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Priestley, Mark; Minty, Sarah; Eager, Michelle – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2014
Recent worldwide trends in curriculum policy have re-emphasised the role of teachers in school-based curriculum development. Scotland's Curriculum for Excellence is typical of these trends, stressing that teachers are agents of change. This paper draws upon empirical data to explore school-based curriculum development in response to Curriculum for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Curriculum Development, Teacher Role, Change Agents
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Priestley, Mark; Minty, Sarah – Scottish Educational Review, 2013
Scotland's Curriculum for Excellence typifies many international trends in curricular policy, through its emphasis on generic skills and competencies, its focus on pedagogy and its apparent extension of autonomy to teachers as agents of change. Such curricula pose considerable challenges to school systems, where prevailing practices are often at…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Educational Quality, Skill Development
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Wallace, Carolyn S.; Priestley, Mark – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2011
The purpose of this study was to investigate socio-cultural factors underpinning curriculum change by examining teacher beliefs in the context of professional development. Scottish teachers in the study were participating in policy implementation based on formative assessment. Teachers were selected who were positive about the formative assessment…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sociocultural Patterns, Educational Change, Curriculum Development
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Fenwick, Ashley J. J.; Minty, Sarah; Priestley, Mark – Curriculum Journal, 2013
A recent trend in developed countries' school curricula has been the transition from disciplinary to generic forms of knowledge, resulting in an emphasis on interdisciplinary organisation and more active forms of learning. Subject specialists are increasingly expected to demonstrate how their subject interconnects and equips pupils with key life…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Case Studies, Interdisciplinary Approach, Educational Change
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Priestley, Mark – Journal of Educational Change, 2011
Educational change is a fact of life for teachers across the world, as schools are subjected to constant and ubiquitous pressures to innovate. And, yet, many school practices remain remarkably persistent in the face of such innovation. This paradox of innovation without change is perplexing for policymakers and practitioners alike. This paper…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Curriculum Development, Innovation, Educational Change
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Edwards, Richard; Miller, Kate; Priestley, Mark – Curriculum Journal, 2009
Drawing upon research in the curriculum of hospitality, this article explores the contrasting ways in which the prescribed curriculum is translated into the enacted curriculum in school and college contexts. It identifies organisational culture and teacher and student backgrounds and dispositions as central to the emerging contrasts. It uses this…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Implementation, Organizational Culture
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Priestley, Mark; Miller, Kate; Barrett, Louise; Wallace, Carolyn – British Educational Research Journal, 2011
This article discusses the issue of the sustainability of educational change in the light of findings from research undertaken in tandem with a development project initiated by a Scottish Education Authority, The Highland Council. The paper reviews some of the key themes that have emerged from recent literature on educational change, before…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Collaboration, Educational Change, Barriers