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Sebastianelli, Rose; Trussler, Susan – Journal of Teaching in International Business, 2006
We revisit the issue of internationalizing the required course in business statistics as a means for introducing international subject matter earlier in the undergraduate business curriculum. A survey of sophomore business students indicates that their level of international knowledge is poor. The results are strikingly similar to a decade ago.…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Statistics, Textbooks, International Trade
Sammel, Alison – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2008
In this paper I respond to Ajay Sharma's "Portrait of a Science Teacher as a Bricoleur: A case study from India," by speaking to two aspects of the bricoleur: the subject and the discursive in relation to pedagogic perspective. I highlight that our subjectivities are negotiated based on the desires of the similar and competing discourses…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Science Education, Scientific Enterprise, Critical Theory
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
Weisz, Eva – 1988
Basic qualitative research was conducted in classrooms of two teachers in order to examine the nature of their enacted curriculum. Hidden curriculum was investigated as one component of the enacted curriculum in the two classrooms. One teacher taught a regular first grade class, and the other taught a class of developmentally handicapped children…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Developmental Disabilities, Grade 1, Hidden Curriculum
Thomas, William – American School Board Journal, 1988
When discussing discipline, educators must separate trivial-but-annoying discipline problems from serious or criminal behavior and define vague terminology. The school's informal and formal curricula, instructional styles, and scheduling must also be examined to determine when the school itself is at fault. Carbondale (Illinois) Elementary…
Descriptors: Definitions, Discipline, Elementary Secondary Education, Hidden Curriculum
Peer reviewedGordon, Beverly M. – Social Education, 1985
Emancipatory pedagogy refers to a process of teaching that aims to free the teacher and the student from the mental restrictions imposed by the mainstream culture on the way they perceive things. Cited here are sources of practical ways in which classroom teachers can explore emancipatory pedagogy. (RM)
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Bias, Elementary Secondary Education, Hidden Curriculum
Peer reviewedArnott, Allan – New Zealand Journal of Adult Learning, 1997
Investigation of the Rural Education Activities Program in New Zealand found that it provided broad, community-embedded service, but there was little capacity to measure these efforts, lessening their legitimacy and credibility. A range of actions remained unacknowledged or hidden, and ideological conflicts and tensions were apparent. (SK)
Descriptors: Community Development, Community Education, Educational Practices, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedLaird, Susan – Journal for a Just and Caring Education, 1995
Considers feminist thought about the maternal relation as a possibly significant contribution to curriculum studies. Reframes feminists' critique of the maternal as an analysis of a hidden curriculum in child rearing. Identifies descriptive, negative, problematic, normative, and critical senses of the maternal within this critique that influence…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Curriculum Design, Elementary Secondary Education, Family Role
Peer reviewedCoulehan, Jack; Williams, Peter C. – Academic Medicine, 2001
Asserts that North American medical education favors an explicit commitment to traditional values of doctoring--empathy, compassion, and altruism--but a tacit commitment to behaviors grounded in an ethic of detachment, self-interest, and objectivity. Explores differing ways (conflation, deflation, and maintaining of values) that students respond…
Descriptors: Altruism, Educational Principles, Hidden Curriculum, Medical Education
Peer reviewedJohnson, David W.; Johnson, Roger T. – NASSP Bulletin, 1996
Cooperation, not competition or individualism, is at the heart of forming a more perfect union, establishing justice, ensuring domestic tranquility, providing for the common defense, and securing the blessings of liberty for ourselves and our posterity. It's time to recognize the relationship between cooperative learning and commitment to the…
Descriptors: Competition, Cooperative Learning, Democratic Values, Elementary Secondary Education
Brookes, Andrew – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2006
All forms of organized outdoor activity can--and perhaps should--be evaluated as if they were environmental education, because they may significantly generate and distribute knowledge of, beliefs about, and attitudes towards particular places. Safety guidelines for outdoor activities provide one possible indication of hidden "environmental…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Recreational Activities, Hidden Curriculum, Environmental Education
Hillman, Carol B. – 1989
Dimensions of a rich and nurturing learning climate for the early childhood years are discussed. Contents focus on: (1) the early childhood scene; (2) the teacher's role in creating a positive learning climate; (3) the transition from home to school during the first few days of school; (4) the outdoor classroom; (5) school climate and staff…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Early Childhood Education, Hidden Curriculum, Parent Teacher Cooperation
Peer reviewedHartley, David – Scottish Educational Review, 1985
Provides sociological analysis of recent documents on social education in Scotland. Argues that sociological theory underpinning prescriptions for social education takes no account of social inequalities and social conflict in both education and society. Explores contradictions between social education and meritocratic individualism. Discusses…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Hidden Curriculum, Individualism
Peer reviewedBarfels, Sarah E.; Delucchi, Michael – Teaching in Higher Education, 2003
Used the concept of "hidden curriculum" to examine how course content and instruction operate to reproduce inequality within three academic programs at private liberal arts colleges: regular, all-college honors, and core honors. Findings show differences in curricula, classroom tasks, and interaction, and followup data support the findings. (SLD)
Descriptors: Course Content, Equal Education, Hidden Curriculum, Higher Education
Peer reviewedMassialas, Byron G. – Social Studies, 1992
Describes the beginnings and development of the New Social Studies as an attempt to foster citizen ability to make decisions on major issues. Suggests that the movement ended because of commercialization of materials, lack of a research base, failure to consider the personalities of teacher and student, and failure to consider the hidden…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Decision Making, Educational Theories, Elementary Secondary Education

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