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Riseborough, George – Journal of Education Policy, 1993
Celebrates life and work of British primary headteacher over past decade, using ethnographic conversational data. Stan Fast's intellectual and moral vision, his theories and practices, are set in context of recent (conservative) policy. Although his transformative "hidden curriculum" stressing three C's (caring, cooperation, compassion)…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Conservatism, Educational Policy, Elementary Education

Hlebowitsh, Peter S. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1994
Discusses how many recent treatments of the hidden curriculum have overlooked historical antecedents of the early progressive curriculum literature. Shows how insights derived from John Dewey and others portray the hidden curriculum more positively than some of the ideologically laden interpretations in vogue today. The hidden curriculum can…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Hidden Curriculum, Politics of Education, Progressive Education

Milne, Catherine – Investigating, 1999
In the process of selecting which science facts should be learned, the events that are selected become imbued with significance and their implicit messages with value. Contends that what is included and what is left out of science stories says much abut meaning-making at all levels of school science, and has implications for the way science is…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Hidden Curriculum, Science and Society, Science History

Sandlin, Jennifer A. – Adult Basic Education, 2001
Interviews of adult literacy learners were compared with depictions of learners as consumers in textbooks. Texts focused on learners' deficits and lack of knowledge, whereas learners viewed themselves as competent, capable consumers despite limited academic skills and income. (Contains 40 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Literacy, Adult Students, Consumer Education

Schwarz, Gretchen – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1996
Technopoly rhetoric hypes computers in classrooms without considering costs, ultimate purposes, technology's place in the curriculum, and technology's effects on learners and learning. Developed by the military and modern corporations, computers concentrate more on efficiency, speed, power, and information than on sustained inquiry and genuine…
Descriptors: Computers, Curriculum, Educational Technology, Elementary Secondary Education
Florio-Ruane, Susan – 1989
This paper describes the importance of knowledge about the social organization of schools and classrooms for beginning teachers. The paper begins with a consideration of schools and classrooms as cultural settings and examines the beginning teacher's role within them. The remaining sections of the paper examine the interweaving of school social…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, Group Dynamics
Boyd, Gary M. – 1982
Educational games are usually developed by copying existing recreational games and adding instructional components, or by using the intuitive preferences of the designer. However, existing games attract people through ideological value exemplifications. Moreover, whatever else they teach, games teach ideologies of either preservation, equality, or…
Descriptors: Design Requirements, Educational Games, Hidden Curriculum, Incidental Learning

Elias, Maurice J.; Clabby, John F. – Educational Leadership, 1988
Because children are subjected to undesirable and confusing socialization messages from peer networks and the media, schools are now paying more attention to students' social development needs. To counter schools' hidden curriculum and help students cope with stress and avoid serious interpersonal difficulties, an eight-step Improving Social…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Elementary Secondary Education, Hidden Curriculum, Problem Solving

Ginsburg, Mark B.; Newman, Katherine K. – Journal of Teacher Education, 1985
This article discusses how issues concerning political and economic inequalities and the role of schooling were evidenced in the context of a teacher education program. The article also analyzes how the prospective teachers' viewpoints interact with the diverse messages in the formal and hidden curriculum of the teacher education program.…
Descriptors: Educational Attitudes, Equal Education, Hidden Curriculum, Higher Education

Figley, Grace E. – Quest, 1984
This article discusses the possibilities of moral education through physical education. A brief overview of several moral education programs is presented with an emphasis on Kohlberg's cognitive development approach. An appeal is made to physical educators for greater concern and involvement towards this goal. (Author/DF)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Curriculum, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethical Instruction
Molyneux-Hodgson, Susan – 1999
This paper explores the mathematical education of electronic engineering students through an analysis of how mathematics is constituted for the purpose of learning in a university setting. The nature and role of mathematics, offered to students via implicit and explicit messages within mathematics and engineering discourse, is described.…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Engineering Education, Foreign Countries, Hidden Curriculum

Harris, Elayne M. – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 1997
Learning is a byproduct of encounters with everyday phenomena such as television, and the hidden curriculum of television is of great significance to marginalized groups. The influence of broadcast and narrowcast television on a rural Canadian community's capacity for economic development illustrates how marginality is learned and reinforced…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Community Development, Economic Development, Foreign Countries

Kanpol, Barry; Weisz, Eva – NASSP Bulletin, 1990
The effective leadership literature fails to present a clear understanding of the principal's relationship to the curriculum. Principals must understand the enacted curriculum process, not just the official curriculum, and work with teachers to negotiate curriculum meaning. Empowerment involves trust, open dialogue, a collaborative support system,…
Descriptors: Administrator Effectiveness, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Empowerment

Rukeyser, William S. – Educational Leadership, 1990
Refutes Joel Rudinow's critique of the Whittle Educational Network, specifically his remarks concerning Channel One's availability, teacher viewing discretion, and commercials. Claims that Channel One has no hidden agenda, but is intended to help teachers dispel teenagers' woeful ignorance of current events, geography, and related subjects. (MLH)
Descriptors: Current Events, Educational Technology, Geography, Hidden Curriculum

Gordon, David – Scottish Educational Review, 1988
Reviews the life and work of R.F. Mackenzie, radical and child centered educator. Assesses his views of Scottish education as the protector of the Establishment and of schools as loveless agents of control with no respect for the individual, his criticisms of the curriculum, and his rejection of the examination system. (SV)
Descriptors: Biographies, Educational Assessment, Educational Change, Educational Philosophy