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McEneaney, Elizabeth H. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2015
This article offers a critique of Michael Young's perspective on the Internet as it relates to the knowledge-driven curriculum he supports. I argue that the Internet is a site of both theoretical knowledge and everyday concepts which challenges the differentiation of knowledge that premises much of Young's writing. Google searches from the…
Descriptors: Internet, Curriculum Development, Knowledge Management, Online Searching
Deng, Zongyi – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2015
This issue of the "Journal of Curriculum Studies" presents a symposium on the recent work of Michael Young. Contemporary curriculum theory has little specific to say about how knowledge is selected, organized and transformed into curriculum content for teaching and learning. Over the last two decades, Young has taken a rather different…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Theories, Educational Change, Program Content
Young, Michael – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2015
In this paper, following some brief introductory remarks, I provide a context to this Symposium by presenting a brief autobiographical account explaining how I became involved in curriculum theory and the idea of a knowledge-led curriculum and how I was led to write the paper under discussion. I then make brief comments on each of the six papers…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Futures (of Society), Educational Change, Knowledge Level
Chou, Chien; Tsai, Chin-Chung – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2002
The emergence and rapid growth of computer network technologies are changing the way people live and learn. Computer networks provide new alternatives for the design, development, storage and distribution of, as well as access to, learning materials. Therefore, they present new and formidable challenges for curriculum designers and teachers. In…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Internet, Computer Assisted Instruction, Distance Education