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Showing 1 to 15 of 49 results Save | Export
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Hwang, Soon Ye – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
Resisting a deep-seated technical perspective of education, I attend to the notion of attunement as a key concept with which to imagine curriculum as a complicated conversation. As fully appreciating the meaning and potential of attunement requires an embodied sense of the word that is deployed by working from within our bodily, social, and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Implementation, Curriculum Development, Alignment (Education), Second Language Instruction
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Snyder, Sarah N.; Pitt, Kendra-Ann; Shanouda, Fady; Voronka, Jijian; Reid, Jenna; Landry, Danielle – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
Medical discourse currently dominates as the defining framework for madness in educational praxis. Consequently, ideas rooted in a mental health/illness binary abound in higher learning, as both curriculum content and through institutional procedures that reinforce structures of normalcy. While madness, then, is included in university spaces, this…
Descriptors: Mental Disorders, Higher Education, College Curriculum, Praxis
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Ender, Tommy – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
I position the use of counter-narratives as a critical approach that grants students agency and meaning in their learning and provides teachers with opportunities to present silenced curricular narratives as relevant and necessary in a globalized setting such as North America. Counter-narratives focus on a subject that preserves colonial and…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Social Studies, Curriculum, Community Organizations
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Gilmore, Amir – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
Inspired by jazz's epistemologies and structures, this article was written as a Black liberatory jazz album on Black Boy Joy. Threaded through musical tracks, Black Boy Joy is conceptualized as a Black spiritual Life Force and a liberatory emotional expression that refuses the anti-Black curriculum antagonizing Black boys. Black Boy Joy centers…
Descriptors: Music, Males, Blacks, Aesthetics
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Guo, Shibao; Maitra, Srabani – Curriculum Inquiry, 2017
Under the new mobilities paradigm, migration is conceptualized as circulatory and transnational, moving us beyond the framework of methodological nationalism. Transnational mobility has called into question dominant notions of migrant acculturation or assimilation. Migrants no longer feel obligated to remain tied to or locatable in a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Student Mobility, Acculturation
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Darokar, Shaileshkumar S.; Bodhi, Sainkupar Ranee – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
This article is an attempt by two educators, one Dalit and one Tribal, to make a case for why education in India needs to be informed by a conception of "the Dalit curriculum." We argue that the Dalit curriculum is an educational theory based on the following foundational assumption: The Dalit reality is the denominator of measuring any…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Class, Tribes, Curriculum
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Gilbert, Jen – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
This article recounts my experience serving as an expert witness at a Human Rights Tribunal. In 2018-2019, a grade six trans girl, known only as AB, sued the Ontario provincial government in Canada for revoking a progressive sex education curriculum that addressed gender and sexual identity. While working as an advocate for AB, I wrestled with my…
Descriptors: Sex Education, Course Content, Sexual Identity, LGBTQ People
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Coloma, Roland Sintos – Curriculum Inquiry, 2017
If knowledge production is indelibly central to curriculum inquiry, then a critical investigation into the conditions of racialized minority and diasporic subjects in general and of Filipina/os in particular can shed light on the intersection of curriculum, empire, and global migration, a topic which has received relatively little attention in…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Global Approach, Curriculum Research, Racial Bias
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Pandya, Jessica Zacher – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
In this essay, I discuss Allan Luke's influence on my own critical digital literacy research, beginning with the influence of his monograph "The Social Construction of Literacy in the Primary School" (1994/2018b) and continuing to the present day. I address some of his most admirable qualities: his way of talking about theory and…
Descriptors: Critical Literacy, Educational Theories, Theory Practice Relationship, National Curriculum
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Rose, Ebony – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
In her scholarship of the past five decades, Sylvia Wynter has woven a critique of education in Caribbean, European, African, and American societies. In addition, her work demonstrates how education globally structures a particular cultural, historical, and onto-epistemic anti-Black/anti-Indigenous worldview. In Wynter's most neglected piece of…
Descriptors: Humanism, Racial Bias, Foreign Policy, Western Civilization
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Santiago Ortiz, Aurora; Navarro Pérez, Antonio; Agosto Ortiz, Paulette; Cruz González, Coralis; Román Oyola, Michelle – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
In the wake of Hurricane Maria and in response to the negligent inefficiency of the local and federal governments, community groups and collectives, grassroots organizations, and activists of multiple causes began organizing under the principles of mutual aid and solidarity in Puerto Rico. One of these is the Colectivo Casco Urbano de Cayey…
Descriptors: Community Action, Activism, Community Organizations, Social Support Groups
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Hillary, Alyssa – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
When we consider disability and the curriculum, we usually mean preparing professionals to work with people with disabilities or including students with disabilities. Here, I provide a personal description of these ideas colliding. It's Fall 2017, and I'm taking a course on Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC). That means it's about…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Curriculum, Students with Disabilities, Augmentative and Alternative Communication
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Bacon, Jessica K.; Lalvani, Priya – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
Dominant stories, as upheld through K-12 curricula, are influential in reproducing systems of power and privilege in schools and society. In this article, we suggest that stories of people with disabilities are either missing in K-12 curricula, or told in ways that are highly ableist. We use discourse theory as a frame for considering the role of…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Course Content, Social Bias, Disabilities
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Janks, Hilary – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
This article pays tribute to Allan Luke's work as a pedagogical gift. His ability to bring sociological theories of power, identity and the body to bear on conceptualizing critical literacy is a gift. His research with indigenous populations, and his writing on inclusive curriculum, genres of power and double consciousness resonate in South Africa…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Critical Literacy, Educational Theories, Higher Education
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Boveda, Mildred; Reyes, Ganiva; Aronson, Brittany – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
As three teacher educators with familial ties to the Global South, but academically trained within the Global North, we adopt a de/colonial, intersectional feminist lens to analyze the "general education curriculum" in the United States. We use testimonios, each told in first-person, as entry points where we situate the entanglement of…
Descriptors: Females, Minority Group Students, Students with Disabilities, Special Education
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