Reconceptualizing Curriculum Development

Reconceptualizing Curriculum Development

by and Colleagues and James Henderson
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date: 05/12/2014

Share This eBook:

  $115.99

Reconceptualizing Curriculum Development provides accessible, clear guidance on curriculum problem solving and educational leadership through the practice of a synoptic curriculum study. This practice integrates three influential interpretations of curriculum—curriculum as deliberative artistry, curriculum as complicated conversation, and curriculum as currere—with John Dewey’s lifetime work on reflective inquiry. At its heart, the book advances a way of studying as a way of living with reference to the question: How might I live as a democratic educator?


The study guidance is organized as an open-ended scaffolding of three embedded reflective inquiries informed by four deliberative conversations. Study recommendations are provided by a carefully selected team. The field-tested study-based approach is illustrated through a multi-layered, multi-voiced narrative collage of four experienced teachers’ personal journeys of understanding in a collegial study context. Applying William Pinar’s argument that a "conceptual montage" enabling teachers to lead complicated conversations should be the focus for curriculum development in the field’s current ‘post-reconceptualist’ moment, the book moves forward the educational aim of facilitating a holistic subject/self/social understanding through the practice of a balanced hermeneutics of suspicion and trust. It closes with a discussion of cross-cultural collaboration and advocacy, reflecting the interest of curriculum scholars in a wide range of countries in this study-based, lead-learning approach to curriculum development.

ISBN:
9781317648758
9781317648758
Category:
Curriculum planning & development
Format:
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date:
05-12-2014
Language:
English
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis

This item is delivered digitally

Reviews

Be the first to review Reconceptualizing Curriculum Development.