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Showing 1 to 15 of 68 results
Fensham, Peter J. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2013
The content for the school science curriculum has always been an interplay or contest between the interests of a number of stakeholders, who have an interest in establishing it at a new level of schooling or in changing its current form. For most of its history, the interplay was dominated by the interests of academic scientists, but in the 1980s…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Education, Science Curriculum, Stakeholders
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
Rennie, Leonie J.; Venville, Grady; Wallace, John – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2011
The central thesis of this paper is that the learning of science in integrated curricular contexts requires a broader theoretical framework than is typically adopted by researchers and teachers. The common practice of interpreting science learning in terms of conceptual and procedural understandings in such contexts is problematized through an…
Descriptors: Integrated Curriculum, Science Education, Research Methodology, Learning Theories
Emdin, Christopher – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2010
The critiques of rap artists and other participants in hip-hop culture provide data for teachers and researchers to investigate the attitudes of US urban youth towards schooling. This study explores the complex relationships between hip-hop and science education by examining how rap lyrics project beliefs about schooling, the relevance of existing…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Music, Urban Youth, Science Education
Witz, Klaus G.; Lee, Hyunju – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2009
Two policy trends have characterized US science education in the last two decades: a strong movement to examine issues of science in society, and widespread adoption of state standards mandating curriculum courses related to science, technology and society, scientific literacy, and socio-scientific issues. However, these changes have not found an…
Descriptors: Secondary School Science, Science Teachers, Educational Policy, Science and Society
Bell, Jacqueline; Donnelly, James – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2009
This paper is concerned with a specific example of an emerging international tendency within secondary education: the process of "vocationalization". It begins with an account of the wider international and historical context and then focuses on an empirical study of a recent reform of the late-secondary curriculum in England: the creation of…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Technology, English Curriculum
Biesta, Gert – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2009
This is the second of four essays discussing John Dewey's short essay, "Education as engineering". Dewey's views are remarkably timely against the background of recent discussions about the role of evidence in educational practice and a call for research that tells us "what works". Dewey's view is nuanced and helps one to see what one should and…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices, Engineering, Educational Research
Dewey, John – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2009
John Dewey's short essay, "Education as engineering" was first published in 1922. It is followed here by four commentaries discussing the contemporary relevance of its argument that a science of education cannot advance education in the absence of pioneering developments on the ground of the schools.
Descriptors: Engineering, Teachers, Science Education, Educational Improvement
Leander, Kevin M.; Osborne, Margery D. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2008
We analyse two narratives of teacher-facilitator teams producing elementary science curricula and disseminating them to their peers. We draw on these stories to interpret how teacher-facilitators position themselves with respect to other educators (e.g. peer teachers and development-team members), to real and imagined students and parents, to…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Elementary School Science, Educational Change, Teacher Leadership
van Driel, Jan H.; Bulte, Astrid M. W.; Verloop, Nico – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2008
This paper reports a study on teachers' domain-specific beliefs about the chemistry curriculum for upper-secondary education in The Netherlands. Teachers' beliefs were investigated using a questionnaire focused on the goals of the chemistry curriculum. The design of the questionnaire was based on three curriculum emphases: "fundamental chemistry",…
Descriptors: Questionnaires, Chemistry, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
Jenkins, Edgar – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2007
I explore the emergence of science and scientific method as political constructs in the 19th century and argue that the associated rhetoric continues to have significant consequences for contemporary school science education. It allows science to be promoted as a coherent curriculum component and fosters an untenable but enduring notion of a…
Descriptors: Scientific Methodology, Science Education, Scientific Literacy, Science History
Roth, Wolff-Michael – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2007
Received conceptualizations of scientific literacy are grounded in (1) the notions of "knowledge", "concepts", and "skills" that science students have to "acquire", "appropriate", or "construct" or (2) the notion of "practices" to which they have to be "enculturated" so that they become part of a "community of practice". All such notions…
Descriptors: Scientific Literacy, Science Education, Educational Philosophy, Educational Objectives
Lang, Manfred; Drake, Susan; Olson, John – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2006
Increasingly, there are calls for the school curriculum to reflect the real-world needs of students, such as the need to make difficult choices as citizens. The science curriculum is not exempt from these reappraisals of the relevance of what occurs in schools. Approaches to science involving social contexts are increasingly common, and with them…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Didacticism, Scientific Literacy, Science Curriculum
Geraedts, Caspar; Boersma, Kerst Th.; Eijkelhof, Harrie M. C. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2006
The integration of science and technology education has been a topic of worldwide debate. However, the focus of the debate has been too much on the degree of integration of subjects at the expense of such important but related issues as the nature of the constituting disciplines, educational levels (state, school, classroom), and the objects of…
Descriptors: Technology Education, Integrated Curriculum, Science Education, Foreign Countries
Schmidt, William H.; Prawat, Richard S. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2006
Recent studies show that national control of K-12 curriculum yields important payoffs in terms of greater curricular coherence and, as a result, higher test performance on international tests such as those used in the Third International Mathematics and Science Study. This paper examines the connection between national control of curriculum and…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Government School Relationship, National Norms, Elementary School Curriculum

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