Dysfunctional dichotomies? Deflating bipolar constructions of curriculum and pedagogy through case studies from music and history
Dysfunctional dichotomies? Deflating bipolar constructions of curriculum and pedagogy through case studies from music and history
Recent public discussions of curriculum and pedagogy that have accompanied the English National Curriculum review have been structured around clichéd dichotomies that generate more heat than light and that, as Robin Alexander has argued, reduce complex educational debates to oppositional and incompatible slogans. This paper begins by exploring the ways in which these dichotomies have structured recent debates and goes on to critically explore arguments in two contemporary debates, in the fields of history education and music education, assessing how these debates have been framed and the extent to which the debates can be considered fruitful and progressive. In the first case, we seek to show, through a discussion of 'knowledge' and 'skill' in history, that bipolar thinking is both inadequate and dysfunctional in relation to the matters under discussion. A third term - disciplinary understanding - is advocated and explored. In the second case, we demonstrate that dichotomous thinking about formal and informal music education has generated a debate that has become more sophisticated as various authors have problematised and critiqued informal learning. Analysis of these debates suggests that dichotomous thinking is pernicious when dichotomies are used only as slogans, although dichotomies can be generative when they are used as starting points to open discussion, not to close it. The paper suggests that the difference between the debates might be explained by the varying degrees of political involvement in them.
debate, formal/informal, knowledge/skills, secondary schools
111-129
Cain, Tim
9c455385-1e87-4602-b819-7fafa17abd18
Chapman, Arthur
26a37218-a9f3-4aac-9b0e-203652836f86
2014
Cain, Tim
9c455385-1e87-4602-b819-7fafa17abd18
Chapman, Arthur
26a37218-a9f3-4aac-9b0e-203652836f86
Cain, Tim and Chapman, Arthur
(2014)
Dysfunctional dichotomies? Deflating bipolar constructions of curriculum and pedagogy through case studies from music and history.
Curriculum Journal, 25 (1), .
(doi:10.1080/09585176.2013.877396).
Abstract
Recent public discussions of curriculum and pedagogy that have accompanied the English National Curriculum review have been structured around clichéd dichotomies that generate more heat than light and that, as Robin Alexander has argued, reduce complex educational debates to oppositional and incompatible slogans. This paper begins by exploring the ways in which these dichotomies have structured recent debates and goes on to critically explore arguments in two contemporary debates, in the fields of history education and music education, assessing how these debates have been framed and the extent to which the debates can be considered fruitful and progressive. In the first case, we seek to show, through a discussion of 'knowledge' and 'skill' in history, that bipolar thinking is both inadequate and dysfunctional in relation to the matters under discussion. A third term - disciplinary understanding - is advocated and explored. In the second case, we demonstrate that dichotomous thinking about formal and informal music education has generated a debate that has become more sophisticated as various authors have problematised and critiqued informal learning. Analysis of these debates suggests that dichotomous thinking is pernicious when dichotomies are used only as slogans, although dichotomies can be generative when they are used as starting points to open discussion, not to close it. The paper suggests that the difference between the debates might be explained by the varying degrees of political involvement in them.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 30 January 2014
Published date: 2014
Keywords:
debate, formal/informal, knowledge/skills, secondary schools
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Local EPrints ID: 420245
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/420245
ISSN: 0958-5176
PURE UUID: 0497b50a-1257-454c-a758-a8977d55c8c6
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Date deposited: 03 May 2018 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 12:04
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Author:
Tim Cain
Author:
Arthur Chapman
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