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Peng Xu; Jenny Ritchie – Global Studies of Childhood, 2025
As an entitlement to rights, well-being and equity, young children's citizenship lays the foundation for a democratic, just and sustainable world. This article interrogates the discursive constructions of 'citizenship' within recent early childhood curriculum documents in China and Aotearoa New Zealand. Since the 1990s, both nations have released…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Citizenship, Young Children, Discourse Analysis
Jo Ireland; Dominika Majewska – Cambridge University Press & Assessment, 2024
This work explores the use of learning theories in curriculum development and gathers evidence for what good practice in this area looks like. By exploring the academic literature in this area, the authors hope to find information that curriculum documents do not provide. The following research questions were proposed: (1) Is there evidence of…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Evidence
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Marta Estellés; Claudia Rozas-Gómez; John Morgan; Derek Shafer – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
In this paper, we connect with Martin Thrupp's calls for class-based analysis in education policy by problematising the absence of social class in the refreshed New Zealand curriculum, "Te Mataiaho" (2023). To contextualise this absence, we locate this curriculum policy in a historical perspective and interpret its 'identity turn' as an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Class, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development
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Jack Webster – Curriculum Matters, 2023
Digital citizenship education (DCE) is a concept that looks to develop learners as competent, critical, and active participants in digitally connected societies. "The New Zealand Curriculum" ("NZC") conveys a vision of DCE across subject disciplines, yet digital citizenship is scarcely defined in teaching content or learning…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Citizenship Education, Foreign Countries, National Curriculum
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Bell, Avril; Russell, Elizabeth – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2022
From 2022, New Zealand schools are teaching a new compulsory history curriculum that aims to teach diverse New Zealand histories, while foregrounding the centrality of Maori histories and the impacts of colonisation. The new curriculum will upend a long history of 'forgetting' the nation's contentious and conflictual past, and in particular the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, History Instruction, Grief
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Fox-Turnbull, Wendy; Reinsfield, Elizabeth – International Journal of Technology and Design Education, 2022
Technology is ubiquitous and culturally situated, influencing and impacting lives every second of every day. As humanity emerged, so did technological development. Diverse cultural groups developed technologies, related knowledge, and processes, to meet emerging needs or realise opportunities--such as trade. There is little doubt that some…
Descriptors: Technology, Cultural Influences, Evolution, Geographic Location
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Jade Wrathall – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
The New Zealand Curriculum is comprised of eight compulsory learning areas: English, the arts, health and physical education, learning languages, mathematics and statistics, science, social sciences, and technology. Collectively, these learning areas are intended to provide children with a broad and balanced education. Despite this, the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Compulsory Education, Educational Policy
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Sarah Probine; Jo Perry; Rachael Burke; Joanne Alderson; Fi McAlevey – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
Inquiry-based project learning is an internationally recognised pedagogical approach where children work collaboratively to research and discover the answers to their questions through discussion, representation, and evaluation. This paper explores the findings from Phase One of a qualitative study examining how this approach has been interpreted…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Inquiry, Active Learning, Early Childhood Education
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Yuwei Xu; Clare Brooks; Jie Gao; Eleanor Kitto – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2025
This paper presents findings from a review of 19 national curriculum policy frameworks (NCPFs) across the globe and discusses dominant and culturally specific discourses that shape early childhood education (ECE). We combine two frameworks of developmental universality and specificity and culturally contextualised pedagogy to explore whether and…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, National Curriculum, Educational Policy, Culturally Relevant Education
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Coulter, Sarah-Kay – Teachers and Curriculum, 2022
In 2021 Professor Papaarangi Reidi, at The University of Melbourne, shared the ancient proverb "I nga ra o mua", translated to mean "before we know where we are going, we must know where we have come from". This proverb sets the tone for discussing the Arts in the New Zealand curriculum, as during radical upheaval and social…
Descriptors: Art Education, Pacific Islanders, Foreign Countries, National Curriculum
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Fensham, Peter J. – Research in Science Education, 2022
Science in schooling has for the first time been recently considered as a verified whole for the 10 or 12 of its compulsory years, rather than for a limited sector of schooling or for a particular group of students. This has also been occurring as part of a wider review and plan for the whole curriculum of schooling. A framework has been provided…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Curriculum, National Curriculum, Comparative Education
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Cowper, Alice; Teschers, Christoph – New Zealand Journal of Teachers' Work, 2023
This qualitative study looked at Wilhelm Schmid's concept of the Art of Living (AoL) in relation to the current New Zealand Curriculum (NZC) and Te Whariki. The methodology included a brief content analysis of both Te Whariki and the NZC in relation to relevant knowledge areas and skills for the development of an AoL, as well as interviews of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Parent Participation, Work Experience
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Suzanne Trask; Simon Thornley; Gerhard Sundborn – Health Education Research, 2024
Achieving greater alignment with national curriculum and local school and teacher objectives alongside a deeper understanding of student needs can enhance the impact and reach of health promotion interventions. This study reports on teacher perspectives of a multi-pathway curriculum outline supporting learning (Grades 7-9) about sugary drinks. The…
Descriptors: Food, Health Promotion, Secondary School Students, Intervention
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Browne, Jade – Teachers and Curriculum, 2022
Art disciplines such as music have continued to be marginalised in the curriculum, due to educational policies such as National Standards that have focused solely on numeracy and literacy. With growing concerns of a narrowing curriculum, there have been several developments in education, including the removal of National Standards in 2017, the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, National Standards, Educational Change
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Suzanne Trask; Pule Manuele; Losa Borne; Olivier Galy; Barry Potter; Jacquie Bay – Health Education Journal, 2024
Background: National school curriculum statements detail what it is important to learn and are highly context- and discipline-specific. The health and physical education (H&PE) learning areas have multiple learning purposes, and facilitating this in curriculum design is a significant and challenging task. Objective: There is little reporting…
Descriptors: Physical Education, National Curriculum, Foreign Countries, Health Education
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