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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
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Adrian M. Downey – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2024
This paper revisits the well-known and often-taught novel "The Chrysalids" toward a reconsideration of the novel's place within curriculum and the pedagogies it may offer. Framed as a mourning ceremony, a way of revisioning what the novel could mean in the present by saying goodbye to what it has meant in the past, the paper progresses…
Descriptors: Novels, Literature Appreciation, Grief, Affective Behavior
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Farah Virani-Murji – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2024
There is a growing body of research examining the prejudice and discrimination experienced by Muslim youth in Canada. This article explores the narratives of feeling excluded and misunderstood articulated by 8 Canadian-born Shia Ismaili Muslim youth (aged 14-17). Drawing on a psycho-social theoretical framework, I speculate that youth utilize a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Discrimination, Social Bias, Muslims
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Bryan Smith – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2024
The worlds we inhabit tell stories, stitched into the material and symbolic representations of the past that comes to define the features of our places. These stories are never neutral, anchored as they are in the intentional (re)presentation of a racialized white, masculine, and settler story as "our" story. Indeed, space, as an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Colonialism, Decolonization, Teaching Methods
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Vintimilla, Cristina D.; Pacini-Ketchabaw, Veronica; Land, Nicole – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2023
In this paper we present a working manifesto that emerged from our projects with pedagogists -- a new professional figure in the Canadian early childhood education context. Drawing on feminist scholars' work, we offer this manifesto as a feminist call to actively think against the anti-intellectualism sustained by existing structures in early…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Feminism, Ethics, Political Attitudes
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Land, Nicole – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2023
Drawing on public writing from a pedagogical inquiry research project collaboration between three early childhood educators, a pedagogist-researcher, and preschool-aged children, this article debates how pedagogical inquiry research becomes "hard work." Against the backdrop of mainstream early childhood education in the lands currently…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Early Childhood Teachers, Researchers, Preschool Children
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Attfield, Kate – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2023
Rudolf Steiner's international Waldorf education is comparatively under-researched for a 100-year-old education movement which thrives globally. What is further unknown in academic educational circles is the specific study of the "feeling-life," the middle period of childhood in Waldorf education, of children aged 7 through 14. This…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Holistic Approach, Elementary School Students, Student Centered Learning
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García, Christen Sperry – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2022
The border, as defined by Gloria Anzaldúa, is conceptually marked by an ideological site called "nepantla"--a Nahuatl word that refers to a space existing in-between worlds. Nepantla is a performative site for visual art and writing. Making borderlands foods is an active space that exists in-between worlds. Using a performative approach…
Descriptors: Food, Cultural Influences, Visual Arts, Writing (Composition)
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Ranniery, Thiago; Macedo, Elizabeth – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
This article relies on events interpreted within an ethnographic study of school parties in Aracaju, Brazilian Northeast, in which students embody drag-queens inspired by videoclips of international pop singers. Conceptual resonances from queer black esthetics and neomaterial feminist perspectives will be irregularly mixed with "divas'"…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Popular Culture, LGBTQ People, Music
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Cairns, Rebecca – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
Across the world, history curriculum is often criticized for being ethnocentric or for privileging a nation's preferred historical narratives through which it imagines itself and the world. It is also a site through which ethnocentric narratives can be resisted. Within these debates there tends to be little consideration of the influences on the…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Secondary School Curriculum, Western Civilization, Asian History
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Tan, Charlene; Ng, Connie S. L. – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
Focusing on the cultivation of twenty-first century competencies in a high-performing education system, this article examines the teaching and learning of creativity in Singapore. It is argued that "everyday creativity" and creativity as innovation are privileged by educators in Singapore. Creativity is promoted through a harmonized…
Descriptors: Creativity, Creative Thinking, Foreign Countries, 21st Century Skills
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Ghani, Bilquis – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
Kabul is a city that has experienced years of war and devastation. Through the ruptures to culture, Kabuli1 artists are using their art practice to rebuild their city. As a public pedagogy, the artworks produced in the streets of Kabul reflect the intersection of activism, education, and creative expression. This article will look at how two…
Descriptors: Conflict, Foreign Countries, Fear, War
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Hamzeh, Manal; Carmona, Judith Flores; Sánchez, Ma. Eugenia Hernández; Bernal, Dolores Delgado; Bejarano, Cynthia – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2020
The authors share how their Arabyyat and Chicana feminist pedagogies and methodologies, haki/pláticas ~ testimonios/shahadat, contribute to a decolonial praxis. We center haki/pláticas ~ testimonios/shahadat and introduce what we term as "Arabyya feminista decolonial praxis" in education as an act of linguistic and epistemic…
Descriptors: Feminism, Personal Narratives, Mexican Americans, Praxis
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Bacchus, Ruth; Colvin, Emma; Knight, Elizabeth Bronwen; Ritter, Leonora – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2020
This study considers and evaluates the implementation of two strategies to improve student engagement with assessment -- the provision of exemplars in conjunction with rubrics, and student co-construction of rubrics -- as, respectively, a supplement and an alternative to teacher-designed rubrics. It follows our 2016 finding that teacher-designed…
Descriptors: Scoring Rubrics, Learner Engagement, Student Evaluation, Student Participation
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Xing, Deyu; Bolden, Benjamin; Hogenkamp, Sawyer – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2020
Situated within an increasing trend of globalization and internationalization, many universities pride themselves on the number of international students they recruit. At Canadian universities, there are more international students from China than any other country. However, Chinese international students tend to demonstrate lower spoken English…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Universities, College Students, English (Second Language)
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Chapman, Sian; Wright, Peter; Pascoe, Robin – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2019
Purpose, value, and practice are three key concepts in understanding curriculum implementation in arts education. When these three concepts work in harmony, the alignment provides a framework for successful arts curriculum implementation. This study highlights how these concepts are often misaligned with competition between the translation of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Art Education, Alignment (Education), Curriculum Implementation
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