outcomes and access for both the student and the
teachers. In brief, LOTS consists of six components,
namely group, metric, learning outcome, incident,
correlation and analysis. The generic electronic
portfolio called ePortfolio (Cotterill, 2004) has
introduced an approach, which is being used to
support the evidencing of learning outcomes and to
facilitate personal development planning. In modular
courses, portfolios may provide focus on
programme-level as well as module-specific learning
outcomes. The whole process may help students to
become better at relating what they learned to the
requirements of teachers. S. Kabicher et al. have
presented a sophisticated approach, the use of visual
modelling within an interactive online environment
(ActiveCC Web) for a collaborative design, the
implementation and visualization of the curriculum
structure and the content (Kabicher and Derntl,
2008), (Kabicher et al., 2009). One of the options for
describing the content related to the curriculum is a
special taxonomy. T. G. Willett et al. have
introduced TIME (Topics for Indexing Medical
Education), a hierarchical taxonomy of topics
relevant to medical education. The content and the
structure of the topics within TIME was developed
in consultation with medical educators and librarians
at several Canadian medical schools (Willett et al.,
2007). Existing solutions, that were published, are
focused on the curriculum only from a certain
perspective, offering the agenda together with
selected functionalities and making the efforts to
provide them to students and teachers of the
respective institution in a transparent format.
However, we have not yet seen a complex
instrument that would cover all elements associated
with global curriculum harmonization, including
a detailed parametric description down to the level
of the learning units, and one that would be linked to
the learning outcomes (Komenda et al., 2013).
2 OBJECTIVES
Many thoughtful attempts were made in order to
develop a curriculum mapping or model, which
should increase academic rigor, sharpen students’
critical thinking and analytical reasoning, and
expose them to a richer subject matter.
Consequently, three following main research strides
emerged. 1) Instructional methods cover many
innovative methods in higher education: active
learning, experiential learning, inquiry-based
learning, discovery-based learning, problem-based
learning, project-based learning, collaborative and
cooperative learning, and understanding by design.
2) Evaluation and assessment provide new methods
developed to promote Bloom’s higher-order thinking
and other competencies required in the employment
market such as self-assessments, students’ portfolio,
open book test, case studies analysis, group projects,
prototyping, and technology-based evaluation.
3) Curriculum coherence and integration focus on
reforms in the curriculum structure: the integration
of general education across the curriculum, the
integration of the disparate elements of students’
learning experiences, and shifting from curriculum
objectives to attaining competencies (Pasha and
Shaheen Pasha, 2012). With regard to the mentioned
areas, this paper introduces an innovative curriculum
planning model, which is based on the outcome-
oriented paradigm. This performance-based
approach at the cutting edge of the curriculum
development offers a powerful and an appealing way
of introducing effective reforms in education
management. Here, emphasis is on the product –
what sort of graduates shall be produced – rather
than on the educational process itself (Harden,
1999). Our research is concentrated on the following
topics.
To propose a curriculum planning model, which
would channel clear communication between the
involved stakeholders (supervisors, guarantors,
managers and teachers).
To develop a robust web-oriented platform for
complex curriculum management, which would
provide a set of effective tools to be used for
creating, transparent browsing, and reviewing the
curriculum in a user-friendly environment.
A pilot curriculum reform and harmonization
using the described approach has been already done
within the study discipline of Mathematical Biology,
which is part of the Experimental Biology
curriculum at the Faculty of Science of Masaryk
University in Brno, Czech Republic. The goal of this
field of study is to produce professionals in the
domain of data analytics in clinical, biological and
environmental research. It also enables to attract a
new generation of interdisciplinary experts, needed
for processing and analysing data from experiments
as well as for properly interpreting the obtained
results, including communication and collaboration
with other experts in the given fields.
What will such an approach to curriculum
planning and harmonization bring for the student? It
will provide clear information about what
knowledge shall be acquired during the whole study
period, what topics will be in the schedule, what
fields will be covered repeatedly and how the
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