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Annamma, Subini Ancy; Handy, Tamara – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
Classroom and behaviour management are often touted as ways to build relationships in the classroom. Yet conceptions of classroom and behaviour management often focus on controlling or eradicating student behaviour; these carceral logics limit the ways educators can build classroom relationships focused on love and respect. Moreover, classroom and…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Disabilities, Race, Student Behavior
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Thomas, Rhianna – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
In my second year teaching at the elementary level, two biracial first graders told a Black child that she could not play because her skin was too dark. I found myself, a white female teacher, using the language of the bullying prevention programme to ignore the racialized nature of the incident and ultimately enact a hidden curriculum of white…
Descriptors: Bullying, Prevention, Racial Bias, Social Bias
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Tupper, Jennifer A.; Cappello, Michael – Curriculum Inquiry, 2008
This article examines the importance of treaty education for students living in a province entirely ceded through treaty. Specifically, we ask and attempt to answer the questions "Why teach treaties?" and "What is the effect of teaching treaties?" We build on research that explores teachers' use of a treaty resource kit,…
Descriptors: Treaties, Foreign Countries, Learning Activities, Racial Relations
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Gordon, David – Curriculum Inquiry, 1988
Using the ideas of Paul Ricoeur and Clifford Geertz, this article develops the notion of education as a "text" and analyzes the "hidden curriculum" of that text as it is read by all members of the society. The hypothesis is proposed that education becomes a text about society's myths and sacred beliefs. (TE)
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Sociology, Elementary Secondary Education, Hidden Curriculum
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Heap, James L. – Curriculum Inquiry, 1985
Critically examines the "English ethnographic tradition's" view that classroom instruction transmits propositional knowledge. Uses observed classroom discourse to argue that instruction in fact produces knowledge, both propositional and "how-to". (MCG)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Discourse Analysis, Discovery Processes
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Lakomski, Gabriele – Curriculum Inquiry, 1984
The theory of symbolic violence, a structuralist theory of socialization and reproduction of social inequality, is analyzed and criticized as insinuating a radical stance while hiding its objectivist nature and defeatist assumptions. The central concepts of power, power relations, habitus, and the term "arbitrary" are discussed. (MJL)
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Educational Theories, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education
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Gordon, David – Curriculum Inquiry, 1984
The hidden curriculum of schools gives students an image of science in which scientific truths are seen as a collection of facts, scientists as clever people, scientific explanations as true because they "make sense," and reality as consisting of observation. (Author/DCS)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Elementary Secondary Education, Fundamental Concepts, Hidden Curriculum
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Kickbusch, Kenneth W.; Everhart, Robert B. – Curriculum Inquiry, 1985
Analyzes the social knowledge, or "practical ideologies" implicitly transmitted by classroom procedures and ways of formulating course content in two contrasting high school history classes. Discusses the attitudes and behavior of "conformist" and "nonconformist" students in terms of socioeconomic class. (MCG)
Descriptors: Class Organization, Classroom Environment, Classroom Techniques, Conformity