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Showing 1 to 15 of 328 results
Knoll, Michael – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2015
The Laboratory School of the University of Chicago founded by John Dewey in 1896 is considered as one of the most innovative schools of progressive education. Its history, and specifically its sudden end, is still of general interest. In sympathy with Dewey, most historians tend to put the main blame for the tragedy on University President William…
Descriptors: Laboratory Schools, Progressive Education, Educational History, School Administration
Hlebowitsh, Peter – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
The curriculum literature has much to say about the ecological fallacy embodied in the "best practices" movement. The work of Schwab anticipated much of it by reminding us of the dangers of trying to control classroom practices from afar, with the use of theoretical representations of classrooms that were, by definition, never fully like their…
Descriptors: Best Practices, Educational Practices, Classroom Environment, Educational Quality
Labaree, David F. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
The US is suffering from a school syndrome, which arises from Americans' insistence on having things both ways through the magical medium of education. Society wants schools to express the highest ideals as a society and the greatest aspirations as individuals, but only as long as they remain ineffective in actually realizing them, since one does…
Descriptors: Role of Education, Beliefs, Misconceptions, Educational History
Reisman, Avishag – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
This article describes an attempt to bring disciplinary historical inquiry into the social studies classroom. This work emerges from a five-school 6-month intervention in San Francisco, "Reading like a Historian", which found main effects for student learning across four quantitative measures: historical thinking, factual knowledge, general…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Secondary Education, History Instruction, Inquiry
Charalambous, Charalambos Y.; Hill, Heather C. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
The set of papers presented in this issue comprise a multiple-case study which attends to instructional resources--teacher knowledge and curriculum materials--to understand how they individually and jointly contribute to instructional quality. We approach this inquiry by comparing lessons taught by teachers with differing mathematical knowledge…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Teacher Characteristics, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods
Teacher Knowledge, Curriculum Materials, and Quality of Instruction: Lessons Learned and Open Issues
Hill, Heather C.; Charalambous, Charalambos Y. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
This paper draws on four case studies to perform a cross-case analysis investigating the unique and joint contribution of mathematical knowledge for teaching (MKT) and curriculum materials to instructional quality. As expected, it was found that both MKT and curriculum materials matter for instruction. The contribution of MKT was more prevalent in…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Instructional Effectiveness, Mathematics Activities, Educational Policy
Biesta, Gert – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
In this paper I discuss some aspects of recent scholarship on rhetoric and the curriculum, making a distinction between approaches that use insight from rhetoric to analyse formal and informal curricula and approaches that develop programmatic suggestions for the conduct of education. In the paper I deploy an educational perspective which I…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Socialization, Empowerment, Education
Rutten, Kris; Soetaert, Ronald – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
The aim of the special strand on "Revisiting the rhetorical curriculum" is to explore the educational potential of a new rhetorical perspective, specifically in relation to different traditions within educational and rhetorical studies. This implies that we do not only look at education "in" rhetoric, but that we position education also "as" a…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Curriculum, Education, Literacy
Zappen, James P. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
Traditional rhetoric attempts to find the available means of persuasion in public assemblies, law courts and ceremonials and is grounded in cultural values and beliefs. Traditional rhetoric supports the development of social communities and posits education as a primary means of maintaining these communities. In contrast, contemporary alternatives…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Values, Rhetoric, Rhetorical Theory
Teo, Tang Wee – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
"Potemkin schools" is used as the phrase to capture what a US science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) public speciality high school becomes as a result of its institutional branding. By way of an examination of the efforts of one teacher drawn into school branding through his "inquiry-based reform" of an Advanced Chemistry course,…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Science Instruction, Science Curriculum
Gibson, Howard – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
Economic wellbeing has become a collective term used by British governments to signal their concern for levels of materiality where there is childhood poverty; for the need to prepare pupils for employment by teaching them relevant competences and appropriate attitudes; and for the necessity to develop skills for "personal financial capability" in…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Educational Needs, Well Being, Poverty
Banner, Indira; Donnelly, Jim; Ryder, Jim – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
This article uses the concept of "boundary object", first developed within science studies by Star and Griesemer, to analyse curriculum policy implementation. It employs as a vehicle a significant but contested reform of the science curriculum in schools in England from 2006 onwards, drawing empirically on an extended study of the reform, using…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Science Curriculum
Foster, John – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2011
Learning is important to sustainability--but how? On the dominant sustainable development picture, various kinds of learning are seen as instrumental to one's behaving responsibly towards future generations, within a framework of present actions and ecological consequences. This whole picture of future-oriented responsibility is radically flawed,…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Experience, Physical Environment, Ecology
Lee, Yew-Jin – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2011
Sociocultural theory is increasingly popular as a paradigm for research in education. A recent member in this family of theories is introduced--cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT)--that shows much promise to complement and invigorate the field of educational change, a large, multi-faceted, and persistent problematic. In particular,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Models, Social Theories
Doug, Roshan – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2011
This polemic paper illustrates the correlation between the original principles underpinning the British National Curriculum which was introduced in the late 1980s and the current quality of the nation's schools' poetry from a variety of poets including those "from other cultures and traditions". It argues that the conception of the National…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Poverty, Poetry, English Instruction

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