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Hordern, Jim – Curriculum Journal, 2021
This paper interrogates the concept of recontextualisation and discusses its relevance for understandings of the knowledge required for teaching subjects. While various distinctive approaches to recontextualisation can be identified, this analysis primarily draws on the work of Bernstein, with recontextualisation discussed in the broader context…
Descriptors: Knowledge Base for Teaching, Educational Sociology, Intellectual Disciplines, Curriculum Development
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Hordern, Jim – Teaching in Higher Education, 2019
This paper discusses the nature of higher expertise in society and the role of higher education in constituting that expertise. It is argued that higher expertise relies on disciplined norms against which expert activity can be evaluated, and such norms are the basis not only for knowledge communities in higher education but also for other…
Descriptors: Expertise, Role of Education, Higher Education, Educational Practices
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Hordern, Jim – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2019
This paper draws on Bernstein's sociology of knowledge to examine the academic study of early childhood in England, involving scrutiny of how knowledge is recontextualised from contributory disciplines to take account of early childhood practice and professionalism, and of governmental influence on what counts as disciplinary and curriculum…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Educational History, Educational Development
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Hordern, Jim – European Journal of Teacher Education, 2015
This paper starts by exploring the relevance of Bernstein's work on vertical and horizontal discourses and the constitution of professional knowledge for conceptualisation of the knowledge needed for teaching practice. Building on arguments for the differentiated nature of knowledge, and drawing on the work of Winch, Young and Muller on expertise,…
Descriptors: Knowledge Base for Teaching, Specialization, Educational Practices, Professional Identity
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Hordern, Jim – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2015
Higher apprenticeships are celebrated in current policy discourses as an alternative to traditional higher education, with the claim that they will prepare higher apprentices for their future careers and enhance industrial productivity through higher skill levels. This paper aims to scrutinise these claims using notions developed by Bernstein and…
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Career Awareness, Vocational Education, Educational Sociology
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Hordern, Jim – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2016
This article argues for an early childhood professionalism based upon notions of professional community and professional knowledge. Professionalism is conceived here as shaped by the relation between the social and the epistemic, with certain types of professional knowledge given precedence in accordance with the involvement of different…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Professionalism, Educational Practices
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Hordern, Jim – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2014
This paper sets out to examine how vocational knowledge is recontextualised in curricula, pedagogy and workplaces, by learners, and to ensure the availability of valuable and relevant knowledge for vocational practice. Starting from Bernstein's notion of recontextualisation, and with reference to literature in the sociology of educational…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Learning Theories, Curriculum, Educational Sociology