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  • 1
    UID:
    almahu_9949938137202882
    Format: 1 online resource (220 pages)
    ISBN: 9781835491461
    Series Statement: The BERA guides
    Content: The call for decolonising curriculum knowledge comes from across public and academic voices and educational organisations. Led by international educationalists across all phases of education, The BERA Guide to Decolonising the Curriculum is a powerful evocation, direction, and call to action for epistemological equity in knowledge production, teaching, and learning. The chapters draw on significant international literature from across the fields of decoloniality, race, gender, history, sociology, and philosophy, and real-world cases, with multiple examples from international academic leaders, academics, and teachers to address concerns about the ideological and political orientation of educational policy discourse bounded by Eurocentric epistemology. Published in partnership between the British Educational Research Association (BERA) and Emerald Publishing, The BERA Guides are short, research-informed yet accessible introductions to key, interdisciplinary topics impacting education research and practice for a broad academic audience.
    Note: Introduction -- Chapter 1. Decolonising the curriculum: Fostering praxis for equity and inclusion / Marlon Lee Moncrieffe, Omolabake Fakunle, Marlies Kustatscher, and Anna Olsson Rost Early Childhood and Primary Education - Introduction -- Chapter 2. Decolonising and diversifying primary school curriculum knowledge: Enacting theory in practice and pedagogy / Hannah Tyreman, Lisa-Maria Muller, and Marlon Lee Moncrieffe -- Chapter 3. The primary curriculum for religious education in northern Ireland: Making a case for epistemic justice / Rebecca Loader, Erika Jiménez, Joanne Hughes, and Aisling O'boyle -- Chapter 4. Decolonising early childhood education: Disrupting professional discourses / Chandrika Devarakonda and Marlies Kustatscher -- Chapter 5. Decolonial education through solidarities: Anti-racism learning in early childhood education and care in Canada / Zuhra Abawi and Rachel Berman -- Chapter 6. Decolonising knowledge of the parent-practitioner relationship in early childhood practice through reflective intercultural teaching and learning interventions / Lesleann Whiteman -- Chapter 7. Decolonising the curriculum: A comparative case-study of black learner and educator perspective experiences from London (uk) and johannesburg (south Africa) / Omena Osivwemu Early Childhood and Primary Education - Summary Secondary and Tertiary Education - Introduction -- Chapter 8. Diversifying the history curriculum in England: A slow (r)evolution / Katharine Burn, Richard Harris, and Joseph Smith -- Chapter 9. Challenging dominant narratives: Centring historically underserved voices to create new enquiries for the history classroom / Dan Lyndon-Cohen -- Chapter 10. A professional development model for the teaching of British empire, migration and belonging / Abigail Branford and Jason Todd -- Chapter 11. Decolonisation in further education: Engaging diverse students in the delivery of a decolonised curriculum for a level biology in the heart of the former empire / Samantha Hughes and Neil Hart -- Chapter 12. Decolonising language teaching: More than a box-ticking exercise / Christina Richardson, Jane Jones, and Tanya Linaker -- Chapter 13. Headsup: Using deliberate reflexive practice to strengthen decolonial thinking and action / Balqis Mohammed, Anna Olsson Rost, and Karen Pashby Secondary and Tertiary Education - Summary Higher education - Introduction -- Chapter 14. Creating the anti-racism framework to transform the curriculum for student teachers in England / Heather Jane Smith and Vini Lander -- Chapter 15. Decolonial praxis in Wales: Reflections on research, policy, and anti-racist action / Susan Davis and Jeremiah Olusola -- Chapter 16. Decolonising the curriculum in higher education: Introducing a practice-informed framework from two non-white academics in a uk university / Farah Akbar and Omolabake Fakunle -- Chapter 17. Relationality, plurilingualism, and place: Language education in higher education in northern Ireland / Mel M. Engman -- Chapter 18. 'Hunting' for a black feminist decolonial 'archive' at a predominantly white university / Sahar D. Sattarzadeh -- Chapter 19. Decolonising teaching and research: A student buddying programme between burundi and the uk / Louise Taylor, Jill Childs, Susan Muchiri, Naomi King, Diana Wanjagi, and Frankii Charles Higher education - Summary Conclusion -- Chapter 20. What are the next steps to advancing equity and inclusion in teaching and learning through decolonial educational research and practice? / Marlon Lee Moncrieffe, Omolabake Fakunle, Marlies Kustatscher, and Anna Olsson Rost.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9781835491478
