The barriers and enablers of curriculum thinking and teacher agency in geography education: a multinational study
The barriers and enablers of curriculum thinking and teacher agency in geography education: a multinational study
There is an increasing urgency, driven by global geopolitical, ecological and climate crises, for geography teachers to use their subject expertise as agents of change to empower children and young people with the knowledge and skills needed to think geographically and better understand our complex and rapidly changing world. This paper brings our international insights about national curriculum contexts and approaches to secondary geography education into dialogue with the concepts of recontextualisation and Future 3 curriculum to consider how we can foster teachers as curriculum makers with agency to decide what to teach and how. We examine the seven national education systems in which the authors work (Czechia, China, United Kingdom (England), Japan, the Netherlands, South Africa and South Korea) to identify the key barriers and enablers geography teachers face when wanting to enact a Future 3 curriculum of engagement that centres powerful knowledge to enhance student capabilities. Guided by Bernstein’s theory of the pedagogic device, we present a novel framework for analysing different curriculum contexts which we suggest could be insightful for educators wanting to foster teacher agency and provide students with epistemic access to powerful disciplinary knowledge in school geography.
Curriculum thinking, geography education, powerful disciplinary knowledge, recontextualization, teacher agency
220-236
Krause, Uwe
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Rawlings Smith, Emma
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Flajšhans Nedbalova, Radka
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He, Xueying
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He, Yujing
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Ito, Naoyuki
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Milaras, Milton
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Yang, Jayeon
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Hanus, Martin
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Béneker, Tine
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16 February 2025
Krause, Uwe
3fee9eb2-8d5d-4f4c-a308-4e973846a34e
Rawlings Smith, Emma
587730f7-d234-4421-8dc9-48e1705b5a92
Flajšhans Nedbalova, Radka
af329684-0d47-425a-aa3a-e352c2a02696
He, Xueying
316ceaa4-872c-4723-9247-ca862c30e4ad
He, Yujing
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Ito, Naoyuki
9caad2f2-7a36-4b94-bf86-a11fba39a28a
Milaras, Milton
d9b2a87c-1ada-4307-b221-82a5f741c22e
Yang, Jayeon
a9f46a7f-8db6-4811-b52a-46823ff36506
Hanus, Martin
55ef9c68-ec32-4b75-bb48-acc59c1da7ce
Béneker, Tine
ded36109-0ac9-43c9-99f9-1a5b2fa1af5c
Krause, Uwe, Rawlings Smith, Emma, Flajšhans Nedbalova, Radka, He, Xueying, He, Yujing, Ito, Naoyuki, Milaras, Milton, Yang, Jayeon, Hanus, Martin and Béneker, Tine
(2025)
The barriers and enablers of curriculum thinking and teacher agency in geography education: a multinational study.
International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 34 (3), .
(doi:10.1080/10382046.2025.2466160).
Abstract
There is an increasing urgency, driven by global geopolitical, ecological and climate crises, for geography teachers to use their subject expertise as agents of change to empower children and young people with the knowledge and skills needed to think geographically and better understand our complex and rapidly changing world. This paper brings our international insights about national curriculum contexts and approaches to secondary geography education into dialogue with the concepts of recontextualisation and Future 3 curriculum to consider how we can foster teachers as curriculum makers with agency to decide what to teach and how. We examine the seven national education systems in which the authors work (Czechia, China, United Kingdom (England), Japan, the Netherlands, South Africa and South Korea) to identify the key barriers and enablers geography teachers face when wanting to enact a Future 3 curriculum of engagement that centres powerful knowledge to enhance student capabilities. Guided by Bernstein’s theory of the pedagogic device, we present a novel framework for analysing different curriculum contexts which we suggest could be insightful for educators wanting to foster teacher agency and provide students with epistemic access to powerful disciplinary knowledge in school geography.
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Krause Rawlings Smith et al 2025 Accepted Manuscript
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The barriers and enablers of curriculum thinking and teacher agency in geography education a multinational study
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 February 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 February 2025
Published date: 16 February 2025
Keywords:
Curriculum thinking, geography education, powerful disciplinary knowledge, recontextualization, teacher agency
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 499269
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499269
ISSN: 1038-2046
PURE UUID: ee891784-0de3-4749-adc5-5ff2ae058734
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Date deposited: 13 Mar 2025 17:34
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:41
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Contributors
Author:
Uwe Krause
Author:
Emma Rawlings Smith
Author:
Radka Flajšhans Nedbalova
Author:
Xueying He
Author:
Yujing He
Author:
Naoyuki Ito
Author:
Milton Milaras
Author:
Jayeon Yang
Author:
Martin Hanus
Author:
Tine Béneker
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