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Daniel Tröhler; Sophie Winkler – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
Our guiding thesis in this article is that the recent burgeoning discussion of differentiation in the context of education has to do with critiques of the globalization theories that have been popular since 1990. In doing so, however, these critically motivated discussions run the risk of overlooking the historical roots of differentiation, which…
Descriptors: Social Differences, Global Approach, Nationalism, Politics of Education
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Weintraub, Roy; Naveh, Eyal – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2020
Modern historical research challenges religious education by undermining the arguments in favour of the existence of a supreme power who is responsible for patterns of reality. This article explores how the new generation of history textbooks of Religious Zionism, one of Israel's ideologically most influential populations, cope with this dilemma.…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Religious Factors, History Instruction, Judaism
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LaSpina, James Andrew – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2003
I examine selected history textbooks marketed in the USA, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. My focus is on representations of indigenous peoples and their place "in" the text. In design, these textbooks tend to balance inclusively the best of a nation's history with the "text" of progress. But when compared in a global…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Textbooks, Nationalism, Indigenous Populations
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Kamens, David H.; Cha, Yun-Kyung – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1992
Discusses the introduction of art and physical education into the curriculum of mass schooling. Explains why the two subjects diffused more slowly than others into educational systems outside the West. Attributes slow diffusion before World War II to the association of these subjects with colonialism. Concludes that relating the subjects to…
Descriptors: Art Education, Colonialism, Cultural Context, Curriculum Development