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Andile Mbhele; Adelakun O. Johnson; Cedric Bheki Mpungose – Hungarian Educational Research Journal, 2024
This article presents the results of an interpretive case study of three lecturers teaching English at a South African University. The purpose of the study was to explore the lecturers' strategies to decolonize the curriculum succinctly. Purposive, with convenient sampling, identified the three most available lecturers. An emailed reflective…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Decolonization, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development
Jo Ireland; Dominika Majewska – Cambridge University Press & Assessment, 2024
This work explores the use of learning theories in curriculum development and gathers evidence for what good practice in this area looks like. By exploring the academic literature in this area, the authors hope to find information that curriculum documents do not provide. The following research questions were proposed: (1) Is there evidence of…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Evidence
Buriel, Albane – Prospects, 2023
This article discusses the education system under the totalitarian regime of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) from 2014 to 2017. It describes and analyses the characteristics of the totalitarian education system, as conceived and implemented by the Salafist and jihadist group. The aim of this article to understand some of the…
Descriptors: Authoritarianism, Foreign Countries, Governance, National Curriculum
Edward Vickers – Comparative Education, 2024
While 'national education' has regularly been invoked by post-1997 Hong Kong administrations, its pursuit has acquired new force and urgency since the introduction in 2020 of a National Security Law. Investigating the role of schooling in this reinvigorated project of thought reform, this article asks how far recent initiatives have merely…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Curriculum Development, Patriotism, Citizenship Education
Peter Brett; Jennifer Casey; Lachlan Nicolson – Citizenship, Social and Economics Education, 2024
Contemporary liberal democracies face complex and disruptive challenges, such as toxic populism, culture wars, political polarization, religious fundamentalism, the climate emergency, global conflicts, and the influence of powerful social media platforms. This is the disconcerting world that young people are growing up in and need support in…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, National Curriculum, Democracy, Foreign Countries
Marta Estellés; Claudia Rozas-Gómez; John Morgan; Derek Shafer – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
In this paper, we connect with Martin Thrupp's calls for class-based analysis in education policy by problematising the absence of social class in the refreshed New Zealand curriculum, "Te Mataiaho" (2023). To contextualise this absence, we locate this curriculum policy in a historical perspective and interpret its 'identity turn' as an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Class, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development
Daniel B. Robinson; Lauren Sulz; Hayley Morrison; Lindsey Wilson; Jodi Harding-Kuriger – Curriculum Studies in Health and Physical Education, 2024
Health education (HE) curricula across Canada are developed by individual provinces/territories, enabling curriculum documents to be responsive to regional needs. However, this autonomy prevents Canadian teachers (and students) from having access to a consistent collection of curriculum competencies/outcomes. Without national HE curriculum…
Descriptors: Health Education, Curriculum Development, Foreign Countries, Competence
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
Students' Experiences of Bildung and Education: Is it in Accordance with Norway's Curriculum Policy?
Mia Stubhaug; Armend Tahirsylaj – Issues in Educational Research, 2024
This qualitative study examined how a selected sample of 15 to 16 year-old Norwegian pupils experience Bildung (all-around development) and education in their schooling, and how those experiences are in coherence with the intended curriculum policy goals as stated in the latest Norwegian curriculum reform. Wolfgang Klafki's operationalisation of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Public Policy, National Curriculum
Mohamad Joko Susilo; Badrun Kartowagiran – Journal of Education and Learning (EduLearn), 2023
This study developed a mosque-based education integration model curriculum in the face of modernization. This development research adopted the ADDIE development model or analysis, design, development, implementation, and evaluation. This research was conducted in a limited way at the Syuhada Mosque Foundation, Yogyakarta, Indonesia. The informants…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Islam
Jina Ro – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
In this article, I examine how teachers can enact 'powerful knowledge' (PK)--a curriculum principle proposed by Michael Young--by linking it with the scholarship of teacher professionalism (TP). Despite the significance of teachers' role in curriculum enactment, effort to understand this topic has been insufficient. I first indicate that…
Descriptors: Teacher Competencies, Professionalism, Curriculum Development, Instruction
Fidler, Ailsa – Education 3-13, 2023
This is a qualitative research study which investigates the curriculum decision-making of four primary school history subject-leaders in the North-West of England. A grounded theory approach was utilised. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with the subject-leaders and an audit of their schools' history curriculum completed. The curriculum…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Decision Making
Jack Webster – Curriculum Matters, 2023
Digital citizenship education (DCE) is a concept that looks to develop learners as competent, critical, and active participants in digitally connected societies. "The New Zealand Curriculum" ("NZC") conveys a vision of DCE across subject disciplines, yet digital citizenship is scarcely defined in teaching content or learning…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Citizenship Education, Foreign Countries, National Curriculum
Clare Stow; Lizzie Burton – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
Ever since the 1970s, politicised debates have raged over the teaching of history, dubbed the 'history wars'. These debates continue to impact primary and secondary teachers' choices of history curriculum foci to this day. This research aimed to discover history teachers' understanding of how to develop diversity within their history curricula and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, History Instruction, Curriculum Development, Teacher Attitudes
Jang, Soo Bin – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
This article explores national curriculum change initiated by the South Korean state by examining the 2015 curriculum reform. Relying on interviews with policy actors who participated in the curriculum-making process, I aimed to understand how certain reform ideas within an institutionalized, state-led curriculum change made--or failed to…
Descriptors: Entrepreneurship, National Curriculum, Educational Change, Foreign Countries