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Curriculum theory, curriculum policy and the problem of ill-disciplined thinking

Curriculum theory, curriculum policy and the problem of ill-disciplined thinking
Curriculum theory, curriculum policy and the problem of ill-disciplined thinking
This paper examines the implications of policy fracture and arms length governance within the decision making processes currently shaping curriculum design within the English education system. In particular it argues that an unresolved ‘ideological fracture’ at government level has been passed down to school leaders whose response to the dilemma is distorted by the target-driven agenda of arms length agencies. Drawing upon the findings of a large scale on-line survey of history teaching in English secondary schools, this paper illustrates the problems that occur when policy making is divorced from curriculum theory, and in particular from any consideration of the nature of knowledge. Drawing on the social realist theory of knowledge elaborated by Young (2008), we argue that the rapid spread of alternative curricular arrangements, implemented in the absence of an understanding of curriculum theory, undermines the value of disciplined thinking to the detriment of many young people, particularly those in areas of social and economic deprivation.
0268-0939
245-261
Harris, Richard
0550d258-245a-4d0f-b366-4a8bc580cda3
Burn, Katharine
9d6203b4-1de4-407b-9d67-c04e93a29b3d
Harris, Richard
0550d258-245a-4d0f-b366-4a8bc580cda3
Burn, Katharine
9d6203b4-1de4-407b-9d67-c04e93a29b3d

Harris, Richard and Burn, Katharine (2011) Curriculum theory, curriculum policy and the problem of ill-disciplined thinking. Journal of Education Policy, 26 (2), 245-261.

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper examines the implications of policy fracture and arms length governance within the decision making processes currently shaping curriculum design within the English education system. In particular it argues that an unresolved ‘ideological fracture’ at government level has been passed down to school leaders whose response to the dilemma is distorted by the target-driven agenda of arms length agencies. Drawing upon the findings of a large scale on-line survey of history teaching in English secondary schools, this paper illustrates the problems that occur when policy making is divorced from curriculum theory, and in particular from any consideration of the nature of knowledge. Drawing on the social realist theory of knowledge elaborated by Young (2008), we argue that the rapid spread of alternative curricular arrangements, implemented in the absence of an understanding of curriculum theory, undermines the value of disciplined thinking to the detriment of many young people, particularly those in areas of social and economic deprivation.

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Published date: 2011

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 154773
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/154773
ISSN: 0268-0939
PURE UUID: b9efc128-39df-4057-88c9-c6ff7086ec89

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Date deposited: 26 May 2010 10:10
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:35

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Contributors

Author: Richard Harris
Author: Katharine Burn

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