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Transplanting Practices in Social Studies: An Historical Case Study of Curriculum Development and Reform Efforts in Australia, 1969–1989

  • Autores: Lindsay Parry
  • Localización: Theory and research in social education, ISSN 0093-3104, Vol. 27, Vol. 4, 1999, págs. 505-528
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • In this paper, an historical case study is presented of the transplanting of curricular and instructional practices from the United States to Australia. The case study draws upon a collection of education policy documents (syllabuses, policy statements and correspondence) and oral histories recorded with key curriculum workers in Queensland (one of eight states and territories in Australia) from 1969 to 1989. Analyses of these data provide valuable insights into the complexities and intricacies of two eras of curriculum development and reform, and more broadly, into the validity or otherwise of significant historical assumptions and explanations held about those and other reform efforts. The paper advocates the use of conceptual constructs (social and cross-cultural perspectives) and methodological approaches (document analysis and interview-based fieldwork in the form of “oral histories”) in further empirical research on the transplanting of social studies across societies.


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