3rd Edition

School Subjects and Curriculum Change

By Ivor F. Goodson Copyright 1993
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    The process of curriculum development is highly practical, as Goodson shows in this enlarged anniversary third edition of his seminal work. The position of subjects and their development within the curriculum is illustrated by looking at how school subjects, in particular, geography and biology, gained academic and intellectual respectability within the whole curriculum during the late 1960s and early 1970s. He highlights how subjects owe their formation and accreditation to competing status and their power to compete in the provision of 'worthwhile' knowledge and considers subjects as continually changing sub-groups of information. Such subjects from the framework of the society in which individuals live and over which they have influence. This volume questions the basis on which subject disciplines are developed and formulates new possibilities for curriculum development and reform in a post-modrnist age.

    Part 1 Becoming an Academic Subject; Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 The Growth of the English Education System; Chapter 3 Academic ‘Subjects’ and Curriculum Change; Part 2 School Subjects; Chapter 4 Biology; Chapter 5 Geography; Chapter 6 Rural Studies; Part 3 Relationship Between Subjects; Chapter 7 ‘Climates of Opinion’ with Respect to Education and the Environment, 1960–1975; Chapter 8 Redefining Rural Studies; Chapter 9 Construction of an ‘A’ Level Syllabus; Chapter 10 The Defence of Geography and Biology; Chapter 11 The Negotiation of Environmental Studies; Part 4 Conclusions; Chapter 12 Conclusions, Complexities and Conjectures;

    Biography

    Ivor Goodson, Peter McLaren