Spelling suggestions: "subject:"then multionational curriculum"" "subject:"then multionational 9curriculum""
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The Learn to Travel Project : a case study of curriculum innovation in primary schoolsMason, Peter January 1995 (has links)
This thesis is a case study of curriculum innovation in the primary school at a time of major change during the introduction of the National Curriculum. It involved a small number of primary schools, teachers and children. In particular the processes and impacts of the innovation were investigated. Action research methodology (Carr and Kemmis, 1986 McNiff, 1988) was employed and teachers' plans, classroom activities and children's responses were analysed. The research informs us about the nature and effects of opportunities created and constraints imposed by the National Curriculum. The case study indicates that teachers responded to the innovation as if it were a topic and not a single subject, but they incorporated National Curriculum subjects and themes into it. Geography was the major subject developed, but the teachers tended to view this subject as a body of knowledge, with accompanying skills, rather than a process of learning to be taught and this was related, at least in part, to the nature of the National Curriculum. A number of activities concerned with values and attitudes were developed, despite the lack of obvious links to the National Curriculum. The study shows that these teachers were 'pragmatists' rather than 'progressives' or 'traditionalists' in their use of teaching methods. The research also indicated the problems of the relationships between these teachers and the Project co-ordinator. The case study demonstrated that this Project had local relevance, had significant effects on teachers and children directly involved and reached a wider educational community who gave a generally favourable response, indicating the educational value of introducing work on travel and tourism to the primary curriculum.
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Differentiation in teaching and learning : aspirations and reality in primary educationAbbott, Lesley Eleanor January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Classroom research and the science curriculum : case studies in the face of multiple crisesWalker, Robert January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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Thinking and understanding in the primary school curriculumBonnett, Michael Robert January 1993 (has links)
This thesis addresses certain a ects of the issue of what it is to develop children's thinking and understanding with particular reference to primary education, and against the backdrop of the National Curriculum. It begins by identifying some of the professional responsibilities of teachers in this area and some of the judgments that they have to make in the course of their practice. Some of the pr blematic assumptions which underlie commonly held responses to the issues these judments raise are set out. The relationship between the development of thinking and understanding and other aspects of human life such as action and emotion are also given some preliminary discussion. The middle sections of the thesis explore and refine in a more theoretically systematic way some of the central issues previously raised by considering insights which have arisen in the context of two broad and contrasting perspectives - loosely termed "rationalist" and "existentialist" respectively. The conceptions of thinking and understanding that each of these emphasise and their broad curriculum implications are developed. It is argued that as well as suggesting certain basic dimensions to thinking - the "calculative", the "authentic" and the "poetic" (distinctions taken originally from Martin Heidegger) - the considerations raised by these views need to some extent to be interwoven if an adequate account of what it is to develop children's th nking and understanding s to be achieved In the final part of the thesis m re specific issues relating to the structuring and assessment of children s learning, and central aspects of the relationship between teacher and pupil n primary education, are explored in the light of previous analyss. Certain aspects of the National Curriculum at the primary stage of education are considered and some critical evaluation f some of its main features is offered.
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The nature and purpose of the use of television in English primary schoolsChien, Mei-Ying January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Infant/junior transfer : are concerns similar to those identified at the primary/secondary stage?Taylor, B. C. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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The teaching of poetry in secondary schoolsDymoke, Sue January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Teacher preparation for the implementation of the National Curriculum StatementTshiguvho, Muvhango Esther 08 1900 (has links)
MEd Curriculum Studies) / Department of Curriculum Studies / See the attached abstract below
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Managing to learn - learning to change : reflection and refraction in actionLeeson, Bernard Alan January 1996 (has links)
This qualitative practitioner research is set in a mixed, rural 11-16 Church of England Comprehensive School. It embraces reflective action enquiry into leadership and management of innovation in a turbulent period of national educational change. It is founded on the belief that if change processes are to be understood widely, practitioners must share experience emanating from reflective and analytical practice. This study is about "managing to learn" It embraces concepts of managing personal learning; managing colleagues' and students' learning; and managing processes leading to the emergence of the school as a "learning organisation" It is also about "learning to change" and espouses learning to promote personal change; learning to facilitate change in others; and learning to establish institutional change as a natural on-going characteristic of organisational life. This study is founded on a process of "reflection", as characterised by Schön (1983). Consequently, it employs a process of personal reflection on leadership roles in managing change and learning processes. It employs processes of reflection on cultural and political aspects of organisational life and resultant manifestations and implications of introducing, implementing, and institutionalising organisational and cultural change. This research utilises "refraction"- that is, convergence and divergence. Firstly, it promotes divergent and creative ways of organising which encourage and facilitate innovative processes. Secondly, it employs processes of converging, focusing, and concentrating on taken-for-granted "critical incidents" in the life of a developing school, to elicit meanings of events as understood by participants. Thirdly, it applies cultural and political prisms to school organisation, together with autocratic, bureaucratic, adhocratic, and reticular-democratic lenses in order to elucidate important cultural, political and organisational data. Finally this research is about "action" It is about doing, intervening, intending, committing, motivating, accomplishing, fulfilling and achieving. The essential concept and understanding of "action" is that it should be informed action.
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Study of Taiwanese ¡§National¡¨ Curriculum in Japanese Colonial PeriodLee, Kuang-chih 17 June 2006 (has links)
Study of Taiwanese ¡§National¡¨ Curriculum in Japanese Colonial Period
ABSTRACT
The purpose of this study is to discuss the foundation and influence of elementary school curriculum in Japanese Colonial Period in Taiwan and to provide further explanations for the manipulation from the power relationships at that time. First, this paper critically reviews those contributions from Marx, Gramsci and Apple to build up the analysis scaffold of national curriculum principles. Then it discusses the role of dominant structures and elementary schools through Taiwanese economic evolution in that period. Further more, it shows the knowledge features of elementary school textbooks by the content of subjects such as Japanese, Moral, Geography and History courses. The results confirm that national curriculum in Japanese Colonial Period in Taiwan provides a platform for ideology manipulation from the dominant, it is not only a set of knowledge content but also something which hiding with the figure of national power at it¡¦s back.
Keywords: Hegemony, National curriculum, Elementary school, Textbook
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