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World Yearbook of Education 2011: Curriculum in Today's World: Configuring Knowledge, Identities, Work and Politics
Contributor(s): Yates, Lyn (Editor), Grumet, Madeleine (Editor)
ISBN: 0415575826     ISBN-13: 9780415575829
Publisher: Routledge
OUR PRICE:   $161.50  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: January 2011
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Education | Curricula
- Education | Comparative
- Education | Educational Policy & Reform
Dewey: 375.000
LCCN: 2010513432
Series: World Yearbook of Education
Physical Information: 0.63" H x 6.14" W x 9.21" (1.23 lbs) 254 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

How do curriculum, conceptions of knowledge and the schooling experiences of young people engage the great issues of this tumultuous time? Curriculum is always influenced by the events that shape our world, but when testing and bench-marking preoccupy us, we can forget the world that is both the foundation and the object of curriculum. This edited volume brings together international contributors to analyze and reflect on the way the events of the last decade have influenced the curriculum in their countries. As they address nationalism in the face of economic globalisation, the international financial crisis, immigration and the culture of diaspora, they ask how national loyalties are balanced with international relationships and interests. They ask how the rights of women, and of ethnic and racial groups are represented. They ask what has changed about history and civics post 9/11, and they ask how countries that have experienced profound political and economic changes have addressed them in curriculum.

These interactions and changes are a subject of particular interest for an international yearbook in that they are almost always permeated by global movements and influenced by multinational bodies and practices. And as these essays show, in curriculum, global and international issues are explicitly or implicitly also about local and national interests and about how citizens engage their rights and responsibilities.

This volume brings together a new approach to perspectives on curriculum today and a new collection of insights into the changes from different parts of the world which discuss:

  • How is the world represented in curriculum?
  • How do responses to world events shape the stories we tell students about who they are and can be?

This book will be of great benefit to educational researchers and policy-makers, as well as undergraduate and postgraduate students.