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Andy Markwick; Michael J. Reiss – Curriculum Journal, 2025
Today's school students are inheriting complex and harmful global challenges that are potentially irreversible and which they will need to address. The ability to think critically and creatively, to work in interdisciplinary teams and to understand the importance of a healthy planet for all life will be needed for success. Education has a major…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Curriculum Development, Global Approach, Teaching Methods
Jairo I. Fúnez-Flores – Curriculum Journal, 2024
This essay reviews and builds upon Aníbal Quijano's contribution to decolonial theory to sketch out what I refer to as the geopolitics and coloniality of curriculum, broadly understood as an imperial doctrine and a pedagogical mode of domination aimed at producing a modern/colonial subjectivity. It argues that the geopolitics and coloniality of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Colonialism, Violence, Decolonization
Bryan Smith – Curriculum Journal, 2024
Curriculum, as a policy and way of moving through educational experience, is entwined with an ongoing history of invasion in Australia and similar invader-colonial contexts. As a result of this, the conceptual foundations of curriculum in Australia reproduce colonial epistemologies as normative modes of knowing and consideration. One way of seeing…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Decolonization
Scanlon, Dylan; MacPhail, Ann; Calderón, Antonio – Curriculum Journal, 2023
The aim of this paper is to explore and provide an alternative theoretical viewpoint, informed by empirical studies, of the curriculum policy enactment process which spans across different curriculum policy spaces by drawing on figurational sociology. This paper constructs this alternative figurational viewpoint of the policy enactment process by…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Policy, Policy Formation, Stakeholders
Roofe, Carmel – Curriculum Journal, 2022
Amidst views by teachers that they are not involved in decisions about curriculum making, Caribbean orality provides a way of knowing and transmitting knowledge reflective of the dynamics of the local context and the meanings people make of the spoken word. Caribbean orality provides the opportunity to understand how teachers make sense of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Oral Language, Verbal Communication, Curriculum Development
Hordern, Jim – Curriculum Journal, 2021
This paper interrogates the concept of recontextualisation and discusses its relevance for understandings of the knowledge required for teaching subjects. While various distinctive approaches to recontextualisation can be identified, this analysis primarily draws on the work of Bernstein, with recontextualisation discussed in the broader context…
Descriptors: Knowledge Base for Teaching, Educational Sociology, Intellectual Disciplines, Curriculum Development
Diane Swift; Gemma Clowes; Sarah Gilbert; Alex Lambert – Curriculum Journal, 2024
In England, the development of teachers' curriculum design capabilities has been identified as a 'challenge remaining' (Department for Education [DfE]. (2022). "Opportunity for all: Strong schools with great teachers for your child."…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Professionalism, Sustainability, Foreign Countries
Daniel W. J. Anson – Curriculum Journal, 2025
National curricula influence, and are influenced by, political agendas. Understanding political enmeshment (both overt and covert) in curriculum development is therefore vital for ensuring transparency and quality in curricula. This paper analyses how the Australian Curriculum is represented in the federal Education Ministers' media releases.…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Political Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Curriculum Development
Paul McFlynn; Mairead Davidson; Clare McAuley; Sammy Taggart – Curriculum Journal, 2024
Despite the divisions within Northern Ireland's education system along religious and academic lines, it has managed to maintain relative stability, or at least a functional inertia, over the past four decades. The full potential, however, of this system and in particular, the Northern Ireland Curriculum (NIC), has yet to be realised. This paper…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Practices, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development
Hughes, Sioned; Makara, Kara; Stacey, Dave – Curriculum Journal, 2020
The paper explores tensions in the articulation of progression in learning across the Humanities disciplines. Informed by our review of research in the Humanities disciplines, international curricula on progression in these areas and reflections from professional activity within the newly defined Humanities 'Area of Learning and Experience' in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Humanities, Humanities Instruction, National Curriculum
Tronsmo, Eli – Curriculum Journal, 2020
In a time of strong focus on school development, teachers' work is increasingly linked to a variety of actors, organisations and stakeholders with different agendas and suggestions for school improvements. This paper explores the different actor constellations that teachers engage with in collaborative knowledge work and the opportunities and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Teacher Responsibility, Teacher Collaboration, Secondary School Teachers
Miller, Lisa R.; Klassen, Kimberly; Hardy, Jacques W. – Curriculum Journal, 2021
This paper documents the design, implementation and evaluation of a content-based language teaching (CBLT) curriculum for an English for Academic Purposes (EAP) programme at a Japanese university. The aim of the programme is to prepare students for study abroad in Anglophone universities in a two-year time frame. This curriculum redesign project…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Foreign Countries, Study Abroad, Content and Language Integrated Learning
Pratt, Nick; Alderton, Julie – Curriculum Journal, 2023
This paper explores how the twin processes of neoliberalism and neoconservatism work together on, and through, curricula and their associated pedagogies. It bridges the gap between policy and classroom practice, focusing on the particular example of the school subject of mathematics and the notion of mastery, operationalised in the English…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Criticism, Mastery Learning, Teaching Methods
Hughes, Sioned; Lewis, Helen – Curriculum Journal, 2020
Current curriculum reform in Wales provides an opportunity for teachers to have greater freedom to develop pedagogical approaches that meet the needs of their pupils. The "Successful Futures" report recommends that teachers should have a greater autonomy in choosing how to deliver the curriculum, and ensuring it is done so in a manner…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Curriculum Development, Professional Autonomy
Sinnema, Claire; Nieveen, Nienke; Priestley, Mark – Curriculum Journal, 2020
The proposed Curriculum for Wales 2022 presents a bold new vision for curriculum, teaching and learning. Together with its focus on four key purposes, it affords substantially more flexibility and autonomy to teachers and schools, positions learners as central to curriculum decision making, promotes active forms of pedagogy and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Educational Change, Professional Autonomy