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Originally published in 1989. What should be taught in schools?
This book explores the differing curriculum traditions in Britain,
Europe, the USA, Latin America, India and the Far East and the
possibilities for change. For the practising teacher and the
educationalist it opens up the debates about 'quality' in education
which have been intense in many countries throughout the 1980s and
focuses on how different countries are trying to change the
curriculum to achieve higher standards and greater relevance.
Considering the age-old questions "Who shall be educated?" and
"What knowledge is of most worth?", four major curriculum
traditions are examined in an historical context. The authors show
how some European and American practices were freely incorporated
into emerging systems in other parts of the world while elsewhere
curricula were transferred by imperialists to their colonies and
then modified. In the first part of the book the difficulties of
curriculum change are explored within the contexts of countries
where the curricula are rooted in indigenous models. The second
part examines countries where curricula have been transferred from
other parts of the world and how this affects curriculum change. In
each case the politics of educational change since 1945, when
compulsory education was introduced in many countries, has been
analysed. The book will help students of education to understand
the issues of curriculum reform and the transfer of curriculum
models and places the problems in an international perspective with
case studies.
Originally published in 1989. What should be taught in schools?
This book explores the differing curriculum traditions in Britain,
Europe, the USA, Latin America, India and the Far East and the
possibilities for change. For the practising teacher and the
educationalist it opens up the debates about 'quality' in education
which have been intense in many countries throughout the 1980s and
focuses on how different countries are trying to change the
curriculum to achieve higher standards and greater relevance.
Considering the age-old questions "Who shall be educated?" and
"What knowledge is of most worth?", four major curriculum
traditions are examined in an historical context. The authors show
how some European and American practices were freely incorporated
into emerging systems in other parts of the world while elsewhere
curricula were transferred by imperialists to their colonies and
then modified. In the first part of the book the difficulties of
curriculum change are explored within the contexts of countries
where the curricula are rooted in indigenous models. The second
part examines countries where curricula have been transferred from
other parts of the world and how this affects curriculum change. In
each case the politics of educational change since 1945, when
compulsory education was introduced in many countries, has been
analysed. The book will help students of education to understand
the issues of curriculum reform and the transfer of curriculum
models and places the problems in an international perspective with
case studies.
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