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Wouter Smets – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
National canons of history sparked intense debate among historians over the last years, history educators have regularly shown concerns regarding these canons. The main arguments are that history is instrumentalized for political purposes, and that canons are incompatible with multiculturality. In this study, the cases of the Netherlands and…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, History Instruction, Role of Education, Foreign Countries
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Mati Keynes – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
This article explores how recent curricular reform in Australia has been responsive to a culture of redress. It argues that taken together, the 2008 National Apology to the Stolen Generations and the 2010 national curriculum reform marked a turning point, whereby settler colonial injustices have since been systematically included in the…
Descriptors: Land Settlement, Colonialism, Social Justice, Educational Change
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Dickens, Siobhan – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
This paper reports a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) exploring the nature, causes and epistemic effects of knowledge recontextualization in the 'official' Key Stage Five History curriculum in England. "Recontextualization" refers to inevitable changes that occur to knowledge as it is 'pedagogized', due to the value-laden practices and…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Discourse Analysis, Epistemology, National Curriculum
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Puustinen, Mikko; Khawaja, Amna – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
In this case study, we explore pedagogical practices that could promote powerful knowledge in school history. We analyse teaching sessions conducted by two teachers. The cases were selected from an observation study that focused on historical literacy in Finnish schools. While Michael Young's ideas of powerful knowledge have gained considerable…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Case Studies, Teaching Methods, Literacy
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Smith, Joseph – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2020
This paper focuses on a specific example of an all-too-rare phenomenon in education studies: the successful resistance by ordinary classroom teachers of policy change at the macro-level. Focusing on the withdrawal of the 2013 Draft National Curriculum for History in England, it considers the views of six teachers who were personally involved in…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Neoliberalism, Activism, Teacher Attitudes
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Ormond, Barbara Mary – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2017
This paper explores the challenges for teachers in positioning them as independent curriculum makers. History teachers in New Zealand have recently entered uncharted territory with the abandonment of prescribed topics for history and a new-found authority to determine the selection of historical knowledge taught to their senior secondary students.…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Curriculum Development, Professional Autonomy, History Instruction
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Cohen, Erik H. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2016
This article considers the role of teacher agency and curricular flexibility as pedagogic features of Shoah education in Israeli state schools. The analysis is based on a recent national study which included a quantitative survey (questionnaires), qualitative methods (focus groups, interviews, observations) and a socio-historical review. As…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Professional Autonomy, National Curriculum, State Schools
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Wilkinson, Matthew L. N. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2014
This paper introduces the concept of the "absent curriculum" on the premise that the study of curriculum has been prone to privileging curricular presence to the exclusion of curricular absence. In order to address this imbalance and to articulate a theory of absence in the curriculum, the paper applies ideas derived from the philosophy…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, History Instruction, National Curriculum, Hidden Curriculum
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Wilschut, Arie H. J. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2010
The paper analyses and compares developments in history teaching in Germany, England, and the Netherlands in the 19th and 20th centuries. The development of history teaching in the three countries shows striking similarities. National politics have always used history education for purposes which did not necessarily tally with distanced critical…
Descriptors: Ideology, Foreign Countries, History Instruction, Educational Development
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Hawkey, Kate – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2007
What lies behind the lack of theorizing about content in history in contrast to much greater attention given to theorizing about children's developing understanding of historical skills and processes? Egan's model of the characteristic ways in which children of different ages engage with the world is used to raise the question of what content to…
Descriptors: Culture, Comprehension, Inferences, Cognitive Processes
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Nasser, Riad; Nasser, Irene – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2008
The paper discusses the collective identity of the Palestinian citizens of Israel as it is filtered to school students through the state-commissioned school textbooks. Since it was established in 1948, Israel has maintained two separate education systems, one for Palestinian-Israelis, who are now approximately 20% of the population, and the other…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Context, Textbook Evaluation, Textbook Content
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Torsti, Pilvi – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2007
This study examines the national division of history teaching in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the war and post-war period. The process of division of schooling into three curricula (Bosnian Serb, Bosnian Croat, and Bosniak) is presented. Representations of other national groups are central in 8th-grade history textbooks used by the three national…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, History Instruction, Social Psychology, Critical Theory
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Donnelly, James – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1999
Analyzes the educational aims of science and history teachers through classroom observation and interviews. Finds that science teachers placed a strong emphasis on the content of their subject, exhibited a less uniform set of aims, and perceive uncertainty as threatening; history teachers emphasize children's interpretations and judgments as the…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Higher Education, History Instruction, Institutional Role
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McKiernan, Derek – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1993
Traces educational reform related to history education in Great Britain since the first Margaret Thatcher administration. Outlines the work of the History Working Group and two competing approaches to the study of history. Describes how conservative forces rejected pluralistic history in favor of traditional nationalist-based history. (CFR)
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Course Content, Curriculum Development, Educational Change