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Collin, Ross – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
This conceptual article critiques a popular account of education grounded in Bourdieu's social theories. Specifically, the article shows how Bourdieu overplays competition and underplays ethics, or people's diverse ways of imagining, debating, and living out the good. On a Bourdieusian view of education, it is difficult to see how educators and…
Descriptors: Ethics, Competition, Social Theories, Educational Research
Albornoz Muñoz, Natalia; Sebastián Balmaceda, Christian – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2022
Historical thinking is a construct approached by different disciplines with a recent proliferation in research interest compared to thinking in other domains. Leading exponents do not agree on its definition and include the two main traditions: Anglo-American and German, and various groups or research centres throughout the Western world.…
Descriptors: Ethics, History, Thinking Skills, Western Civilization
Lechtenberg, Kate – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
This paper uses critical discourse analysis to examine the alignment between the stated goals and the discursive implications in a scripted curriculum published by Teaching Tolerance, a progressive education organization in the US. Social justice education and critical race theories ground the analysis of "Teaching 'The New Jim Crow': A…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Social Justice, Critical Theory, Discourse Analysis
Fozdar, Farida; Martin, Catherine Ann – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2020
Recent critiques of citizenship education have identified the need for curricula that cover not only civil, political, social and cultural aspects of political belonging and responsibility, but that orient students to the realities of global engagement and responsibility. Rather than focussing on national values, histories and political…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Civics, National Curriculum, Foreign Countries
Stoel, G. L.; van Drie, J. P.; van Boxtel, C. A. M. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2015
The present study seeks to develop a pedagogy aimed at fostering a student's ability to reason causally about history. The Model of Domain Learning was used as a framework to align domain-specific content with pedagogical principles. Developing causal historical reasoning was conceptualized as a multidimensional process, in which knowledge of…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Pretests Posttests, Epistemology
Schmidt, Sandra J. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2015
This manuscript contributes to a discussion of how to meaningfully engage issues of sexuality in the curriculum. Noting the struggle to create social change through the inclusion of LGBQ people and events, the manuscript is premised on what we might learn about equity and change by locating the study of inequity in how it is etched into and…
Descriptors: Sexuality, Sex Education, Homosexuality, Equal Education
Smith, Katy – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2008
This paper examines some intersections among school literacy events and practices, identity formation, and the institutional practice known in the US as tracking. During a year-long, critical ethnographic study to examine how a team-taught, interdisciplinary curriculum impacted the development of students' literacies, it was found that not only…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Literacy, Self Concept, Track System (Education)
Pike, Mark A. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2003
This paper examines the debate about the English literature canon in schools. It evaluates the importance of the canon in a 21st-century curriculum and considers its relevance to adolescent readers saturated in early 21st-century culture who have disparate identities and diverse backgrounds. The implications for teaching and learning of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English Literature, Classics (Literature), Poetry