    Additional Edition: PDF version: ISBN 9781835491447
    Language: English
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  • 2
    UID:
    kobvindex_DGP1913221970
    Format: Diagramme
    ISBN: 9781835491461
    Content: This chapter provides a context for other case-study chapters in this volume that explore in more depth steps taken to provide a decolonised perspective in the history curriculum. The chapter first provides a brief overview of developments in recent years towards diversifying the history curriculum. It then focuses specifically on two surveys conducted by the Historical Association in 2019 and 2021, examining how history teachers have responded to more recent calls both to diversify and (from some) to decolonise the curriculum. As the surveys only provide self-reported data about any changes made (rather than allowing direct observation of teachers’ practice), it is not possible to determine whether a genuinely decolonised approach is being adopted. There are, nonetheless, clear indications that small but significant steps are being taken in many school contexts to diversify curriculum content, seeking to address both an overwhelming Anglo-centric bias and a narrow conception of what constitutes ‘British history’.
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 99-101
    In: The BERA Guide to decolonising the curriculum, Leeds : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2024, (2024), Seite 91-101, 9781835491461
    In: 9781835491447
    In: year:2024
    In: pages:91-101
    Language: English
    Keywords: Großbritannien ; Bildungswesen ; Bildungsforschung ; Curriculum ; Entkolonialisierung ; Curriculumforschung ; Bildungspolitik ; Geschichtsunterricht ; Aufsatz im Buch
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  • 3
    UID:
    kobvindex_DGP1913221245
    ISBN: 9781835491461
    Content: Religious education (RE) in Northern Ireland (NI) is taught according to the Core Syllabus produced by representatives of the region’s four main Christian churches and, at primary level, is exclusively Christian in content. In this chapter, the authors apply the lens of epistemic injustice to examine the implications of this given an increasingly diverse society and pupil population. Drawing on a recent study of educational experiences among minority ethnic and migrant groups, the authors suggest that the primary RE curriculum may perpetuate epistemic injustice in three ways: (1) by impeding children from minority faith traditions from sharing their experiences in a way meaningful to their peers; (2) by reducing the resources available to children to make sense of encounters with other religious traditions; and (3) through a lack of appropriate alternative arrangements for pupils whose parents withdraw their children from RE. The authors conclude with recommendations to increase epistemic justice within the primary RE curriculum.
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 38-39
    In: The BERA Guide to decolonising the curriculum, Leeds : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2024, (2024), Seite 31-39, 9781835491461
    In: 9781835491447
    In: year:2024
    In: pages:31-39
    Language: English
    Keywords: Nordirland ; Bildungswesen ; Bildungsforschung ; Curriculum ; Entkolonialisierung ; Curriculumforschung ; Bildungspolitik ; Religionsunterricht ; Aufsatz im Buch
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  • 4
    UID:
    kobvindex_DGP1913221555
    ISBN: 9781835491461
    Content: Black university student protests calling for decolonising the curriculum in South Africa in 2015 and the Black Lives Matter movement sweeping across the UK in 2020 have brought attention to the need for anti-racist and decolonial education and practice in schools. Drawing on critical pedagogy and decolonial discourse, this research analyses conceptualisations of decolonising the curriculum and anti-racist pedagogy through Black learner and educator understandings from a London primary school and educator perspectives in Johannesburg. Empirical data collected from a learner focus group, field journal, and educator interviews showed key themes for informing best practice as belonging, identity and community knowledge, cultural relevance, critical thinking, and consciousness raising. Findings from this research suggested shared educator understandings of ‘decolonising the curriculum’ and evidence of decolonial practice. While Black learners’ critique raised considerations for progression of ‘soft reform’ to more ‘radical’ transformation.
