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Swann, Joanna – Higher Education Review, 2009
This article is a tribute to the Popperian educationist Tyrrell Burgess, who died earlier this year. Burgess is identified as the originator of an approach to the curriculum whereby students are helped to formulate problems, and propose and test solutions. This approach was first developed at the School for Independent Study at North East London…
Descriptors: Problem Based Learning, Curriculum, Educational Philosophy, Epistemology
Campbell, R. J.; And Others – 1991
The first of two follow-up studies, involving 53 infant teachers in England and Wales, was conducted to monitor changes in the workloads of teachers as the national curriculum and assessment were brought in following ministerial promises to reduce the burdens imposed on teachers by the implementation of the national curriculum. Data were collected…
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Curriculum, Educational Legislation, Educational Policy
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Wedell, Klaus – British Journal of Special Education, 1988
Conflicts between the British Education Reform Act of 1988 and the 1981 Education Act as well as the Warnock Report (1978) are identified. Considered are ways the Act deals with the following issues: special educational needs, curriculum, and the process of integration. (DB)
Descriptors: Curriculum, Disabilities, Educational Legislation, Educational Needs
Osborn, Marilyn; And Others – 1994
This paper reports on findings from a 1990-93 PACE (Primary Assessment, Curriculum and Experience) study concerning the impact of the United Kingdom's Education Reform Act on teachers' professional perspectives and responses to change. Data are drawn from interviews with a national sample of 88 teachers and more intensive classroom study…
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Curriculum, Educational Change, Educational Legislation
Campbell, R. J.; Neill, S. R. St. J. – 1992
A sample of 348 secondary teachers in England and Wales kept a week's record of their work and completed a questionnaire on time usage. The survey indicated that the total mean time spent on work and work-related activities was 54.4 hours per week. Of this, teachers spent 16.9 hours on teaching, 12.9 hours on preparation, 18.1 hours in…
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Curriculum, Educational Legislation, Educational Policy