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Muller, Johan; Young, Michael – Curriculum Journal, 2019
This article extends the authors' earlier work (Young & Muller 2013) exploring the concept of 'powerful knowledge'. It first examines some of the origins of the concept and goes on to a brief consideration of how sociology, political theory and economics have traditionally represented 'power' and 'knowledge'. Two key senses of power are…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Knowledge Level, Politics, Humanities
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Howieson, Cathy; Spours, Ken; Young, Michael – Journal of Education and Work, 2017
This Introduction provides an overview of the distinctive contribution of the late David Raffe to educational research in the UK and internationally over a 40-year period. His wide-ranging research on post-compulsory education and training systems was enriched by the development of conceptual distinctions that have become part of the lingua franca…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Educational Policy, Educational Improvement, Educational Research
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Young, Michael; Muller, Johan – Review of Education, 2014
The aim of this paper is to explore and clarify the idea of "powerful knowledge" as a sociological concept and as a curriculum principle. The paper seeks to clarify its conceptual basis and to make its meaning and the arguments it implies, less ambiguous and less open to misunderstanding. This will enable us to suggest some of the…
Descriptors: Educational Sociology, Educational Principles, Concept Formation, Ambiguity (Context)
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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
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Young, Michael – Review of Research in Education, 2008
The explicit theme of this article is the question of knowledge in education and, more particularly, the importance of the differentiation of knowledge as a starting point for the sociology of the curriculum. It also has two subthemes: change and difference. First, the author argues that if the sociology of education is to make its potential…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Realism, Educational Sociology, Social Differences
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Young, Michael; Muller, Johan – European Journal of Education, 2010
This article draws on social realist approaches in the sociology of knowledge and in light of them constructs three scenarios for the future of education in the next decades. The primary focus of the article is on one of the most crucial questions facing educational policy makers--the relationship between school and everyday or common sense…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Educational Policy, Educational Change, Policy Analysis
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Young, Michael; Muller, Johan – Theory and Research in Education, 2007
The aim of this article is to reflect on and explore questions of truth and objectivity in the sociology of educational knowledge. It begins by reviewing the problems raised by the social constructivist approaches to knowledge associated with the "new sociology of education" of the I970s. It suggests that they have significant parallels…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Educational Sociology, Natural Sciences, Ethics
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Moore, Rob; Young, Michael – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2001
Argues that the question of knowledge must be reconceptualized in order for sociology to make its potential contribution to current debates about the curriculum. Reviews dominant assumptions underlying contemporary curriculum policy. Draws on recent research in the sociology of science to develop a social realist approach to knowledge. Provides…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Educational Sociology, Foundations of Education
Young, Michael – 1988
The topic of this paper is the "new sociology of education" (NSOE) and its origins in the early 1970's. One aim of this paper is to argue that the regressive return to a rigid and ahistorical academic curriculum is not the only alternative. A second theme is the suggestion that the NSOE took a highly unreflective view of the role of…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Democracy