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Kaghondi wamwa Mwanga – Music Education Research, 2025
The practice of music diversity is colonialized. Its model is impotent to disrupt the Western canon. On the contrary, the practice has opened the door to sonic materialization and trafficking that has become indicative of the encounter between classical music and other music traditions in higher education. The Global South has become the mining…
Descriptors: Music, Colonialism, Diversity, Music Techniques
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Chinaza Uleanya; Suraiya R. Naicker – Leadership and Policy in Schools, 2025
This study explored a future-fit scoping review from the perspective of leadership in schools within the context of Africa. A qualitative method was adopted for the study following a search of four databases, using specific key terms. Sequel to the search, articles were retrieved, coded and thematically analyzed. The findings of the study showed…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Administration, Instructional Leadership, Educational Innovation
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R'boul, Hamza – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2022
The enduring colonial-like relations among Northern and Southern spaces continue to influence knowledge production and dissemination. Critical scholarship on epistemic diversity in higher education has argued that knowledge circulation is often unilateral considering how global partnerships among universities and higher education models are still…
Descriptors: International Education, Higher Education, Colonialism, Cultural Pluralism
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Bacchus, Kazim – Educational Review, 1990
Traces the development of education in colonial societies and educational policies in postcolonial nations, showing trends toward greater inequalities. Concludes that curriculum should focus less on empirical/analytical and practical/social knowledge and more on critical emancipatory knowledge. (SK)
Descriptors: Colonialism, Curriculum Development, Developing Nations, Educational Policy
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Cogan, John J. – Educational Leadership, 1982
Two educational development programs--a revolutionary project in Cuba and an evolutionary project in Jamaica--have implications for the rest of the world. (Author)
Descriptors: Colonialism, Curriculum Development, Developing Nations, Educational Development
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Morris, Paul – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1988
Analyzes the impact on secondary school curriculum of Hong Kong's return to Chinese sovereignty. States that changes will be influenced through curriculum controls including: providing curriculum-wide guidelines, selecting range and content of subjects, and selecting textbooks. Concludes that state bureaucracy plays a critical role in the…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Curriculum Development, Developing Nations, Educational Change
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Huang, Hsin-Ming (Samuel) – International Journal of Educational Reform, 1999
Since 1994, reform of Taiwan's educational system has taken two directions: "Taiwanization" (a refocus from Chinese nationalism to indigenous understanding) and "Americanization." This article examines the Americanization strand, highlighting changes in administration; teacher recruitment, training, and status; philosophy;…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Colonialism, Curriculum Development, Developing Nations
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Jansen, Jonathan D. – Oxford Review of Education, 1990
Explores the utility of the construct, compensatory legitimation, for the comparative study of curriculum policy. Demonstrates the limits of existing compensatory strategies for explaining the curriculum policy of Zimbabwe. Applies the construct to postcolonial states. Argues socialist curriculum policy supports the legitimation of the state in…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Comparative Education, Curriculum Development, Developing Nations
Eshiwani, George S. – 1990
This paper reviews the evolution of the Kenyan education system since independence from Britain in 1963. At the time of independence, very few resources were devoted to the education of Africans as compared to non-Africans, resulting in critical shortages of trained manpower. Educational segregation and differentiation also reinforced racial and…
Descriptors: African Studies, Colonialism, Curriculum Development, Developing Nations
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Lillis, Kevin M. – Comparative Education Review, 1985
Discusses problems associated with reform of secondary school curricula in Kenya in the period immediately after independence. Follows the course of two innovations--School Mathematics of East Africa (SMEA) and the Africanization of the literature curriculum--and discusses various reasons for their failure and for Kenya's continued dependence on…
Descriptors: African Culture, African Literature, Change Strategies, Colonialism
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Barnes, Barbara – Comparative Education Review, 1982
Focuses on educational change in primary and secondary levels during the initial postindependence period, with emphasis on 1977-1979. During its first five years of independence, Mozambique gave priority to quantitative expansion of education, succeeding in achieving a threefold increase in school enrollment, but the "new education" is…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Change Strategies, Colonialism, Comparative Education
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Kamens, David H.; Cha, Yun-Kyung – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1992
Discusses the introduction of art and physical education into the curriculum of mass schooling. Explains why the two subjects diffused more slowly than others into educational systems outside the West. Attributes slow diffusion before World War II to the association of these subjects with colonialism. Concludes that relating the subjects to…
Descriptors: Art Education, Colonialism, Cultural Context, Curriculum Development
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Nhundu, Tichatonga J. – Journal of Negro Education, 1992
Reviews experiences of Zimbabwe in implementing education in its first decade of independence, examining cases and effects of educational expansion, and policy dilemmas. New initiatives and a recommitment to current policies are recommended to equalize educational opportunities and provide universal elementary and secondary education. (SLD)
Descriptors: Access to Education, African History, Colonialism, Curriculum Development