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Knitter, William – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1988
Delineates the concepts of character, virtue, vice, and privation which undergird Joseph J. Schwab's 'informing vision,' as discussed in "The Practical 4: Something for Curriculum Professors to Do." States that in explicating the informing vision, the animating spirit needs to be retained. (LS)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Research, Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices
Mayes, Clifford – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2009
Various psychoanalysts have written about the implications of psychoanalytic theory for teaching and learning. Although many curriculum scholars have offered their personal interpretations of the relevance of psychoanalytic theory to education, there is very little in the educational literature about what psychoanalysts "themselves" have had to…
Descriptors: Psychiatry, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes, Instruction
Osberg, Deborah; Biesta, Gert – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2008
This study uses the "logic" of emergence to rethink the practice and purposes of modern Western schooling which, conventionally, is organized around a representational epistemology and aims to enculture the student into a particular way of being. The idea of "planned enculturation" is, however, problematic for contemporary multicultural societies…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Educational Responsibility, Epistemology, Foundations of Education

Tanner, Laurel N. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1991
Discusses John Dewey's concept of curriculum, as applied in his Laboratory School. Describes the planning of the school and how its curriculum evolved over time. Identifies both Dewey's belief in educational specialization and his understanding of its limits. Notes the implications of Dewey's work for today's educators. (SG)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Research, Educational History, Educational Planning

Lentz, Leo; van Tuijl, Hans – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1987
Outlines the program "Language Arts in the Primary School" which was developed by the National Institute for Curriculum Development in the Netherlands. Focuses on three areas of that project: (1) the school and its language education; (2) the projects research activities; and (3) the school's curriculum. (BR)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Language Arts
Shkedi, Asher – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2009
The paper examines the implementation of an external written curriculum in the classroom. The study is based on observation of and interviews with 26 Israeli Bible teachers who followed a formal curriculum and used a teachers' guide. The study identified three types of curriculum narrative: the frame narrative, the task narrative, and the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Biblical Literature, Grade 8, Public Schools

Reid, William A. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1990
Examines educational history to discover the process by which curriculum became a universal idea and how the concept of the classroom was invented. Argues that universal ideas and inventions such as the classroom result in the creation of dominant institutional categories that exert a powerful influence over what can or cannot be done by…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Research, Educational Development, Educational History
van Huizen, Peter; van Oers, Bert; Wubbels, Theo – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2005
Contemporary teacher education demonstrates the continued use of competency-based, personality-based and inquiry-based approaches. These approaches are commonly regarded as representing alternative paradigms for designing curriculum and pedagogy. From a Vygotskian perspective, characterized by the use of bridging concepts relating individual…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Professional Development
Hawkey, Kate – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2007
What lies behind the lack of theorizing about content in history in contrast to much greater attention given to theorizing about children's developing understanding of historical skills and processes? Egan's model of the characteristic ways in which children of different ages engage with the world is used to raise the question of what content to…
Descriptors: Culture, Comprehension, Inferences, Cognitive Processes

Burns, Gerald T. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1988
States that the academic course of study in secondary schools has changed only modestly since the late nineteenth century. Illustrates this point by examining changes in the mid-1800s curriculum of the Cambridge, Massachusetts, High School. Includes tables which show the high school's course of study during the period. (GEA)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational Development, Educational History

Clough, Peter – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1988
Outlines a "curricular" approach to learning difficulties against the background of traditional conceptions and practices relating to special needs in British schools, and in light of recent developments in "mainstream" curricula. Examines calls for change in the organization of learning, distinguishes mainstream from special…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Objectives, Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education

Buckley, Joanne – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1994
Maintains that Canadian scholar, Kieran Egan, developed a schema of childhood development that presents a bold, new approach to the stages of growth, both affectively and cognitively. Describes Egan's views and how the school curriculum must be adapted to correspond more closely to these views. (CFR)
Descriptors: Child Development, Childhood Attitudes, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes

Harlen, W.; Dahar, R.W. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1981
Presents highlights from a paper which was delivered at a seminar concerned with science education in elementary schools. The specific focus of the seminar was the possibility of developing process skills through the teaching of science in elementary schools, the means of assessing such skills, and the implications of so doing for teacher training…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Assessment, Elementary Education, Inquiry

Duet, Claude; Newfield, John – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1979
Describes study which indicates that the attitudes of curriculum supervisors toward possible consequences of curriculum organizations of magnet schools is less favorable than their attitude toward consequences of the comprehensive school. Magnet schools are those designed to accommodate specific student interests (performing arts, engineering).…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Career Development, Curriculum Development, Educational Research

Sosniak, Lauren A.; And Others – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1991
Discusses the results of a study of the teaching and learning of mathematics in 21 countries, conducted by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement. Reports that a clear distinction between support for broad educational objectives and for the learning of narrow skills did not exist among teachers. (SG)
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Research, Educational Objectives