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 79-81
    In: The BERA Guide to decolonising the curriculum, Leeds : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2024, (2024), Seite 71-81, 9781835491461
    In: 9781835491447
    In: year:2024
    In: pages:71-81
    Language: English
    Keywords: Großbritannien ; Südafrika ; Bildungswesen ; Bildungsforschung ; Curriculum ; Entkolonialisierung ; Curriculumforschung ; Bildungspolitik ; Person of Color ; Lehrerbildung ; Schüler ; Aufsatz im Buch
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  • 5
    UID:
    kobvindex_DGP1913220796
    Format: Diagramme
    ISBN: 9781835491461
    Content: Decolonising the curriculum has been increasingly discussed in education, particularly following the Black Lives Matter antiracism protests in 2020. This chapter presents how teachers in UK primary schools are approaching curriculum-making through decolonial lenses. With a focus on teaching and learning about race, cultural diversity, and British history in primary school education, the authors refer to key examples of teacher education research which has argued over the years for decolonising and diversifying curriculum knowledge. The authors relate these arguments to evaluate data from online learning modules on this topic created by the Chartered College of Teaching. Findings show that when provided with robust continuous professional development (CPD), teachers grow in confidence in seeing and challenging the limitations of knowledge centred by the Eurocentric discourses of the primary national curriculum. Adopting decolonial lenses for critical curriculum thinking enables teachers to plan and implement approaches to pedagogies framed by a diversification of curriculum-making.
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 29-30
    In: The BERA Guide to decolonising the curriculum, Leeds : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2024, (2024), Seite 19-30, 9781835491461
    In: 9781835491447
    In: year:2024
    In: pages:19-30
    Language: English
    Keywords: Großbritannien ; Bildungswesen ; Bildungsforschung ; Curriculum ; Entkolonialisierung ; Curriculumforschung ; Bildungspolitik ; Lehrerbildung ; Grundschule ; Aufsatz im Buch
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  • 6
    UID:
    kobvindex_DGP1913220478
    ISBN: 9781835491461
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 11-13
    In: The BERA Guide to decolonising the curriculum, Leeds : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2024, (2024), Seite 3-13, 9781835491461
    In: 9781835491447
    In: year:2024
    In: pages:3-13
    Language: English
    Keywords: Bildungswesen ; Bildungsforschung ; Curriculum ; Entkolonialisierung ; Curriculumforschung ; Bildungspolitik ; Aufsatz im Buch
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  • 7
    UID:
    kobvindex_DGP1907750266
    Format: 1 Online-Resource (XVIII, 244 Seiten)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781835491461 , 9781835491447
    Series Statement: The BERA Guides
    Content: The call for decolonising curriculum knowledge comes from across public and academic voices and educational organisations. Led by international educationalists across all phases of education, The BERA Guide to Decolonising the Curriculumis a powerful evocation, direction, and call to action for epistemological equity in knowledge production, teaching, and learning. The chapters draw on significant international literature from across the fields of decoloniality, race, gender, history, sociology, and philosophy, and real-world cases, with multiple examples from international academic leaders, academics, and teachers to address concerns about the ideological and political orientation of educational policy discourse bounded by Eurocentric epistemology. Published in partnership between the British Educational Research Association (BERA) and Emerald Publishing, The BERA Guidesare short, research-informed yet accessible introductions to key, interdisciplinary topics impacting education research and practice for a broad academic audience.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781835491478
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 9781835491478
    Language: English
    Keywords: Bildungswesen ; Bildungsforschung ; Curriculum ; Entkolonialisierung ; Curriculumforschung ; Bildungspolitik ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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