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María José Martínez Ruiz-Funes; José Pedro Marín-Murcia – Journal of Educational Media, Memory and Society, 2024
This article deals with the study of natural sciences in non-compulsory secondary education from the end of the nineteenth century until the educational reform in 1970. We begin with a critical review of the ways in which the secondary education curriculum and textbooks of this period conveyed established knowledge about natural sciences. We then…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Natural Sciences, Educational History, Textbook Content
Thorburn, Malcolm – Oxford Review of Education, 2017
Interest in progressive education ideas has often been accompanied by advocacy for greater use of interdisciplinary and holistic learning approaches, as these are considered beneficial in conceptual, curriculum, and pedagogical terms. The paper reviews the possibilities for progress on this basis and contextualises the paper around three…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Democracy, Interdisciplinary Approach, Progressive Education
Hughes, Hilary; Bruce, Christine – Education for Information, 2013
Responding to the need for innovative LIS curriculum and pedagogy, grounded in both information and learning theory, this paper introduces the theory and practice of "informed learning" [3]. After explaining how informed learning originated within the LIS discipline we outline the principles and characteristics of informed learning. Then…
Descriptors: Information Science Education, Educational Innovation, Educational Practices, Educational Change
Tarman, Bulent – International Journal of Progressive Education, 2011
The purpose of this study is to examine and analyze the historical development, status and purpose of the Turkish social studies curriculum in addition to understanding John Dewey's impact on the modernization of Turkish educational system. Document analysis as a qualitative research method is used in this study. The data were obtained from the…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Foreign Countries, Social Studies, Content Analysis
Richards, Colin – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2011
A century ago Edmond Holmes, His Majesty's Chief Inspector of Elementary Schools from 1905 to 1910, made a major contribution to educational debate through his widely quoted and much disputed "What Is and What Might Be" (Holmes, 1911). In a previous article (Richards, 2010) his criticisms of what was then contemporary policy and practice…
Descriptors: Intellectual History, Educational Practices, Educational Policy, Criticism
Wu, Jinting – Curriculum Inquiry, 2012
This article examines the uptake of "suzhi"--roughly glossed as "quality"--in China's recent curriculum reform called "suzhi jiaoyu" (Education for Quality) in the rural ethnic context of Qiandongnan. It engages with three layers of analysis. First is a brief etymological overview of "suzhi" to map out its…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Curriculum Development, Ethnography, Foreign Countries
Lovheim, Daniel – History of Education, 2010
This article analyses the introduction and, later on, reconstruction of compulsory school technology in Sweden 1975-1995. It focuses on two curricular reforms and different attempts to increase the legitimacy of technology as a school subject. The article builds upon theories from science studies and the term boundary-work is used to analyse the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Epistemology, Technology Education, Intellectual Disciplines
Wood, Phil – International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 2009
Geography, as with all subjects, has a set of organising principles and concepts. One of the central concepts which underpins the subject is that of place. However, it is very much the case that this is an evolving concept, which has taken on a number of guises over time. This paper reviews some of the major changes in perspectives on place as a…
Descriptors: Geographic Concepts, Geography Instruction, Concept Formation, Concept Teaching
White, John – Educational Studies in Japan: International Yearbook, 2007
I take up recent remarks by Teruhisa Horio about school student disaffection in Japan and see echoes of this in Britain. In that country the traditional school curriculum of discrete largely academic subjects is often taken to be one cause of the problem. I review justifications for it but no sound ones appear to be available. We need to…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Educational History, Intellectual History
Walsh, Thomas – Irish Educational Studies, 2007
The focus of this article is the Revised Programme of Instruction (1900), which was devised in the final years of the nineteenth century and implemented in Irish national schools between 1900 and 1922. It begins by analysing the societal and educational context for the Revised Programme. Second, the work of the Commission on Manual and Practical…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Development, Intellectual History, Instructional Development
Turkmen, Lutfullah; Bonnstetter, Ronald J. – Science Education International, 2007
The last one thousand years or more of Turkish science educational development have numerous historical similarities to other parts of the world. While documentation of historical educational developments are important to those whose ancestors are being described, the true value of this regional- and country-specific evolutionary historical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Education, Science Education History, Intellectual History
Shaffer, Robert – History Teacher, 2001
In 1942, Howard Wilson, a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and the editor of the Harvard Educational Review, called for the "easternization of America," in reaction to what he called the "glib" talk for years about the "westernization of Asia." Funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, Wilson's…
Descriptors: Asian History, Foreign Countries, Instructional Design, Curriculum Development
Cox, Cristian – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2005
It can be said that the curriculum was the greatest passion of the exceptional intellectual and educational reformer, Cecilia Braslavsky. The selection and organization of knowledge for educational purposes, condensing relationships between society and education, attracted her natural inclination towards a broad and profoundly political…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Design
Duruhan, Kemal; Sad, Suleyman Nihat – International Journal of Educational Reform, 2006
With Christianity and the Jewish religion, Islam has been the leading divine religion, accepted and obeyed by millions over a large geography since its declaration in the early 7th century. In this article, the authors shed light on some milestones in Islamic civilization, such as the golden age, the Abbasids, the Ottomans, and the rise of Western…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Islamic Culture, Curriculum Development, Instructional Development
Goodson, Ivor – 1985
The study of how subjects are or are not accepted for inclusion into the curriculum is an area which has largely been ignored but which offers opportunities for a new integration of historical, sociological, and educational approaches. Some of the areas open for such study include the structural and political factors influencing the making of…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Educational Change
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