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E-raamat: Emerging Perspectives from Social Realism on Knowledge and Education: Curricula, Pedagogy, Identity, and Equity

Edited by (University of Auckland, New Zealand), Edited by (University of Toronto, Canada), Edited by (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
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"This book brings the key ideas and concepts of social realism to bear on current debates in the fields of knowledge and curriculum. The key concern of this collection is to highlight matters related to knowledge and the influence these dimensions have on the formation of curricula, pedagogy, identity, and equity in educational contexts. Presenting new perspectives on the place of various types and forms of knowledge in contemporary education, this book explores two central questions, 'what type of knowledge is most important to include in a curriculum?' and 'what is meant by disciplinary knowledge?'. The chapters use empirical examples to illustrate how the issues play out on a global stage, interweaving the social justice concern of equitable access todisciplinary knowledge throughout. In particular, the authors address the emerging theorisation of issues related to the decolonisation of curricula, the recontextualisation of 'non-traditional' knowledge into the curriculum, and to teacher education. Offering new philosophical and theoretical perspectives, this book will be of interest to researchers, scholars, and students examining the fields of knowledge and curriculum, and the sociology of education more broadly"--

This book brings the key ideas and concepts of social realism to bear on current debates in the fields of knowledge and curriculum.



This book brings the key ideas and concepts of social realism to bear on current debates in the fields of knowledge and curriculum.

The key concern of this collection is to highlight matters related to knowledge and the influence these dimensions have on the formation of curricula, pedagogy, identity, and equity in educational contexts. Presenting new perspectives on the place of various types and forms of knowledge in contemporary education, this book explores two central questions, ‘what type of knowledge is most important to include in a curriculum?’ and ‘what is meant by disciplinary knowledge?’ The chapters use empirical examples to illustrate how the issues play out on a global stage, interweaving the social justice concern of equitable access to disciplinary knowledge throughout. In particular, the authors address the emerging theorisation of issues related to the decolonisation of curricula, the recontextualisation of ‘non-traditional’ knowledge into the curriculum, and teacher education.

Offering new philosophical and theoretical perspectives, this book will be of interest to researchers, scholars, and students examining the fields of knowledge and curriculum, and the sociology of education more broadly.

PART 1: Theoretical Matters
1. Introduction: Knowledge and the
curriculum: new perspectives from social realism
2. Bernsteins knowledge
structures and the curriculum
3. The curriculum as relation between knowledge
of reality and the individuals development: contributions from Antonio
Gramsci and Lev Vygotsky PART 2: Curriculum Contestations
4. School music
education beyond human development? Contributions from a social realist
perspective
5. Decolonisation and the curriculum: Applying a social realist
lens
6. Knowledge travels: the recontextualisation of socio-cultural
knowledge for the academy and the school.
7. Privatising Music Knowledge:
Identifying the restrictions that specialise music education PART 3:
Knowledge and Teacher Education
8. Logic in the Curriculum Design Coherence
Model: How the Model creates coherence
9. Practice knowledge and teacher
mentoring: a realist analysis of professional development and learning
10.
Why liberating Education Studies from foundation disciplines cannot make it
more coherent
11. Exploring the challenges of recontextualisation in the
development of teachers professional practice knowledge. PART 4: Crossing
Boundaries
12. Interdisciplinary curriculum and equity
13. Crossing
boundaries: Exploring the theory, practice and possibility of a Future 3
curriculum
Graham McPhail is an associate professor in the School of Curriculum and Pedagogy, Faculty of Education and Social Work, the University of Auckland, New Zealand.

Richard Pountney is a senior lecturer in the Sheffield Institute for Education, Sheffield Hallam University, the United Kingdom.

Leesa Wheelahan is Professor Emerita, William G. Davis Chair in Community College Leadership, in the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto, Canada.