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Showing 1 to 15 of 57 results Save | Export
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Fatih Karatas; Seval Fer – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
In the ever-evolving realm of educational research, the design and validation of curricula is gaining prominence. Ensuring both the internal and external validity of such designs is vital, with external validity, specifically applicability, highlighting the practical feasibility and relevance in real-world educational contexts. Drawing on Dewey's…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Curriculum Design, Educational Research, Validity
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Cheryl J. Craig; Maria Assuncao Flores; Lily Orland-Barak – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2023
In 2020, Miriam Ben-Peretz, the Israel Scholar of 2006 and a member of the U.S. National Academy (in addition to being a recipient of Israel's EMET Prize for Research in Education and an American Educational Research Association Fellow) passed away. Ben-Peretz, whose life patterned Israel's contested history (including its wars), was equally well…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scholarship, Biographies, Educational Researchers
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Sefton-Green, Julian – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
In the wider context of ways that Literacy works to enforce control by elites, the maintenance of high culture, racial stratification, national identity and social injustice through education, this review essay reflects on Allan Luke's collected essays republished by Routledge in 2018 as "Critical literacy, schooling, and social justice: The…
Descriptors: Critical Literacy, Social Justice, Literacy Education, Politics of Education
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Collin, Ross – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
This conceptual article critiques a popular account of education grounded in Bourdieu's social theories. Specifically, the article shows how Bourdieu overplays competition and underplays ethics, or people's diverse ways of imagining, debating, and living out the good. On a Bourdieusian view of education, it is difficult to see how educators and…
Descriptors: Ethics, Competition, Social Theories, Educational Research
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Lee, Sun Young – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
Teacher agency is often depicted in terms of autonomy, empowerment, and participation. This article examines how those democratic visions of teacher agency are (re)constructed during the post-World War Two period when social scientists were eager to find organized procedural reasons. To explain this, I historicize the shifted teachers' role from a…
Descriptors: Teacher Empowerment, Teacher Role, Educational History, Cybernetics
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Tröhler, Daniel – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2020
The general thesis of this article is that 'nation' and 'state' are often understood as almost equivalent and that this understanding has led to aberrations in educational research, not only with regard to citizenship but also with regard to questions of modernity, claims of globalization, visions of a coming world culture, or even the…
Descriptors: Nationalism, National Curriculum, Citizenship Education, Educational Research
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Harrison, Neil; Skrebneva, Iliana – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2020
Culturally Responsive Pedagogy (CRP) has become a driving force for change in North America and New Zealand and is gaining some recognition in Indigenous education in Australia. But as a model of learning and teaching, it cannot be imported unproblematically into Australian schools, wherein the past Indigenous students have had limited success.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Culturally Relevant Education, Indigenous Knowledge, National Curriculum
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Friesen, Norm – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2020
Human Science Pedagogy is 'a strange case,' as Jürgen Oelkers has recently noted: In the Anglophone world, where Gert Biesta has compellingly encouraged scholars to 'reconsider education as a Geisteswissenschaft' (a human science) its main themes and the contributions of its central figures remain unknown. For Germans, particularly in more…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Educational Research, Criticism
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Craig, Cheryl J.; Flores, Maria Assunção – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2020
The intent of this article is to explore the scholarly influence of Philip W. Jackson through examining the spread of his scholarship and the ideas he generated. The research design of this paper is borrowed from a previous study (Ben-Peretz & Craig, 2018) about another distinguished curriculum scholar, Joseph J. Schwab. The work begins with a…
Descriptors: Biographies, Scholarship, Educational Research, Inquiry
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Nordgren, Kenneth – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2019
This article explores an underlying tension between two understandings of historical consciousness. On one hand, the concept is often perceived as a specific ability to historicize the world and thus appears as a modern cultural achievement. On the other hand, it is also conceptualized as an anthropological universal as the ability to make sense…
Descriptors: History, Consciousness Raising, Anthropology, Educational Research
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Grever, Maria; Adriaansen, Robbert-Jan – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2019
To make historical consciousness beneficial for history education research we need to disentangle its multidisciplinary backgrounds so that contradictory approaches and outcomes can be avoided. The aim of this article therefore is to clarify the enigma of its different paradigms. We will discuss two interrelated paradigms: one interpreting…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Horlacher, Rebekka – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2018
Discussions about the what, the when and the how of teaching and learning in schools deal in German-speaking countries with the term "Lehrplan", while English-speaking countries discuss similar topics with the term "curriculum". Yet, these two terms are not just exchangeable terms in two different languages, but imply also two…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Comparative Education, Educational History, Elementary School Curriculum
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Roth, Wolff-Michael – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2018
The crisis of education frequently is framed in terms of methods, where quantitative research is accused of making the subject invisible through quantification, whereas qualitative research is credited for the emphasis on subjectivity and the discursive construction of reality. Such formulations fail to take into account a long-standing critique…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Methodology, Sampling, Educational Theories
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Llopart, Mariona; Esteban-Guitart, Moisès – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2018
Although the first educational applications of the "funds of knowledge" (FoK) concept were carried out in the late 1980s, there have been numerous developments and proposals since then, many of which have been made within the last few years. It continues to be, therefore, a valid, cutting-edge educational approach; one which seeks to…
Descriptors: Cultural Capital, Cultural Background, Family Characteristics, Inclusion
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Apple, Michael W. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2018
In this article, I share a number of thoughts and concerns about the current and future status of a field in which I have been a participant for five decades. I know that many others share these worries as well. Speaking honestly, I am deeply concerned that too much of the field of curriculum has lost its way. Too much of it is characterized by a…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Curriculum, Educational Policy, Educational Practices
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