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Karmiris, Maria – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
The purpose of this article is to engage crip theory in a critical analysis of the calls within elementary education for a return to normalcy. I seek to question the ways COVID-19 has reinforced orientations towards normalcy by asking where normalcy went and how the calls for its return reveal the fundamental limits of inclusion within schools.…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Elementary Education, Inclusion
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Hull, Glynda A.; Stornaiuolo, Amy – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
How are identities as cosmopolitan citizens realized in practice, and how can dialogue be fostered across differences in culture, language, ideology, and geography? More particularly, how might young people be positioned to develop effective and ethical responses, in our digital age, to local and global concerns? Such are the questions we…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Cultural Literacy, Social Networks, Global Approach
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Choo, Suzanne S. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
When world literature as a subject was introduced to schools and colleges in the United States during the 1920s, its early curriculum was premised on the notion of bounded territoriality which assumes that identities of individuals, cultures, and nation-states are fixed, determinable, and independent. The intensification of global mobility in an…
Descriptors: World Literature, Curriculum, Cultural Pluralism, Imagination
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Davies, Lynn – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
This article begins from the premise that it is important to explore how people unlearn, as well as learn, specifically in terms of extremist or violent attitudes. It shows the implications of two aspects of complexity theory--turbulence and self-organisation--for educational practice and the fostering of a complex adaptive school, which can aid…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Peace, Democracy
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Zanazanian, Paul – Curriculum Inquiry, 2012
This article looks at the impact of historical consciousness on the structuring of group boundaries among national history teachers within Quebec's context of group duality between Francophones and Anglophones. By using an "open-ended interpretation key" for taking into account how teachers interact with temporal change for negotiating…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, History Instruction, Teachers, French Canadians