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Bullivant, B. M. – Education News, 1972
Taking account of cultural reality through differential curriculum development is proposed as one way to counter the effects of the age of indifference" in Australian and other societies. (DM)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Cultural Influences, Curriculum Development, Middle Class Standards
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Goldstein, William – NASSP Bulletin, 1976
Schools once had a premier role in acquainting youngsters with all dimensions of culture, says the author, who chides educators for ever allowing the situation to deteriorate. Combines literary allusions and colorful references in telling educators how they can bring culture back to the curriculum. (Editor/RK)
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Cultural Background, Curriculum Development, Evaluation Criteria
Minneapolis Public Schools, Minn. – 1964
THE MIDDLE-CLASS ORIENTATION OF INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS BEING USED FOR CULTURALLY DEPRIVED CHILDREN IN TARGET AREA ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS CAUSED THE MATERIALS TO HAVE LIMITED MEANING FOR THE CHILDREN. TEACHERS WANTED TWO BASIC CHANGES IN READING MATERIAL. FIRST, ILLUSTRATIONS USED IN THE READING MATERIALS SHOULD BE RELEVANT TO THE CHILDREN'S…
Descriptors: Culture Lag, Curriculum Development, Disadvantaged, Elementary Schools
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bowers, C. A. – Teachers College Record, 1976
This article examines the values and typifications that underlie the conservative center of society; whether they are still viable in view of our ecological situation, and how they are reinforced in curriculum materials. (MM)
Descriptors: Competition, Cultural Pluralism, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Evaluation
TANNEBUM, ABRAHAM J.
THE PROBLEM OF EDUCATING SLUM CHILDREN IS SPECIAL AND SHOULD NOT BE BUTTRESSED WITH DEMOCRATIC SLOGANS. AN EXAMPLE OF THE LATTER IS GIVING SLUM CHILDREN AN OPPORTUNITY TO HAVE TEACHERS WHO ARE KNOWN TO BE GOOD IN OTHER SCHOOLS. TRANSFERRED TO THE SLUM SCHOOL, THEY BECOME DEMORALIZED AND FAIL. THEIR INSUFFICIENT SOCIAL AWARENESS AND THEIR LACK OF…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Disadvantaged Youth, Instructional Materials, Middle Class Standards
Tkach, Nick – 1979
The influx of Eastern European immigrants during the nineteenth century in Canada elicited hostility and bigotry from the dominant population. Educators aimed for assimilation of immigrants into the mainstream of Canadian society and used the school curriculum to inculcate nationalism. Up to the 1940s and 1950s, Canadian history-education and…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Cultural Pluralism, Curriculum Development, Educational Philosophy
VREELAND, REBECCA S. – 1967
AN EVALUATION OF A 6-WEEK SUMMER EDUCATIONAL ENRICHMENT PROGRAM FOR DISADVANTAGED STUDENTS RANGING FROM PRESCHOOL TO GRADE NINE FOUND THAT DESPITE THE SHORTNESS OF THE SESSIONS PROGRESS WAS MADE TOWARD REACHING THE GOALS OF THE PROGRAM. THE GOALS INCLUDED INCREASING STUDENTS' VERBAL AND NONVERBAL CREATIVITY, DEVELOPING STUDENT COOPERATION AND…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attitude Change, Behavior Rating Scales, Creativity
Ross, Allen Chuck; Brave Eagle, Dorothy – 1975
Designed for use in curriculum development, this value orientation packet addresses the cultural value orientations of American Indians (specifically, the Lakota on the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota) and those of mainstream society in an effort to help individuals understand that values differ from culture to culture. Specifically, this…
Descriptors: Activities, American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Comparative Analysis
Hagood, Henry B. – 1969
The concept of community control of schools differs from "decentralization" because community control stresses the possibility of the schools becoming an integral part of the total community. When professional educators are coupled with a cluster of special interest groups (e.g., book publishers, realtors, landowners, politicians), they form…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Community Control, Community Involvement, Cultural Background
Thompson, Daniel C. – 1973
When the first black colleges were founded more than a century ago they filled an important need for youth who were denied access to all but a few white institutions. Today these same private colleges must compete with more affluent, prestigious white colleges and universities for funding and for black students and teachers. They are losing in…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Black Education, Black Leadership, Books