36. How do competency standards relate to
curriculum design?
The transposition process of occupational descriptions usually included
in a competency standard in order to design a training curriculum is
one of the areas that should be developed and until very recently they
have little methodological references.
Competency standards are obviously fundamental in the drawing up of
training curricula. However, the process of curriculum design based
on competency standards is by no means a lineal or automatic process.
Among other things, the curriculum design of a particular programme
does not need to provide everything; it should try to identify
what is essential to develop the required competencies.(1)
Some questions give great support to the curriculum design:
What competencies need to be developed? What knowledge should be applied?
What skills should the person master? What attitudes should the person
show?
A curriculum is usually and we should say: necessarily
structured in modules. Competency-based training is mainly possible
by means of modular organisation of curricula. The first attempts to
link competency units and training modules actually took place in curriculum
design. In general, this is the
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By explicit curriculum we mean a deliberate group of learning
opportunities offered to a person or a group of persons for a
particular development. The hidden curriculum (implicit) is made
up by the institutional atmosphere, the management style of the
educational centre, human relationships.
Irigoin; Vargas (2002).
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The term module aims at flexibility to be structured in association
with
by means of the ability to combine one element with another, and
at the same time maintain the independence by which it may exist
on its own.
Irigoin (2002).
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first attempt of transposition that seems to be useful to develop,
although experience shows that a competency unit may produce one or
many modules. In any case, like in the competencies analysis, the term
competency unit implies
a meaningful labour result. In curriculum design, the module should
make sense on its own and have the ability to be structured in association
with others when building up a particular curriculum trail.
In general, all the components of a competency standard contribute
with valuable information for the curriculum design. Although it is
not possible to think of a direct link between competency units and
modules or between competency elements and learning objectives, it is
feasible, through a sensible analysis, to achieve training curricula
taking into account the conditions of competency standards.
An aspect which requires special attention is that referred to the
shaping up of attitudes and personal abilities such as the initiative,
the willingness for cooperation, the creation of a positive working
atmosphere, creativeness and problem-solving. These attitudes are usually
created more by means of the educational strategies used than with the
contents themselves. Remember the concept of hidden curriculum; it is
very unlikely that the initiative ability is developed if no questions
are asked, no problems are raised and if team work and the search for
alternatives to different situations are not promoted throughout the
training process.
The key issues underlying the creation of personal competencies are:
pleasant and educational atmospheres, qualified and motivated teachers,
problemsolving-based learning, the use of several pedagogical means
and training techniques.
Description of some methodologies of curriculum design
Several methodologies will now be described, for instance those used
by INEM, SENA, CONALEP, SENAI and finally the labour competencies programme
which is being drawn up in Argentina.
According to the model of occupational vocational training from INEM,
Spain,(2)
this process is called derivation of training contents based on
vocational profiles. The vocational profile has been defined by
inputs such as: occupational analysis, an occupational future revision
which ends up defining vocational areas and great groups of occupations
related to a process or a productive activity with vocational contents
in common.
Besides, for each occupation, a vocational profile is described by
defining the occupation, the general competency for the occupation,
its competency units, its vocational accomplishments (elements of competency),
execution criteria and vocational abilities. These aspects are similar
to the ones used by the English and Mexican system.
Based on this vocational profile, training contents are drawn up by
establishing the necessary theoretical and practical professional knowledge
for a competent performance of units. In order to do this, the unit
of competency is taken as the grounds for the analysis and the following
questions are answered.
What does the worker need to know in order to establish the
theoretical knowledge?
What does the worker need to know how to do in order to establish
the practical knowledge?
How does the worker need to know how to be and act in order to
specify the required attitudes and behaviours?
After that, training contents are structured in professional modules.
In general, the relationship created between the module and the competency
unit is such that one or more professional modules can correspond to
a unit.

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1 Irigoin, M.; Vargas, F.; Competencia laboral
,
op. cit.
2 INEM, Metodología para la ordenación
de la Formación Profesional Ocupacional. Madrid, 1995.