Curriculum as Contestation

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academic legitimacy
Accredited Programme Status
Andrea Abbas
Category=JNAM
Category=JNF
Category=JNM
Cecilia Jacobs
Christine Winberg
Civil Society
curriculum contestations
Curriculum Reform Agenda
Curriculum Renewal Project
curriculum theory
decolonising knowledge
education and activism
education and politics
educational inequality
epistemological transitions
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Feminist Knowledge
Hierarchical Knowledge Structure
Higher education
higher education and social movements
higher education reform
Interdisciplinary Curricula
Interdisciplinary Subjects
James Garraway
Jim Hordern
Kathy Luckett
Legitimation Code Theory
Lower Ranking Institutions
Lynn Coleman
Monica McLean
neoliberalism in universities
Paul Ashwin
Pedagogic Rights
Penelope Engel-Hills
Powerful Knowledge
Recontextualisation Processes
Recontextualisation Rules
Rooted Cosmopolitanism
Sardar M. Anwaruddin
SD
SD. Strong
second language teacher education
Semantic Gravity
Simon Winberg
social justice pedagogy
socially just curriculum
socially just curriculum transformation
South African Higher Education
South African Higher Education Sector
Specialised Disciplinary Identity
Specialised Pedagogic Identity
Strong Foundational Understanding
Stronger Semantic Gravity
Sue Clegg
Tai Peseta
Teaching in Higher Education
UK Sociology
Victoria Millar

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815399674
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Jun 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In 2015 a social movement swept across the South African higher education sector fuelled by the anger of the ‘born free’ generation, the students born into post-apartheid South Africa. The movement found solidarity in other parts of the globe where the past decade has witnessed the rise of student protests in the UK, the US, Chile, Turkey and Hong Kong to name a few. While the demands are specific to national contexts, the underlying obstacles of economic, cultural and political access into higher education are consistent. These protests have put a spotlight on the global academy that, like the society of which it is a part, is increasingly characterized by inequality. At its core these movements call for a more socially just higher education system. This call is profoundly dissonant to the dominant neoliberal discourses currently shaping higher education.

Against the backdrop of these discourses there has been an unprecedented pressure on higher education curricula. This edited collection is dedicated to exploring what a socially just curriculum reform agenda might involve. The authors share a commitment to socially just curricula and a concern about the ways in which curricula are deeply implicated in the processes of producing and reproducing inequality. Each chapter opens up a different vista on the contested curriculum space drawing on a range of theoretical tools – Archer, Bernstein, Giroux, and Maton to name a few – to illuminate the contestation. Perhaps even more importantly they also draw on a range of voices from both inside and outside the academy. This book was originally published as a special issue of Teaching in Higher Education.

Suellen Shay is Associate Professor and Dean in the Centre for Higher Education Development at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. Her career has spanned a range of types of educational development work, including language development, curriculum development, and staff and institutional development. Tai Peseta is Senior Lecturer at the Learning Transformations Team, Learning Futures Portfolio at Western Sydney University, Australia. She is also Senior Fellow at the UK Higher Education Academy (SFHEA), and International Research Fellow at the Research Institute for Higher Education, Hiroshima University, Japan, and holds honorary appointments at The University of Sydney and Deakin University, Australia.