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Showing 1 to 15 of 88 results
Hull, Glynda A.; Stornaiuolo, Amy – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
How are identities as cosmopolitan citizens realized in practice, and how can dialogue be fostered across differences in culture, language, ideology, and geography? More particularly, how might young people be positioned to develop effective and ethical responses, in our digital age, to local and global concerns? Such are the questions we…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Cultural Literacy, Social Networks, Global Approach
Choo, Suzanne S. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
When world literature as a subject was introduced to schools and colleges in the United States during the 1920s, its early curriculum was premised on the notion of bounded territoriality which assumes that identities of individuals, cultures, and nation-states are fixed, determinable, and independent. The intensification of global mobility in an…
Descriptors: World Literature, Curriculum, Cultural Pluralism, Imagination
Wahlström, Ninni – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
In this article, a continuum of resistance and receptivity constitutes a framework for understanding a cosmopolitan orientation "on the ground." Such a continuum is based on an understanding of the effects of globalization, when it comes to individual people, as both containing a potential for an active interest in other ways of life,…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Resistance (Psychology), Global Approach, Classroom Communication
Vasudevan, Lalitha M. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
This article explores the idea that everyday moments hold cosmopolitan potential wherein such recognition can reorient educators and youth toward one another in meaningful and generative ways. Found in the quotidian practices of young people are indicators of their affiliations, their proclivities, their interests, and their curiosities.…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Youth, Ethnography, Theater Arts
Jacobs, Benjamin M. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
This document-based historical study looks back at the early years of the social foundations of education program that originated at Teachers College, Columbia University, in the 1930s-1940s, and focuses on the sociopolitical, intellectual, and educational currents that helped bring it about. Drawing on archival materials and published monographs…
Descriptors: Foundations of Education, Teacher Education, Educational History, Social Studies
Salter, Peta – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
The refocussing of Australia-Asia relations is manifest in a combination of national policy moves in Australia. Parallel shifts have been made in Europe, the United States, Canada and New Zealand. In Australia, the curricular response to this shift has become known as "Asia literacy." This study is drawn from a wider project that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Curriculum Development, Asian Culture, Cultural Awareness
Sherfinski, Melissa – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
This article reports on the resurgence of classical and Christian education in the United States. This education has been especially popular with evangelical homeschooling mother-teachers. It seeks to cultivate the biblical virtues of truth, goodness, and beauty through contemplating scripture. The curriculum relies on the ancient Trivium tools of…
Descriptors: Christianity, Religious Education, Home Schooling, Biblical Literature
Bickmore, Kathy – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
Constructively critical and inclusive dialogue about conflictual issues is one necessary ingredient of both democratic citizenship and peacebuilding learning. However, in North American classrooms populated by heterogeneous and non-affluent students, pedagogies involving discussion of conflicts are rarely fully implemented, sustained, or inclusive…
Descriptors: Peace, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Public Schools
Garrett, H. James; Matthews, Sara – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
This article investigates the use of photography as a narrative approach to learning in the context of postsecondary education. Two cases are presented: a social studies methods course in a teacher education program in the South of the United States; and a senior undergraduate seminar on global violence at a university in southern Ontario, Canada.…
Descriptors: Photography, Story Telling, Assignments, Learning
Greenwalt, Kyle A. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
This article examines the processes by which the past experiences of undergraduate teacher candidates with their parental figures return in the present, thereby shaping both the nature and the meaning of the experiences offered to them in their initial field placement. Using phenomenological and psychoanalytic lenses, I analyze findings from an…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Undergraduate Students, Experience, Parent Child Relationship
Forest, Danielle E. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
Several scholars have noted the prevalence of the discourse of upward class mobility in the United States, particularly within K-12 education settings. "Rags-to-riches" stories, an extreme form of upward mobility discourse, have been embedded in American culture for generations. However, the prevalence of upward mobility discourse in…
Descriptors: Social Class, Social Mobility, Childrens Literature, Books
Cho, Hyesun – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
This narrative study of an Asian female prospective teacher describes a language minority student's ways of enacting critical literacy in a teacher preparation program in the United States. It discusses how she exerted her agency despite her perceived marginalization as a non-native English speaker. The findings demonstrate how she resisted…
Descriptors: Critical Literacy, Preservice Teachers, Language Minorities, Asians
Nigh, Kelli – Curriculum Inquiry, 2013
What happened when six former drama students recalled their mind-body experiences in a drama class that they attended together, throughout their childhood and adolescence? This article draws from a phenomenological research inquiry that examined these drama students' recollections of various unique warm-up exercises. The warm-up was…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Drama, Children, Adolescents
Wong, Marina – Curriculum Inquiry, 2013
This article reports the development of integrated arts curriculum in two Hong Kong secondary schools over a 9-year period. Initial findings display a range of individual responses to educational change that are both non-predictable and non-linear. Chaos theory is used to explain these varied responses in terms of bifurcations. The findings of…
Descriptors: Art Education, Integrated Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Foreign Countries
Naraian, Srikala – Curriculum Inquiry, 2013
In any sociocultural context, efforts to promote inclusive education may evoke trajectories of change that are as unpredictable as they are inexhaustible, stimulating the production of a range of disability subjectivities, performances, and constructions. This article unearths such local constructions by focusing on the experiences of…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Foreign Countries, Nongovernmental Organizations, Equal Education

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