant social values, shaping the learning environment, and reinforcing social structural inequalities.
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First-Aid Mental Health for the Pre-Medical Student
Unintended but essential learning objectives.
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How Colleges and Universities Create the Value of Their Degrees: Beyond the Formal Curriculum
The unintended program and process of learning that is “hidden” from the formalities of higher education. The formal education and structure of an institution provide the foundation for the social interactions, opportunities for growth and crisis, and challenges that can produce an education.
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As if in Their Shoes: Use of Virtual Reality to Enhance Faculty Intercultural Competence
It refers to the unwritten curriculum that is taught in schools and universities, which includes behaviors, perspectives, values, and attitudes.
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Preparing and Training Higher Education Faculty to Ensure Quality Online Learning and Teaching
A set of implicit procedures, processes, structures, content, and views that are imparted, if not inculcated, to students in variety of educational settings and systems.
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Professionalism Competence: Its Role in Bringing About High-Value Care – A Case Study
The hidden curriculum is a socialization process that transmits norms and values that undermine the formal message taught during the medical education continuum. The hidden curriculum disrupts training in that its message (as it is practiced by others in authority) implies that what is formally taught as best practices is less important than what is practiced. It causes students (residents included) to move from being open-minded to closed-minded; move from being intellectually curious to narrowly focused on facts; from empathy to emotional detachment; from idealism to cynicism; from civility and caring to arrogance and irritability; and, an erosion of ethics ( Mahood, 2011 ).
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Serving Adult Learners From International Backgrounds at Two Canadian Universities: Duty of Care, Student Success, and Approaches to Learning
Hidden curriculum is an element of an educational experience which may not have been intended such as the inclusion of norms, values, and beliefs. In courses and programs for international learners, awareness that there is a hidden curriculum is important for learners and instructors.
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Problem-Based Learning (PBL) and Employability Skills Development in the Hospitality Sector
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Creating a Value Added College Environment: The Role of the Hidden Curriculum
The unintended program and process of learning that is “hidden” from the formalities of higher education. The formal education and structure of an institution provide the foundation for the social interactions, opportunities for growth and crisis, and challenges that can produce an education.
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Race, Class, and Community Cultural Wealth: Impacts on Parental Involvement Among Black Families in K-12 Public Schools
Those values, norms, and beliefs that represent the hegemonic ideas, often used for the purpose of domination in the classroom.
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Promoting a Collegial, Collaborative, and Innovative Teaching and Learning Environment: A Real Institute's Approach to COVID-19
The latent course expectations and learning outcomes desired of students that the syllabus does not make explicit.
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Becoming an Eclectic Instructor
The skills that some students do not have, but do not quite understand that they do not have them or understand what questions to ask about missing skills.
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Culturally Attuned Assessment and Identification Practices in the 21st Century
The unwritten set of values, perspectives, and behavioral expectations established within public institutions that perpetuate social framework often reflecting the views of the ethnic/racial majority group.
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Are We Teaching the Whole Story?: An Analysis of Diversity and Representation in Three Southern States' U.S. History Standards
The concept that suggests that beyond the state-mandated and tested curriculum there is unofficial teaching of norms and values, and individual teacher decisions that influence the day-to-day teaching and learning in classrooms.
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The Power of Storying Leadership: Untold Stories of Leaders of Color for K12 Leadership
The invisible norms, policies, and expectations to succeed but not taught explicitly.
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Revealing New Hidden Curriculum and Pedagogy of Digital Games
Hidden curriculum refers to those unstated norms, values, and beliefs embedded in and transmitted to students (players in game). This can have non-academic but educationally significant consequences of the participating activities. Hidden curriculum is the part of the curriculum knowledge or the subject matter that is not solely academic, but it includes the personal and social knowledge as well.
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Developing a Socially Responsible Approach to IT Research
Research by authors such as Anyon (1980) and others have found that some schools are built upon a hidden curriculum that supports a modernist/capitalist ideology. The hidden curriculum of schools dictates that the primary function of schooling is to socialize children to accept the social roles appropriate for their class status. This curriculum works to teach poor and working-class children to be subservient and punctual, middle-class children to fulfill management-type roles and professional/elite children to dictate political, social, and cultural policy.
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Mentoring, Partnering, and Follow-Through: TRIO Programs Provide a Path Through the Wilderness
The unspoken behaviors, values, and practices that are considered conventional and customary in university settings and are based on the standards of the dominant culture.
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Teaching Teacher Agency in an Era of Standardization
Often implicit procedures, processes, structures, content, and views that are imparted, if not inculcated, to students in variety of educational settings and systems.
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