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Smith, Jill – Canadian Review of Art Education: Research and Issues, 2009
Education is never a passive, autonomous, or static activity. It manipulates, as much as it is manipulated, and reflects specific contexts. Education histories document continuities and changes over time, and are able to throw light on and inform contemporary practice. Prompted by perspectives on curriculum as a social and cultural construction,…
Descriptors: Art Education, Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Educational History
Farrell, Lesley; And Others – Open Letter, 1995
Discusses Australian approaches to critical literacy. The editorial notes that conditions in Australia for curriculum development and implementation are in transition, with different approaches and priorities advanced in the second half of the 90s. Suggests that to teach critical literacy is to help students identify how the ways of focusing on…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Critical Reading, Cultural Influences, Curriculum Development
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Trapnell, Lucy A. – Comparative Education, 2003
Presents a critical reflection of the author's 14-year experience in the Teacher Training Program for Intercultural Bilingual Education in the Peruvian Amazon Basin, developed by a national Peruvian indigenous confederation and the Loreto state teacher training college. Focuses on ethical, political, and pedagogical challenges that intercultural…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Bilingual Education, Cultural Pluralism, Curriculum Development
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Bates, Richard – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2005
Arguing that globalization has been conceived of largely in economic terms this article examines the possibility of a global curriculum in the light of Touraine's assertion that the major global problem is not economic but social: can we live together? I argue that a global curriculum conceived in social terms is possible and that it will involve:…
Descriptors: Global Education, Global Approach, Curriculum Development, Cultural Differences