NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 5 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Webb, Andrea S.; Hubball, Harry T.; McKenzie, Meriem – International Journal of Curriculum and Instruction, 2021
University campuses around the world face significant challenges for engaging culturally diverse faculty and students with responsive programming (e.g., undergraduate, graduate, staff and faculty development programs). Policy documents espousing inclusion and the strategic institutional importance of local and global engagement, for example, are…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Diversity (Faculty), Faculty Development, Educational Strategies
Giesbrecht, Sheila – Education Canada, 2008
Over the last decades, the ways in which children experience and understand their worlds have radically altered. In still-recent times, children were part of communities; they played in wild places and had unsupervised experiences. Today, the lives of children are increasingly fragmented, solitary, and removed from a sense of place. Children come…
Descriptors: School Activities, Local Issues, Foreign Countries, Empathy
Urion, Carl – 1974
Discussing the professional expert involved in local projects, the paper examined the dilemma of trying to find the proper place for this resource person in the many community-based, action-oriented curriculum development projects being developed for Native peoples. The 3 broad categories of involvement are social, administrative, and technical.…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, American Indians, Community Control, Consultants
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Church, Susan – Language Arts, 1988
Discusses experiences as Curriculum Supervisor for the Halifax County-Bedford School District in Nova Scotia, including curriculum development based on each school's community. (MS)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Evaluation, Elementary Secondary Education, Geographic Regions
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Richardson, George – Canadian Social Studies, 1997
Argues that the current presentations of "nationalism" in the Alberta social studies curriculum are archaic and irrelevant. Proposes a more inclusive and critical definition of nationalism and provides some supporting references. Includes four student assignments illustrating and teaching this revised approach to nationalism. (MJP)
Descriptors: Canadian Studies, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Course Content, Current Events