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Adamson, Bob; Tak-Shing, John Lam; Wai-Ming, Yu; Kin-Sang, Jacqueline Chan; Hau-Fai, Edmond Law; Wai-Lun, Anthony Leung – Planning and Changing, 2010
This study outlines the perceptions of school leaders regarding the New Senior Secondary Curriculum in Hong Kong. It illustrates the diversity of perceptions and responses of school leaders in terms of the purposes of the reforms, challenges to be faced, and strategies for implementing the reform. The findings suggest that school leaders'…
Descriptors: Leadership, Foreign Countries, Administrator Attitudes, Educational Change
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Shaobing, Tang; Adamson, Bob – London Review of Education, 2014
This study investigates how teachers understand and implement the emphasis on studentcentredness in the new English curriculum in secondary classrooms in urban areas of China and the factors affecting implementation. It focuses on whether the advantages (greater access to resources, better trained teachers, and so on) of the urban context make…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Urban Schools, Student Centered Learning, Secondary School Curriculum
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Adamson, Bob; Morris, Paul – Comparative Education Review, 1997
Analyzes Chinese policy toward secondary English curriculum during five time periods, 1956-present. Focusing on links between politics and education and on the role of a centralized bureaucracy gives only a partial picture of curriculum development, which also includes a widening base of stakeholders, increasing sensitivity to teacher concerns,…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational History, Educational Policy, Educational Trends
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Adamson, Bob; Lai, Winnie Auyeung – Comparative Education, 1997
Draws on official documents and teaching materials to trace the growth of Putonghua (the official language of China) in school curricula in Hong Kong (where Hong Kong Cantonese and English predominate). Although promoting Putonghua is logical, tensions arise from the already heavy bias toward language subjects in school curricula and shortage of…
Descriptors: Chinese, Curriculum Development, Diglossia, Educational Change