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Vaughn, Margaret; Scales, Roya Q.; Stevens, Elizabeth Y.; Kline, Sonia; Barrett-Tatum, Jennifer; Van Wig, Ann; Yoder, Karen K.; Wellman, Debra – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
Since the passing of No Child Left Behind Act of 2002 (NCLB), teacher autonomy over curricular decisions has been restricted. As a result, state and local school districts faced increased pressures to adopt highly prescriptive and standardized literacy curricular programmes. Given this context, literacy curriculum adoption has become a widely…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Curriculum Development, Decision Making, Professional Autonomy
Kitchen, William H. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
In recent years, neuroscience and brain-based approaches to education have started to feature prominently in the rationale for radical educational reform, both in terms of policy and practice. Revelations about what way the brain works, it seems, is a common point of interest for neuroscience and education alike. Out of these common interests…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Curriculum Implementation, Educational Change, Educational Philosophy
Schulte, Barbara – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2018
It is widely known that there is a discrepancy between educational policy on the one side, and teaching and learning practices on the other. Most studies have been focusing on the sociocultural and micropolitical frames that shape teachers' understandings and enactments of teaching, and that cause the vast diversity of classroom practices around…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Educational Practices, Politics of Education
Musingarabwi, Starlin; Blignaut, Sylvan – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2015
A growing need for utilizing school-based HIV/AIDS interventions the world over has been acknowledged as the most cost-effective means for arresting the spread of the HIV/AIDS pandemic among the vulnerable youth. However, the question on how teachers as educational change agents and cognitive sense-makers of HIV/AIDS curricula situated in a…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Health Education, Curriculum Implementation, Educational Theories
Hlebowitsh, Peter – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
The curriculum literature has much to say about the ecological fallacy embodied in the "best practices" movement. The work of Schwab anticipated much of it by reminding us of the dangers of trying to control classroom practices from afar, with the use of theoretical representations of classrooms that were, by definition, never fully like their…
Descriptors: Best Practices, Educational Practices, Classroom Environment, Educational Quality