Knowledge, Curriculum and Equity

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21st century learning
Anne Burns Thomas
Barbara Ormond
Cap
Category=JNAM
Category=JNF
Category=JNU
Common Core State Standards Initiative
Conceptual Progression
Curriculum policy
curriculum theory
David Lambert
Education Systems
educational inequality
educational policy
Educative Curriculum Material
Elizabeth Rata
empirical studies in curriculum equity
Epistemic Knowledge
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Goal Demotion
Graham McPhail
Historical Thinking Concepts
Horizontal Knowledge Structure
Jim Hordern
Johan Muller
John Morgan
Knower Modality
knowledge production
knowledge society
Leonel Lim
Lyn Yates
Lynne Slonimsky
Maria Timberlake
Occupational Knowledge Base
Paula Ensor
pedagogic modalities
pedagogic recontextualization
pedagogy
Poor Subject Knowledge
Powerful Knowledge
Recontextualisation Process
Recontextualising Field
SLPs
social realism
Social Realist Approach
Social Realist Arguments
Social Realist Ideas
Social Realist Perspectives
social reproduction
sociology of education
Special Education Teacher
Subject Specific Content Knowledge
Ursula Hoadley
Valley Point Secondary
Vertical Discourse
Yael Shalem
York State Education Department
Zain Davis

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138083530
  • Weight: 600g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Jul 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In 2008 the first in a series of symposia established a ‘social realist’ case for ‘knowledge’ as an alternative to the relativist tendencies of the constructivist, post-structuralist and postmodernist approaches dominant in the sociology of education. The second symposium focused on curriculum, and the development of a theoretical language grounded in social realism to talk about issues of knowledge and curriculum. Finally, the third symposium brought together researchers in a broad range of contexts to build on these ideas and arguments and, with a concerted empirical focus, bring these social realist ideas and arguments into conversation with data.

Knowledge, Curriculum and Equity: Social Realist Perspectives contains the work of the third symposium, where the strengths and gaps in the social realist approach are identified and where there is critical recognition of the need to incrementally extend the theories through empirical study. Fundamentally, the problem that social realism is seeking to address is about understanding the social conditions of knowledge production and exchange as well as its structuring in the curriculum and in pedagogy. The central concern is with the on-going social reproduction of inequality through schooling, and exploring whether and how foregrounding specialised knowledge and its access holds the possibility for interrupting it.

This book consists of 13 chapters by different authors working in Oceania, Asia, Europe, Africa and North America. From very different vantage points the authors focus their theoretical and empirical sights on the assumptions about knowledge that underpin educational processes and the pursuit of more equitable schooling for all.

Brian Barrett is associate professor in the Foundations and Social Advocacy Department and graduate research coordinator with SUNY Cortland's Urban Recruitment of Educators program.

Ursula Hoadley is an Associate Professor working in the School of Education at the University of Cape Town. Her work focuses on pedagogy, curriculum and school organisation at the primary level, and she has published extensively both locally and internationally in these areas.

John Morgan is Professor of Education at the University of Auckland. His research interests are in geographical education, the politics of the school curriculum and the cultural politics of schooling.