Curriculum reform over the past decade has increasingly conceptualized curriculum development as a participatory, context-responsive, and practice-oriented process rather than a purely technical design exercise. Contemporary scholarship emphasizes distributed leadership, teacher agency, and collaborative curriculum-making as prerequisites for coherence between policy and classroom practice. When teachers are excluded from design processes, implementation dissonance emerges, characterized by pedagogical uncertainty and superficial compliance. Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC), in particular, requires alignment between intended outcomes, pedagogy, and assessment, making teacher participation indispensable. Cross-national evidence indicates that curriculum coherence depends on integrating classroom knowledge, professional expertise, and socio-cultural realities into policy frameworks . Thus, effective curriculum development is iterative and dialogical, linking macro-level competence frameworks with meso-level institutional cultures and micro-level instructional enactment. Curriculum contextualization refers to adapting national or standardized curricula to local socio-cultural, linguistic, and economic realities to enhance relevance and learner engagement. Research demonstrates that "one-size-fits-all" curriculum models often fail to foster transferable knowledge or meaningful participation, especially in diverse or disadvantaged contexts . Contextualization strategies include revising examples, integrating community knowledge, connecting content to real-world challenges, and aligning learning tasks with local labor-market demands. In CBC systems, contextualization supports competence mastery by linking abstract outcomes to authentic applications. However, contextualization operates along a continuum from surface-level representational adjustments to deeper epistemic transformation that reshapes how knowledge is constructed and applied.. Its effectiveness depends on teacher agency, assessment alignment, and policy flexibility that permits localized interpretation without undermining national standards. Curriculum adaptation, closely related to contextualization, involves deliberate teacher modifications of official curriculum materials to align with classroom realities. Recent studies identify structured adaptation patterns such as omission, extension, revision, and replacement . In centralized systems, adaptation may be framed defensively to maintain compliance, whereas decentralized systems normalize adaptation as inherent to professional practice. Within CBC reforms, adaptation becomes essential because competency attainment requires differentiated pathways rather than uniform delivery. Teachers adapt mathematical explanations, simplify language tasks, modify science experiments, and integrate project-based approaches to support learner diversity . Importantly, adaptation must balance fidelity and responsiveness; excessive rigidity undermines relevance, while unstructured modification risks weakening curriculum coherence . Instructional adaptation operates at the pedagogical level, focusing on differentiated teaching methods, learning processes, and assessment strategies. CBC inherently demands adaptive pedagogy because learners progress through mastery rather than seat time. Differentiation across content, process, and product supports equity and inclusion in heterogeneous classrooms . In practice, this includes scaffolded tasks, flexible grouping, formative feedback, and performance-based assessment aligned with competencies. Universal Design for Learning principles further strengthen inclusive implementation in higher education and TVET contexts. Evidence suggests that adaptive teaching enhances engagement, conceptual understanding, and learner autonomy when supported by professional development and collaborative school cultures .
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