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Deng, Li; Zhengmei, Peng – Comparative Education, 2021
China and the US have responded to the challenges of a knowledge-based society, technological advancement, and global competition by implementing educational reforms to impart skills or competencies required of 21st century students. This study compares the rationales, content, and curricula design of both countries' key competencies frameworks…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Cultural Influences, Confucianism, Foreign Countries
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Johnson, Laura; Morris, Paul – Comparative Education, 2012
The promotion of "critical citizenship" has become a key objective of official school curricula around the world. Using an analytic framework developed by the authors, this paper identifies the diverse conceptions of critical citizenship that are promoted, by comparing the official school curricula for citizenship in England and France.…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Citizenship, Citizenship Education, Cultural Differences
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Somel, Rahsan Nazli; Nohl, Arnd-Michael – Comparative Education, 2015
Curriculum reforms provide a unique opportunity to investigate how in times of social change education is not only influenced by, but also itself a driver of, competition and inequality. This article sheds light on a specific instance of how macro-societal patterns in education intermingle in twenty-first century Turkey by inquiring into a major…
Descriptors: Social Change, Competition, Urban Areas, Neighborhoods
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Carney, Stephen – Comparative Education, 2008
The paper explores the introduction in Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) of the new Chinese curriculum for basic education. In contrast to many previous initiatives since 1949 the present reform attempts to change not only what is taught, and by whom, but fundamental notions of how learning is best facilitated. The paper considers the connections…
Descriptors: International Education, Educational Change, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Comparative Education, 2007
Instruction and assessment need to be understood and thought about within the cultural context in which they occur. Educators and educational researchers may make assumptions that apply in their home culture but not elsewhere. And even different subcultures within an overall mainstream culture may have different views on instruction and…
Descriptors: Subcultures, Cultural Context, Educational Researchers, Cultural Influences
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Barrett, Angeline M. – Comparative Education, 2007
Debate on teaching in low-income countries has tended to assume an over-simplified conceptualization of pedagogy as either teacher-centred or learner-centred. If theory is to address itself to the complex challenge of improving the quality of teaching within under-resourced education systems then it will have to move beyond this polarized view of…
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, Comparative Education, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods
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Tharp, Roland G.; Dalton, Stephanie Stoll – Comparative Education, 2007
Are western psychological and educational theory and practice truly applicable to a range of diverse settings around the world? We demonstrate that there is a globally dominant pedagogical orthodoxy--not exclusively western--for which there is little supportive theory nor evidence of efficacy. There is an alternative--Standards for Effective…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Teaching Methods, Standards, Mathematics Education