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O'Connor, Una; Anderson Worden, Elizabeth; Bates, Jessica; Gstrein, Vanessa – Curriculum Journal, 2020
Curriculum change is an intricate, lengthy process, requiring commitment, cooperation and compromise amongst the agencies and stakeholders involved; its development is more complex in divided societies, particularly when the subject content is open to contention. The addition of Local and Global Citizenship (LGC) to the Northern Ireland (NI)…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Foreign Countries, Criticism, Educational Change
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Pratt, Nick; Alderton, Julie – Curriculum Journal, 2023
This paper explores how the twin processes of neoliberalism and neoconservatism work together on, and through, curricula and their associated pedagogies. It bridges the gap between policy and classroom practice, focusing on the particular example of the school subject of mathematics and the notion of mastery, operationalised in the English…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Criticism, Mastery Learning, Teaching Methods
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Adolfsson, Carl-Henrik – Curriculum Journal, 2018
This article offers a contribution to the current debate about knowledge and the curriculum, especially initiated by social realist writers. The enacted Swedish subject-based curriculum for compulsory schooling is examined and is also used as a significant case with the aim of discussing practical implications of social realist claims regarding…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Video Technology, National Curriculum
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Parker, Gemma – Curriculum Journal, 2015
This is an era of significant government involvement in schools in England, despite consistent rhetoric from the Department of Education to the contrary. In such a period, signs can be detected of the juncture between a postmodern identity and post-professional status, two models of teacher professionalism supposed in Hargreaves' work on the…
Descriptors: Criticism, Postmodernism, Educational Improvement, National Curriculum
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Cain, Tim; Chapman, Arthur – Curriculum Journal, 2014
Recent public discussions of curriculum and pedagogy that have accompanied the English National Curriculum review have been structured around clichéd dichotomies that generate more heat than light and that, as Robin Alexander has argued, reduce complex educational debates to oppositional and incompatible slogans. This paper begins by exploring the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Music Education, History Instruction, Criticism
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Lambert, David – Curriculum Journal, 2011
This article presents a framework for understanding geographical knowledge in the context of the National Curriculum in England. It offers a cautious welcome to the 2010 White Paper in that it places emphasis on teaching and the role of teachers in selecting what is taught: it is broadly sympathetic to the policy thrust which seeks to rebalance…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Geography, Criticism
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Counsell, Christine – Curriculum Journal, 2011
The history education community's efforts to help pupils distinguish between the discipline of history and rawer forms of collective memory have been beset with problems from inside and outside the education community. From without, teachers face criticism for their supposed failure to foster narrowly celebratory versions of Britain's past; from…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Motivation, Memory, Epistemology
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Drew, Valerie; Mackie, Lorele – Curriculum Journal, 2011
Active learning is a pedagogical construct widely appealed to within the global discourse of lifelong learning. However, an examination of the literature reveals a lack of clarity and consensus as to its meaning. This article provides a critical analysis of a range of dimensions underpinning the concept of active learning including policy…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Active Learning, Learning Theories, Criticism