Descriptor
| Elementary Secondary Education | 4 |
| Higher Education | 3 |
| Conservatism | 2 |
| Political Attitudes | 2 |
| Politics of Education | 2 |
| Access to Education | 1 |
| Civil Liberties | 1 |
| Course Content | 1 |
| Critical Theory | 1 |
| Curriculum | 1 |
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Author
| Apple, Michael W. | 4 |
| Teitelbaum, Kenneth | 1 |
Publication Type
| Journal Articles | 4 |
| Opinion Papers | 4 |
| Historical Materials | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Showing all 4 results
Peer reviewedApple, Michael W. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1985
The textbook dominates curricula at the elementary, secondary, and even college levels. The ideological, political, and economic sources of its production, distribution, and reception are examined. (RM)
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Political Influences
Peer reviewedApple, Michael W.; Teitelbaum, Kenneth – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1986
There is more and more external control of classroom content and processes. This external control is being vested in legislative and administrative bodies, which are more apt to turn the school over to managerial and industrial needs. Teachers should take organized action to defend their right to control the classroom. (RM)
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Educational History
Peer reviewedApple, Michael W. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1990
Argues that the New Right has translated economic doctrine into the language of experience and moral imperative through populist politics. Maintains that curriculum decisions are involved in political and cultural conflict as depicted by the question: Whose knowledge becomes official knowledge? Urges curriculum workers to speak for the progressive…
Descriptors: Conservatism, Critical Theory, Educational Change, Educational Philosophy
Peer reviewedApple, Michael W. – JCT: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1995
Discusses the influence of neoconservatism and neoliberalism on education and the importance of seeing schooling as fundamentally connected to the relations of domination and exploitation operative in the larger society, noting the need to recognize the changes that are occurring in many societies and to see the complexity of the power/knowledge…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Civil Liberties, Conservatism, Developing Nations


